BLOGS > JULY 22, 2024
BY BETSY POTASH
In an era when a walk down an airplane aisle reveals dozens of people playing games on their phones or hooked into Hulu, and one person reading a book (maybe), it’s clear that our students aren’t going to fall into books by themselves. They’ve got a hundred choices for how to spend their free time, and most of them glow colorfully on a screen, beckoning at all hours of the day and night with updates, notifications, and promises of the new, social, and entertaining.
But what if a student had a gripping novel in her bag, right next to her phone? A novel she noticed in English class, displayed on a bright shelf of student favorites? What if she could identify with the main character and loved the writing? And she had already started it in class and wanted to know what happened?
Then that book would have a chance in the battle against her phone.
More and more secondary English teachers are discovering the power of choice reading. For many students, it’s the book they choose themselves that will ignite their connection to literature, not the book the whole class is reading. And when it comes to choice reading, a classroom library can make all the difference.
Whether it’s a collection of favorite books you check out from the school library, or a selection you build yourself over years in the classroom, it makes a huge difference to have the books students love right before their eyes.
When you have a classroom library, it’s easy for you to recommend the best of the book world to your students. It’s easy to solve the problem of “I forgot my book” during choice reading time, or to sub in a new and better novel for a student whose eyes have glazed over.
When you have a classroom library, you can create eye-catching displays that’ll keep students hanging out by your books. Simply stand favorites up along the top of your shelves to draw your kids over.
Consider popular display options like these:
You’ll find you also draw more students to your books if you can set your library up as a warm and inviting space. Keep an eye out for a thrift store couch or old bean bags in your friends’ basements. Adding a little flexible seating, a coffee table, and some Christmas lights can also go a long way towards making your classroom library appealing.
But, you might be wondering, who will pay for all this? The bookshelves? The books themselves? The Christmas lights and coffee table?
Well, there are lots of ways to get started. You can apply for a grant or donorschoose.org money if your school has no department budget for books and you’re eligible for this type of program. Then it’s time to hit rummage sales, library book sales, and odd corners of the internet. If you’ve got no budget and you can’t get one, you can still gather books. Dust off some of your own teenage favorites from your shelves and your childhood room and bring them in. Put the word out to your friends and students that you’re building a library and see what happens.
Just a quick word to the wise: more isn’t always better. Take care to put the kind of books on your shelves your students will want to read. They’re a lot more likely to return for more books when they pick up something amazing on one of their first tries. It’s better if they really can’t go wrong. So don’t worry about filling up every inch on your “new” thrift-store bookcase. Better to have a select few student favorites than a hundred dusty old tomes.
I hope you’ll agree with me that reading doesn’t matter any less to our students’ joy, personal growth, and academic success in high school than it does when they’re little. So let’s get great books out into the open where they can be seen. Building a classroom library is the perfect way to get started.
If you’d like more help building your independent reading library, you might want to sign up for my free email course, “5 Days to Build a Better Reading Program.” You can find more information here.
We will help you create fully customized classroom libraries, designed to meet the unique needs of your classrooms.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: BETSY POTASH
Betsy’s passion is helping English teachers build innovative and creative lessons. Get inspired and follow along with her at Spark Creativity.
An Author Interview with Don Everts
December 17, 2025
What peculiar thread connects secret superpowers, chicken farming, Victorian architecture, and the impossible awkwardness of being 14? Debut middle grade author Don Everts weaves it together for us in this conversation about his new book, Oscar and the Mystery of...
Read more
An Author Interview with Sara Amini and Illustrator Shadia Amin
December 17, 2025
Author Sara Amini and artist Shadia Amin team up for this charming, semi-autobiographical middle grade graphic memoir that explores evolving friendships, puberty mishaps, and finding a place to belong. Navigating life as a multiracial girl has never been more hilarious...
Read more
An Author Interview with Katherine Applegate
December 17, 2025
Go behind the scenes with Newbery Medal-winning author and literary superstar Katherine Applegate as she discusses her returns with two exciting new titles releasing in spring! First up is The Littlest Elephant, a picture book adaptation of the best-selling middle grade...
Read more
An Author Interview with Amy Timberlake and Illustrator Jon Klassen
December 17, 2025
Award-winning author Amy Timberlake and illustrator Jon Klassen team up to bring you the latest in the Skunk and Badger trilogy. Rock Paper Incisors follows odd-couple roommates Skunk and Badger as they explore the complexity of friendship and the meaning...
Read more
What We're Reading: Best of 2025
November 17, 2025
As the year wraps up, we’re highlighting the top books that sparked curiosity, inspired learning, and kept students turning pages in 2025. These eight standout titles – from award-winning historical fiction to imaginative adventures and engaging picture books – are...
Read more
Get Ahead of the 2026 ALA YMAs with These 5 Must-Read Contender Titles
November 1, 2025
This month, we’re diving into the most buzzworthy books of the year – handpicked by our Curation Team from our ALA Youth Media Award Contenders book list. These standout titles are generating serious award chatter, and we’re reading them now to...
Read more