Termtime tomfoolery: Using lunchtime activities to market the library as a dynamic space.

Lunchtime in a library can sometimes be overlooked as a quiet or transitional part of the day. In reality, it is one of the most powerful opportunities libraries have to connect with their community. Lunchtime events turn a regular break into a moment of discovery, drawing people into the space, engaging those who may feel unsure or disconnected, and strengthening the library’s role as a welcoming and active hub.

Library events are vital for building a rapport between a school community and their library because participating in a simple activity can lead to conversations. From there, it becomes easier to talk about books, recommend reading, or explain what the library can offer. This is because for many people, a lunchtime event is someone’s first positive and relaxed experience in the library, helping them feel more confident and welcome. The brilliance lies in the fact that lunchtime events naturally attract foot traffic. Students and staff are already moving around, looking for somewhere to go or something to do. Hosting activities during this time removes barriers to participation. There is no need to stay after hours or commit to a long session. People can simply wander in, take part, and head off again because these activities are flexible and easy to join. Not everyone wants a formal workshop or a structured program during their break. Drop in challenges and creative prompts allow people to engage at their own pace, whether they stay for two minutes or twenty.

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Heartfelt Haiku and prizes for winning entries.

Furthermore, connecting lunchtime challenges to theme days and seasonal events helps keep them fresh and relevant. It gives people a reason to take part right now and adds a sense of fun and anticipation. Over the past few weeks, our library has run challenges such as Heartfelt Haiku for Valentine’s Day and Library Lovers’ Day invited participants to reflect on their love of reading and libraries. Lantern making for Lunar New Year created a hands on way to celebrate culture and tradition. A recent voting challenge between Dog Man and Diary of a Wimpy Kid tapped into popular reading interests and friendly competition. Now, in this past week, the Falling into a Book challenge has encouraged readers to embrace the new season with a new story.

Book Battle: Dogmas V Wimpy Kid

Lunchtime events transform the library into a social and welcoming space. A table set up with a challenge, a craft activity, or a voting station often sparks curiosity. Someone who had no intention of visiting the library may step inside just to see what is happening. Once they do, they are surrounded by books, displays, and friendly faces. Lunchtime events create opportunities for spontaneous engagement that might not happen at any other time of day. They also show that the library values participation in many different forms, not just quiet reading. Afterall, when people participate together, even briefly, they share experiences that build a sense of belonging. Over time, these shared moments help strengthen relationships between library users and staff. The library becomes known not just as a place to borrow books, but as a place where people feel comfortable, included, and valued.

Lunar New Year Display and handmade lanterns.

Lunchtime events quietly demonstrate the broader role of libraries. They show that libraries are dynamic spaces that respond to their communities, encourage creativity, and support wellbeing as well as learning. School libraries that use their lunchtime activities or challenges to build connections and rapport with their communities can turn an ordinary break into a meaningful connection and remind everyone why libraries matter.

Queensland School Library Week 2026

This week we celebrate Queensland School Library Week and this year’s theme, School Libraries Light the Way, perfectly captures what our library aims to do every day. School libraries illuminate pathways to learning, belonging, curiosity and joy. They guide students in reading, research, creativity and personal growth while promoting equity and inclusivity for every learner.

Here is how our library is commenced lighting the way in the first few weeks of 2026.

Lighting the Way for Reading, Research and Recreation

Book Clubs in Full Swing: Our book clubs for primary and secondary students have been meeting since Week 2 and the enthusiasm has been wonderful to see. These groups give students opportunities to read for pleasure, discuss ideas and connect with other readers across the school.

Sharing New Books: We continue to promote new books to staff and students. Whether it is a fresh fantasy adventure, a gripping nonfiction title or the newest young adult novel, we work hard to help every reader find something they will enjoy.

Supporting Teacher Professional Learning: We are also lighting the way for staff by ensuring our digital access to teacher journals is current, reliable and easy to use. We share these resources across school networks so that teachers can stay informed, inspired and connected to current practice.

Library Lessons for Years 5 to 8: Our library lessons support student interest and reading engagement. These sessions are planned to build student efficacy in navigating their own reading journey.

Information Literacy for Years 7 and 8: I collaborated with classroom teachers to deliver information literacy instruction that is authentic and practical. Students are learning to locate information, evaluate sources and use material ethically, which helps prepare them for success in school and beyond.

