It's lunchtime at Jackson High School, and it's book time upstairs in the library. The Gateway to Great Books discussion group is grabbing sodas and slices of pizza and getting settled in to discuss the two books that were last month's reading selection.
This is exactly how English teacher turned librarian Danna Bruns envisioned it. From the first meeting at the beginning of the semester, when the group discussed the book "Twilight" by Stephenie Meyer, Bruns has worked hard to create a book discussion group for avid readers.
The discussions are open to everyone in the high school, not just frequent readers. There are two sessions -- one for each lunch period. Bruns wants the environment to be friendly and lively and a discussion about the books overall, not an environment where the students analyze the books for a grade. An average of 15 students come to each session. The Jackson Junior High librarian, Mary Pensel, takes four students from the junior high to the high school for the discussions.
The books are taken off the Gateway Readers Awards nominated list of books. Students must read at least three of the books in order to vote next semester for the winner of the Gateway Readers Awards. The Missouri Association of School Librarians compiles the nominated book list. There aren't enough copies of the discussed books for everyone to read at once, so the interested students have to take turns checking out the library copies.
There were two books discussed last Friday: "If I Have a Wicked Stepmother, Where's My Prince?" by Melissa Kantor and "Invisible" by Pete Hautman. Both books were labeled by students as "fast reads."
"I really wanted to read" the books, said sophomore Holly Bollinger. She has been attending the talks since the first one. So has junior Brenna Frederick and senior Columbia Sternickle. Sternickle has read all the books on the Gateway Awards Nomination list.
Some of the participants are or have been in the past "reader selectors." These students read books and give their recommendations to the librarian, so when someone comes in and says "I don't know what I want to read, but I'm looking for a good book" the librarian has a student-approved book to give them. These avid readers fit right in with the discussions, although they have usually read that month's picks before they were announced.
Junior Richa Sutaria, who is involved in the library, said "Most books [Bruns] picked out I've already read."
But Sutaria said she doesn't mind reading them again.
Bruns said the library is already seeing the effect of the book discussions on the school -- more and more students are checking out books from the library. For more information about the Gateway Awards, go to www.maslonline.org/awards/books/Gateway/.
Emily Hendricks is a freelancer for the Southeast Missourian.
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ACCOMPLISHMENTS
SCHOOL NEWS
-- From staff reports
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Young concert-goers at the Enchanted Forest socialize as they wait for the first band, The Parting Scene, to play on Saturday, December 1, 2007.
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FRIDAY
"The Golden Compass": Rated PG-13, 1 hr 53 mins., at Cape West Cine
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
NEXT WEEK
"Unreal Tournament 3": Tuesday, PS3
"NCAA March Madness 08": Tuesday, XBox 360, PS3, PS2
"Winter Sports: The Ultimate Challenge": Tuesday, Wii
"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix": PG-13, Tuesday
"The Bourne Ultimatum": PG-13, Tuesday
Pink Floyd, "Oh By The Way" (Box Set), Tuesday
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