tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post3890955935919085448..comments2024-03-25T09:56:16.164+00:00Comments on An Awfully Big Blog Adventure: Browsing - Josh LaceyUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-81743449616537093152010-12-01T12:08:36.531+00:002010-12-01T12:08:36.531+00:00Sorry, Josh, I think I had a bit of a rant there. ...Sorry, Josh, I think I had a bit of a rant there. I wasn't brought up in a household with many books - though we did have an old set of encyclopaedias that I used to browse through - but then I was a naturally bookish chikd, so I guess I was going to work out how to browse anyway. And I used the school and town libraries regularly - it seems the way things are going, there are going to be precious few of those around for much longer. And, like Miriam, when I was a teacher I used to talk to the kids about how to choose books, and take them into the library regularly. I guess the issue is not just whether or not they're being taught to browse - it's whether they have access to libraries and their teachers demonstrate an enthusiasm for reading.<br /><br />A though-provoking post, Josh, and sorry again if I snapped!Sue Purkisshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09084528571944803477noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-27548443425642973932010-11-30T11:36:14.730+00:002010-11-30T11:36:14.730+00:00Well, if schools continue to have libraries - no, ...Well, if schools continue to have libraries - no, don't get started you lot - then teachers should be doing what I used to do with my classes. Take them to the library and we all browse. That way they get to see what I do in a library and they learn browsing really quite quickly. Well observed Josh, many thanks.Miriam Halahmyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04935448538608020877noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-3721446773684611872010-11-30T10:04:43.599+00:002010-11-30T10:04:43.599+00:00My own ease in bookshops and libraries came from g...My own ease in bookshops and libraries came from growing up in a book-filled household. Many children don't, and so they do need help learning to use books. Leaving them next to a packed shelf just won't do it. I'm not suggesting that we should peer over their shoulders; I'm just saying that some children need help "learning how to learn".Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-71017896851543376092010-11-29T23:23:15.635+00:002010-11-29T23:23:15.635+00:00I'm taking my youngest (aged one) to the libra...I'm taking my youngest (aged one) to the library tomorrow morning for an organised rhyme time. Afterwards, I let him roam, pick up books, drop them where they fall. I had wondered if this was quite the right approach, but now I'm not going to worry any longer. It's generally about catching their interest when they're young. I hope the library will do this. Thanks for the post.Sarah Taylor-Fergussonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01507013836947182706noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-24393216438370924792010-11-29T23:10:37.289+00:002010-11-29T23:10:37.289+00:00Interesting post. If I go into a shop with rails a...Interesting post. If I go into a shop with rails and rails of designer clothes or even something as innocuous as Zara, I feel totally overwhelmed. I think the sheer volumn of Primark would kill me! Yet I can spend hours browsing a bookshop or a kitchen-ware shop or a hardware store or a stationers. Isn't it what we're comfortable with. If children are given time and made to feel comfortable with books from an early age, they'll be natural browsers... inquisitive to discover what the covers hold and confident to make selections based on their own feelings and judgement. Giving children confidence in any area will turn them into natural browsers and discoverers.Dianne Hofmeyrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18222157214605257030noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-91446286688888244352010-11-29T22:27:05.860+00:002010-11-29T22:27:05.860+00:00"We learned because our parents dumped us in ..."We learned because our parents dumped us in the kids' section while they went off to browse themselves"<br /><br />This is it, though, isn't it? Less children than you'd think have parents who would willingly step inside a bookshop, let alone browse.Leilahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02890097085059764567noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-73385500894926595592010-11-29T22:24:57.887+00:002010-11-29T22:24:57.887+00:00When I used to work for Reading is Fundamental, UK...When I used to work for Reading is Fundamental, UK, we'd do author events with children in bookshops, and before the readings someone from RIF would always ask the children some questions to check they knew how to browse for and select a book. For many of them it would have been their only/ first ever visit to a bookshop, so they did need that bit of extra help.Leilahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02890097085059764567noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-83632794617961630982010-11-29T13:47:07.023+00:002010-11-29T13:47:07.023+00:00I agree with Anne - I don't think children nee...I agree with Anne - I don't think children need to be taught how to browse. It was ever thus, and it still is - you read a book by one author, so yopu look for another by the same person, and then when you've read all those, you start to look around. It's surely part of the reason why Enid Blton, J Wilson and Micheal Morpurgo have been so successful - they've written lots, so there are lots of books to go onto.<br /><br />I'm getting a little bit sceptical about this urge to teach children everything - how to be happy, how to spend their spare time, how to be emotionally intelligent. Maybe we just need to give them a bit of space and time and let them get on with it. Perhaps they can muddle through without an over-anxious adult constantly peering over their shoulders!Sue Purkisshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09084528571944803477noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-36420405515194364652010-11-29T13:16:28.948+00:002010-11-29T13:16:28.948+00:00"To me, it's an almost instinctive activi..."To me, it's an almost instinctive activity and feels so everyday, so ordinary, that I could hardly even imagine it as a teachable skill."<br /><br />This says it all. It's not a teachable skill, and no-one ever taught us to browse. It's a facilitated skill: it requires children to have the time - possibly enforced time - in a library or bookshop so that they learn to do it. Because we are always rushing our children to choose and get out, they never can learn to browse. We learned because our parents dumped us in the kids' section while they went off to browse themselves and there was nothing else to do. Now, even if kids are so dumped, libraries are full of other 'attractions' because they're scared books will put people off and bookshops sell toys and other crud that attracts children's attention. <br /><br />They just need the chance to browse, not lessons!Stroppy Authorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16560035800075465845noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-88259614872493009332010-11-29T11:23:57.169+00:002010-11-29T11:23:57.169+00:00Josh, well said! A worrying observation. Glad the...Josh, well said! A worrying observation. Glad there are still librarians out there - even if fewer than before - who spend time helping children learn about libraries and browsing.Penny Dolanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16386668303428008498noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-79231394148587693902010-11-29T10:15:44.000+00:002010-11-29T10:15:44.000+00:00This is very true. Students don't know how to ...This is very true. Students don't know how to make good choices, and many don't really want to read, so are disconcerted when they end up with a book they dislike. I recommend a lot of books, which is good when the students can come and ask me for titles, but this is a concern for when they leave my library. How to teach them to browse? I will contemplate this at length!Ms. Yinglinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17805324364289597178noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7780182174577095197.post-25139319246701194402010-11-29T09:32:38.135+00:002010-11-29T09:32:38.135+00:00This is very interesting! How can we teach our ch...This is very interesting! How can we teach our children this skill? Other than by example - seeing adults browsing - but as so much of it is internal, it might not work that way ...Joan Lennonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15763862159032836768noreply@blogger.com