Lighting the Way for Equity and Inclusivity

Lunar New Year Activities: From this week we will offer Lunar New Year activities during language classes and at lunchtime. These activities build cultural understanding and celebrate the rich diversity of our school community so that every student feels valued and represented.

The Happy Book Dragon: Our library is also home to its resident happy book dragon (aka ME) who lives and breathes book trivia and reading joy. Sometimes lighting the way simply means sharing enthusiasm and creating a space where curiosity thrives.

Lighting the way together

Queensland School Library Week is a reminder of the powerful role a school library plays in the life of a community. From nurturing readers to supporting staff and celebrating cultural diversity, our library is proud to be a guiding light in our school.

Here is to a bright and book filled week and to the many ways libraries continue to light the way every day.

Banned Books Week: Censorship, Selection, and the Role of the Teacher Librarian.

Each year, Banned Books Week invites us to reflect on the importance of intellectual freedom and the dangers of censorship. Around the world, books are challenged or removed from shelves due to content deemed offensive or ideologically inappropriate by local authorities. These decisions often reflect broader societal tensions around race, gender, sexuality, and political beliefs.

In Australia, the free flow of information is protected by legislation such as the Freedom of Information Act, and championed by organisations like the Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA). ALIA upholds core values of open access to knowledge and ideas, ensuring that libraries remain spaces where diverse perspectives can be explored without fear or restriction. Public libraries, in particular, play a vital role in this mission by offering equitable access to information and digital resources for all citizens. Platforms like Trove, hosted by the National Library of Australia, further support this by providing access to a vast and growing collection of digitised newspapers, books, images, and more.

However, the conversation around banned books takes on a different tone in school libraries. Here, the issue is not so much about banning books, but about what to include. School libraries operate within a framework of collection development and management policies, which guide decisions about which resources best support the needs of the school community. The point of a school library is to support student success by providing access to resources that meets the curriculum whilst also fostering skills in reading, research and informational literacy. Therefore, any policies regarding the breadth and depth of a collection will factor in curriculum relevance, age appropriateness, and the diversity of student experiences.

So when I look at the list of most commonly banned books worldwide… I realise we have most of them on the shelves.

Most Commonly Banned Books Worldwide (All-Time)
  1. The Catcher in the Rye – J.D. Salinger
    Banned for profanity, sexual content, and themes of rebellion.
    • We have this title as it is considered a classic as is in our senior collection aimed for sophisticated readers in Grade 10 and above.
  2. To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee
    Challenged for racial themes and language
    • We have this title as it is considered a classic. It currently sits in our Classics collection and is available for students to borrow. It is also a class text and is frequently used as part of novel studies.
  3. 1984 – George Orwell
    Banned for political themes and criticism of totalitarianism
    • We have this title as it is considered a classic. It currently sits in our Classics collection and is available for students to borrow. It is also a class text and is frequently used as part of novel studies.
  4. Harry Potter series – J.K. Rowling
    Challenged for promoting witchcraft and occultism
    • We have numerous copies of this!
  5. The Satanic Verses – Salman Rushdie
    Banned in several countries for blasphemy
    • We don’t have this text as it does address the curriculum.
  6. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    Banned for sexual content and perceived anti-religious themes
    • We have this title as it is considered a classic. We do have this novel in our senior collection aimed for sophisticated readers in Grade 10 and above. It is also a class text and has been used as part of novel studies.
  7. Beloved – Toni Morrison
    Challenged for graphic depictions of slavery and violence.
    • We don’t have this text as part of our collection. We do have 12 years a slave, The Colour Purple and Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
  8. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    Banned for being “obscene” in several countries
    • We do not have this novel because it does not meet any curriculum requirements.
  9. Fifty Shades of Grey – E.L. James
    Banned for erotic content and BDSM themes
    • We do not have this novel because it does not meet any curriculum requirements.
  10. The Grapes of Wrath – John Steinbeck
    Banned for political reasons and profanity.
    • We do have this novel in our senior collection aimed for sophisticated readers in Grade 10 and above.

I will point out that one of the challenges of being in a school with students from Grade 5-12 is that what may be appropriate for a senior student to read may not me developmentally appropriate for a younger boy. To manage this, we have further classified the fiction texts into general (all years), middle fiction (Grades 7-9) and senior fiction (Grades 10-12). Students are able to freely access resources within their ‘age range’. However, they require parental permission to access more sophisticated readers. This ‘limiting’ of access is our way of supporting the free movement of information whilst acknowledging that some novel themes could cause distress to an immature brain.

