Libraries Keep Kids Learning Over The Summer

Summer is the perfect time for students of all ages to relax, but it’s also a time when learning loss can occur. One of the best resources to avoid the so-called “summer slide” is the library. 

Summer is the perfect time for students of all ages to relax, but it’s also a time when learning loss can occur. One of the best resources to avoid the so-called “summer slide” is the library. 

On a recent Tuesday morning, the Morgantown Public Library is holding its weekly Summer Reading Program event. Dwight Overstreet helps his youngest son Riley complete the worksheet about friendship in literature. His older son is upstairs, looking at anime books.

Overstreet brought both his sons to the Morgantown Public Library to take part in the day’s activities and pick out some new books. 

“I’ve never seen the excitement on both of my boys’ faces when they walk into the library,” he said. “I think it is of such a huge vital importance for a child’s development to come to a public library like this.

Despite living in Morgantown for almost a decade, Overstreet says it’s only the second time he’s brought his children to the library. But as a middle school teacher, he recognizes the importance of summer reading.

“I think it’s wonderful,” Overstreet said. “I do think a lot of it is for them to utilize their abilities, to enhance them because reading is such a fundamental skill that you use from a young age to even as an adult.” 

Libraries provide a unique bridge for children during the summer months they’re out of school. A study by the Education Commission of the States found that while students make similar achievement gains during the school year, disadvantaged youth fall significantly behind in reading during the summer.

The same analysis found that two-thirds of the 9th-grade reading achievement gap can be explained by unequal access to summer learning opportunities during the elementary school years.

Sarah Palfrey is the director of the Morgantown Public Library system. She says Overstreet isn’t alone in delaying a trip to the library in recent years. But she says this summer has shown a marked increase in the public’s engagement with libraries since the COVID-19 pandemic emergency subsided. 

“The enthusiasm is through the roof, both from the staff side of things and from the community,” she said. “We have been really pleased to see people, the return of a lot of families that we hadn’t seen for a while.”

Palfrey says increased engagement is great to see because reading experts agree that all reading counts toward a child’s development. 

“But any kind of reading, all reading counts,” she said. “That’s our always at the baseline of everything.”

That means everything from picture books, to more traditional chapter books, graphic novels and even audiobooks count, regardless of topic.

“I think the biggest benefit that most kids get out of summer reading is sort of being in charge of choosing their own books,” Palfrey said. “Kids get told what to read a lot and summer reading gives them an opportunity to explore their own interests, read all the Minecraft books, all the Lego books.” 

If your last experience with summer reading was from your own school days, things have changed a little bit. 

Megan Tarbett is the director of the Putnam County Libraries as well as the president of the West Virginia Library Association. She says libraries have moved away from challenges or reading counts, and instead try to encourage library visitors to embrace the reading experience.

“We’ve moved away from quantitative logging of books for the children. We do bingo sheets and the things are, ‘I read for 15 minutes, I read outside, I picked a new book, I’ve visited the library,’” Tarbett said. “It’s different things instead of ‘I’ve read 100 books this summer,’ or ‘I only read two books this summer,’ because we don’t want to make anyone feel like their reading is less worthy, because they didn’t read as much.” 

Libraries across the state and the country are hoping to not only keep kids learning during the summer, but more importantly spark a self-directed love of reading and learning. 

Libraries also help with what Tarbett calls the business of life.

“Copiers, faxes, notaries, sometimes people are scrambling to try to print things and they forget that, you know, the library is there for them,” Tarbett said. “A lot of it is getting them to come to us with what they need, whether that’s entertainment or sustenance.”

Some libraries in West Virginia even serve as locations for summer food services, places where students can get free meals. And as temperatures heat up, libraries can play another important role in the community as simply a place to cool down and get away from the heat.

“It’s also uniquely situated as we require nothing of you to be in the building,” Tarbett said. “You can come in, use our computers, read our books, look at our magazines and never get a card. I don’t need to know who you are. And you don’t have to pay me a dime to just be in this place. And that is such a rarity. The library expects nothing of you.”

