Library as Ad-Hoc Summer Camp

From the Chicago Tribune: It was a warm and sunny day outside, but Xavier Parker, 10, was deep into a computer game at Thurgood Marshall Public Library when his father walked in and told the boy he was about to go to a store.

“Stay in here,” Xavier’s father, Jimmy Giles, said, leaving the boy in charge of his 6- and 8-year-old brothers. “Don’t go anywhere until I come back and get you.”

Giles is a single father and he doesn’t like his boys roaming their Englewood neighborhood or playing outside because it’s not safe, he said. So nearly every day the boys walk to the library and sometimes stay there for hours. “They love it here,” he said. “They don’t want to leave.”

Many of these children spend the day at the library without the guidance of a parent, said Susan Neuman, professor of educational studies at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, who is writing a book on public libraries and education. As a result, some librarians have developed informal regimens and systems for managing the daily influx of unsupervised kids. More from The Chicago Tribune.