This distinction of inclusion versus exclusion of texts is crucial. While public libraries are bound by principles of universal access, school libraries must balance educational goals with community values. This is where the role of a teacher librarian is imperative because school libraries need staff that are fully trained and qualified. They need someone who is an informational professional and an educator to be able to craft a collection development policy that helps ensure that resource selection is transparent, consistent, and inclusive, rather than reactive or restrictive. It is this combined capacity that empowers teacher librarians to advocate for collections that reflect the richness of student identities and the complexity of the world they inhabit. Unfortunately, here in Queensland, many schools lack a qualified informational professional in their school library, that is if they have a library at all! This an absolute travesty for the children and their wider communities.

Ultimately, Banned Books Week reminds us all why intellectual freedom matters. This week serves as a poignant reminder of the fragile nature of intellectual freedom as it honours the fundamental right to read, to explore ideas from all perspectives, and to seek truth without interference. Each year, the spotlight falls on books that have been challenged or removed because they represent discomfort or dissent for a select few individuals. However, in doing so, we need to think about the deeper cost of censorship: the narrowing of thought, the silencing of voices, and the erosion of a society built on open inquiry and democratic exchange. Whether in public or school libraries, our responsibility is to foster environments where curiosity is encouraged, critical thinking is nurtured, and all voices have the opportunity to be heard.

The Whimsical Wonder of Readathons: Reading for Joy, for Fun, for Pleasure!

Normally, my annual fundraiser is Frocktober, where for the month of October, I celebrate the gloriousness of frocks whilst fundraising for the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund. But this year, I’m mixing it up with something equally delightful and just a bit more bookish: a readathon! And not just any readathon—The World’s Coolest Readathon, hosted by the Australian Book Foundation. I saw that another wonderful Teacher Librarian Barbara from Bourke High School had signed up and then I thought… why not do it myself?

And what better way to kick things off than with a mystery? My first book for this readathon is Diabolical Bones by Sue Ellis—a Brontë Girls Mystery, borrowed from the ever-wonderful Brisbane City Council libraries. Gothic Yorkshire, clever heroines, and a touch of the macabre? Yes please.

A readathon, I’ve decided, is the perfect sequel to Book Month—like the epilogue where the characters (aka readers) get to celebrate their love of stories with wild abandon. It’s the encore performance, the bonus chapter, the literary afterparty.

Once upon a time, in a land not so far away (okay, it was my bedroom in Brisbane’s Southside), I embarked on a noble quest: the MS Readathon. Armed with a stack of books taller than my bedside lamp and a sponsorship sheet that made me feel like a literary philanthropist, I read my way through mysteries, adventures, and magical lands—all while raising money for a good cause. It was glorious.

Fast forward to today, and I find myself whispering reminders like a mantra: Read for fun. Read for joy. Read for pleasure. Because somewhere between grown-up responsibilities and inbox avalanches, the simple delight of reading can slip through the cracks.

Why Readathons Are Brilliant (and Backed by Science!) 

Readathons aren’t just nostalgic—they’re powerful tools for literacy, wellbeing, and community. Here’s why they’re so magical:

They Spark a Love of Reading: Choosing your own books makes reading feel like breathing—natural and joyful.

“Until I feared I would lose it, I never loved to read. One does not love breathing.

Harper LeeTo Kill a Mockingbird

They Boost Brains and Wellbeing: Reading for pleasure improves mental health and cognitive skills.

“Reading gives us someplace to go when we have to stay where we are.”
— Mason Cooley

They Create Lifelong Readers: Even reluctant readers get swept up in the fun.

“A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one.”
— George R.R. Martin

They Build Community: Fundraising through reading turns stories into shared kindness.

“No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.”
— Aesop

A Readathon Renaissance

Whether you’re a teacher, parent, librarian, or just a book-loving human, readathons offer a delightful way to reconnect with the joy of reading. They’re flexible, inclusive, and can be tailored to any age or interest. Plus, they’re a fabulous excuse to wear pajamas all day and call it “literary immersion.”

So if you, like me, sometimes need a nudge to read for the sheer pleasure of it, consider joining or hosting a readathon. You’ll be part of a movement that’s not just fun—it’s transformative.

And if you’re ready to dive in, check out The World’s Coolest Readathon. It’s got all the charm of the MS Readathon days, with a modern twist and a mission to make reading joyful again.

References