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Mrs. Van at Vaughn shares library fun
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
Library
Technician Patty Van Valkenburg has a satisfying dilemma
at the Vaughn Elementary School library — books are
literally falling apart at the seams from overuse by
enchanted students. She doesn’t permit the “I Spy”
series, and a few others, to leave the library; still,
these stimulating hands-on, oversized books are mighty
popular with all ages at the school, and draw together
library visitors who would perhaps not otherwise meet
one another.
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Patty Van Valkenburg,
aka Mrs. Van, shows off a new
shipment of books to Ms. Puckett's
fifth-grade class.
Photo by Mindi La Rose |
Van
Valkenburg (nicknamed “Mrs. Van” at the school) spends
part of a day every week with each class in the school.
In each of the 40-minute sessions, split between
instruction and free reading time, she teaches the
children about the standard Dewey Decimal System, the
different parts of a book, and how to find research
materials in the library. Her job, as she sees it, is to
collaborate with individual teachers’ goals for each
class, to assist in providing a positive learning
environment for children.
The
Vaughn Elementary School library is light and airy, full
of kid-sized chairs and tables; it has a “quiet only”
reading loft for serious young scholars, stuffed animals
in the toy cart for rainy days. Sections of the library,
such as “dinosaur stories,” are presided over by the
appropriate creature or object, in this case
two-foot-tall dinosaurs standing on the top shelf. The
computer lab is in a side room off the library.
Students
are welcome here anytime during the school day.
Occasionally, Mrs. Van talks with a student who has
graduated to middle school and has returned with a
parent to collect a younger sibling, or overhears a
current student say, “Mrs. Van has the best library.”
She is quick to gently correct. “No,” she says. “It’s
not my library. It’s ours; this library belongs to all
of us.” That positive attitude has fostered respect
among the children for the reading resources, and the
privilege of using them.
Louie,
the bearded dragon, is a permanent resident of the
library, and has developed a fondness for being read to.
On any given day, during recess or free library time, a
child sits down and reads a story to Louie, and, as they
have been taught in the classroom, takes care to also
show him any pictures accompanying the tale. Mrs. Van
says Louie is a “reading mentor” of sorts, with as much
personality as a dog. Another creature sharing the
library with students is a ball python named Lucille.
Mrs. Van is the primary caretaker of both, although
during the summers they may vacation with other willing
and able caretakers.
Van
Valkenburg began her present career as a temporary
teaching assistant when her grown children were young.
She discovered she enjoyed being around the children all
day, and was encouraged by the librarian at Key
Peninsula Middle School to fill a vacant permanent
library position at KPMS, learning the system as she
went. She has been the equivalent of head librarian at
Vaughn for around eight years, for a total of 20 years
in service to students of the Key Peninsula. She is a
staff of one, with help in half-day increments totaling
three full days each week of “incredible volunteers —
all qualified, competent, and dependable.” Her day
begins at 7 a.m., and ends at 3:30 p.m. When not
teaching children in the library, ordering books with a
$2,000 annual purchasing budget, updating records, and
any number of other library-related tasks, she puts in
two hours daily as the school’s “building technology
person” — which means she troubleshoots computer
problems in the classroom and computer lab, having been
trained by the Peninsula School District technology
department.
Summers
find Mrs. Van enjoying her flower garden, camping with
husband Bob in an RV, playing tug-of-war with her bull
mastiff, Chewy… and reading children’s books. “There’s
so much good literature out there now; it’s just
excellent,” she says. She likes books on CD and tape so
she can double-task: “I can dig in the dirt, clean house
— and still enjoy a good story at the same time!”
On any
given day, the library appears to be only half-supplied
somehow deficient in offerings. That’s because every
day, about 2,000 books are checked out by enthusiastic
readers. Mrs. Van says the best part of her job is the
children. They come in and bubble over with what they’ve
read, or learned from a library book; in this cheerful,
smiling librarian, they find a dedicated woman delighted
to share in their discoveries. “I just have the best
job,” she says.
“Kids and
books…It doesn’t get any better.”
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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