Old School Fly Fishing Rods And Minor League Baseball Lore, Inside Appalachia

This week on Inside Appalachia, we meet a craftsman who builds exquisite, handmade fly rods and shares his love of fishing with others. We also talk about Appalachia’s nurse shortage, and we hear stories about Appalachian baseball.

This week, we meet a craftsman who builds exquisite, handmade fly rods and shares his love of fishing with others.

We also talk about Appalachia’s nurse shortage. Experts say tackling racism could help attract and keep more nurses.

We also hear stories about Appalachian baseball and listen to the story of how a minor league team in Tennessee traded its shortstop — for a turkey.

You’ll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.

In This Episode:


The Tao Of Fly Fishing Rods

The path from making the fly fishing rod to using it is long, but still ends in the river.

Credit: Zack Harold/West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Fly fishermen are a different breed. There’s plenty of newfangled fishing gear out there, but some folks prefer to fish with hand-made rods made with traditional materials.

Folkways Reporter Zack Harold takes us along on a trip to the Elk River to learn more.

Nursing Crisis In Kentucky

Health care access is still a major problem in our region. Along with a lack of facilities, there’s a growing need for more nurses — especially nurses who are people of color.

WFPL’s Morgan Watkins reports. 

Reviewing The Story Of West Virginia’s Statehood

Mason Adams hears more about West Virginia’s split from Virginia, which was more complex than choosing to stay with the union.

Courtesy

If you live in and around West Virginia, you’ve probably heard the history of how the state split off from Virginia. But if your history classes didn’t get into it, or if you don’t remember the finer points, West Virginia University (WVU) history professor Hal Gorby explains what people get wrong about the creation of West Virginia.

Inside Appalachia Host Mason Adams spoke with Gorby.

Baseball Lore In Appalachia

“Tales from the Dugout: 1001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball” explores some of the stories of the minor leagues.

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Minor league baseball is back. Through early fall, there’s almost always a game happening somewhere. Veteran minor league baseball announcer Tim Hagerty is the author of “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball.”

Bill Lynch spoke with Hagerty about minor league ball and some of Appalachia’s best baseball lore.  

——

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Tyler Childers, Erik Vincent Huey, Jeff Ellis, and Alabama.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Summer Reading Suggestions, Inside Appalachia

Inside Appalachia loves books and writers – and if you’re looking for summer book recommendations, we’ve got a bunch. This is our summer reading episode, featuring some of our favorite notable author interviews from over the past several months. 

Inside Appalachia loves books and writers – and if you’re looking for summer book recommendations, we’ve got a bunch.

This is our summer reading episode, featuring some of our favorite notable author interviews from over the past several months. 

You’ll hear these stories and more this week, Inside Appalachia.

In This Episode:


Silas House Talks Climate Calamity With “Lark Ascending”

“Lark Ascending” is a post-apocalyptic story about the ravages of climate change.

Written by Kentucky’s Silas House, the novel racked up several awards including the 2023 Southern Book Prize and the 2023 Nautilus Book Award. 

Mason Adams spoke with House following the release of “Lark Ascending,” last fall.  

Kentucky poet laureate Silas House spoke to Mason Adams about his novel “Lark Ascending.”

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Barbara Kingsolver’s Appalachia Explored In “Demon Copperhead”

A Pulitzer Prize winning novel is typically considered “a solid read,” and even before it took the honor, Barbara Kingsolver’s “Demon Copperhead” was attracting attention.

In 2022, Kingsolver was the Appalachian Heritage Writer-in-Residence at Shepherd University in West Virginia. 

WVPB’s Liz McCormick sat down with Kingsolver to talk about Appalachia and the book. 

Author Barbara Kingsolver.

Credit: Evan Kafka

Frank X. Walker Talks Poetry and Affricachia

Thirty years ago, Kentucky poet Frank X. Walker rebelled against the definition of Appalachians as, “the white residents of the Appalachian mountains” and coined the phrase “Affrilachia.” 

Walker’s latest is “A is for Affrilachia,” a children’s book.  

It’s been called “an ode to Affrilachia.” 

WVPB’s Eric Douglas spoke with Walker. 

Cover art for Frank X. Walker’s children’s book, “A is for Affrilachia.”

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Hotdogs In the Hills With Emily Hilliard

One of our favorite recent non-fiction books has been “Making Our Future: Visionary Folklore and Everyday Culture in Appalachia,” by folklorist Emily Hilliard.

It’s chock full of quirky Appalachian culture – from indie pro wrestling to the video game “Fallout 76” and more.

Folkways Reporter and resident foodie Zack Harold talked West Virginia hotdogs with Hilliard.

Emily Hilliard’s book relishes Appalachian culture.

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Women Speak In Appalachia

For a sampling of women writers, especially poets, you might check out any of the eight volumes of “Women Speak,” an anthology series collecting the work of Appalachian women.

The books are edited by Kari Gunter-Seymour, Ohio’s poet laureate.  

Inside Appalachia Producer Bill Lynch spoke with Gunter-Seymour about poetry, getting published, and Appalachian Ohio.

——

Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert. Other music this week was provided by Del Mcoury, The Appalachian Road Show, Little Sparrow, Buck Owens and Tim Bing.

Bill Lynch is our producer. Zander Aloi is our associate producer. Our executive producer is Eric Douglas. Kelley Libby is our editor. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens.

You can send us an email: InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

You can find us on Instagram and Twitter @InAppalachia. Or here on Facebook.

Sign-up for the Inside Appalachia Newsletter!

Inside Appalachia is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

New Book Explores Minor League Baseball Lore

Announcer Tim Hagerty says there’s more to baseball than just the game. He’s the author of “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball,” which takes a look at sillier parts of America’s favorite pastime. Bill Lynch spoke with Hagerty about minor league ball and even baseball in West Virginia.

Announcer Tim Hagerty says there’s more to baseball than just the game. He’s the author of “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball,” which takes a look at sillier parts of America’s favorite pastime.

Bill Lynch spoke with Hagerty about minor league ball and even baseball in West Virginia. 

The transcript below has been lightly edited for clarity.  

Lynch: Tim Hagerty, tell me a little about yourself. Tell me how you got into baseball.

Hagerty: Well, I was fortunate that my high school had a cable access broadcast station at it. So I got to broadcast games when I was 16 or 17, and I knew this is what I wanted to pursue. 

I grew up in Massachusetts and was passionate about baseball. I loved playing. 

I was the type of kid that, even in Massachusetts, if you asked me to name ten Kansas City Royals, I could do it. I knew the rosters. I knew the statistics. I was the type of kid that would read the box scores every day. 

And now in my job, that helps me, actually, because a lot of those players that I was following as a fan, as a kid, have become coaches and scouts.

Sometimes I’ll be in a press box, and somebody introduces themselves and I’ll say, “Oh, you played for Cincinnati,” and they sort of looked at me, surprised. 

So, I guess my childhood passion has helped me as an adult. 

Lynch: Where did your career take you? 

Hagerty: Yeah, I targeted a college – Northern Vermont University – that had a really specific broadcast program. And what was great about that was in a rural area that I was able to broadcast games for a local AM station. 

First job was in Idaho Falls, Idaho – beautiful city. That’s where the Royals AAA, excuse me, Royals rookie league team is. And it was there that I met a young player, Billy Butler, who went on to be a Major League All Star, and we’ve occasionally remained in touch, and he actually contributed the foreword to my new book.

So, it was fun to reconnect with him.

From there, went to Mobile, Alabama. From there, went to Portland, Oregon, Tucson, Arizona, and now I’m in El Paso, Texas with the Padres AAA team.

Lynch: So, what do you like about minor league baseball?

Hagerty: A lot. I think it’s the ultimate community event. There are so many fans who love the Cardinals or the Pirates or the Braves. 

But in smaller cities – there’s something about Charleston across that player’s jersey. That’s your city. That’s your professional team. 

What I also love about it is that in a lot of minor league cities, I hear from fans who say, “My parents brought me here. Now, I’m bringing my kids.”

And also, just how different it is. I’ve been fortunate enough to broadcast games, and about 60 different stadiums. They’re not all alike. You know, to me, the local ballpark is much like a local community. Each of them has their own flavor.

Lynch: Let’s talk about the book. This is your second book, isn’t it?

Hagerty: It is. Yeah, my first book came out in 2012. That was about the craziest team names in minor league history, including the Wheeling Stogies, named after a cigar. 

But my new book “Tales from the Dugout: 1001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball,” is about the wildest stories that have ever taken place. 

And speaking of Wheeling, in West Virginia, the oldest story that I found in my book takes place there in 1877. 

Wheeling puts together this promotion in which fans would try to capture a greased pig. And if you got the pig, you got to keep the pig. And what it taught me was that these days minor league teams do all sorts of crazy things to sell tickets and to get media attention. That’s not new. 

Wheeling was trying wild things in 1877.

Lynch: So, the research on this. Where did you find the stories?

Hagerty: I’ve always loved baseball research, and there’s a lot of different sources. 

The origin of this book, when researching something else back in 2012. I found this 1880s newspaper archive and it talked about a Texas league game in Austin that got delayed when a wild bull ran on the field. 

I don’t know about you, but when you see something like that, I want to know everything about this. 

The bull was kicking up dust. Fans are shrieking. It knocked down a fence. And that taught me that hidden in newspaper archives are so many baseball stories that a lot of people don’t know about. 

I went to the Baseball Hall of Fame Library in Cooperstown, which is a great resource. They have a lot of old baseball publications there. 

There was also the Spalding-Reach guide. 

It was an annual publication that baseball fans devoured. It was really the only thing of its kind from the late 1800s through the early 1900s. And it would have a lot of statistics and rosters and basic stuff, but also would have these wild stories. 

So, it was fun to flip through there.

Lynch: With 1,001 stories in your book, do you have one that’s a favorite for you?

Hagerty: Well, probably the one that took the most time to research – in 1978, there was a fly ball that disappeared.

AA Bristol was at AA Jersey City in the eastern league, and I wasn’t able to pinpoint the batter, but a Jersey City batter hit a high fly ball to right field and it vanished. It didn’t land on the field. It didn’t go over the fence. It didn’t land in the stands. And I know that sounds crazy, but I’m talking to players who are on the field at the time I corresponded with somebody who was in the stands and everybody sort of described it the same way, like, just speechless. What happened to this ball?

So, the umpires got together. They understandably don’t know what the rule is when a ball goes up and never comes down. So, they gave the batter a double.

Yeah, in tonight’s game in Charleston or Bluefield, if a ball goes up and disappears, there’s precedent. It’s a double.

Lynch: The book is called “Tales from the Dugout: 1,001 Humorous, Inspirational & Wild Anecdotes from Minor League Baseball.”

Tim, thanks a lot.

Hagerty: Thank you, Bill.

Prison Book Bans Don’t Get As Much Attention

The Marshall Project, a nonprofit newsroom focused on the criminal justice system, published a searchable database of the books banned in 18 state prison systems. Some states, like West Virginia, didn’t provide banned book lists, but the states provided book policies on how they ban books in the first place. Banned book lists are available for download.

Book bans in schools and libraries have been in the news lately, but books are also being banned in prisons without much public attention.

The Marshall Project, a nonprofit newsroom focused on the criminal justice system, published a searchable database of the books banned in 18 state prison systems. Some states, like West Virginia, didn’t provide banned book lists, but the states provided book policies on how they ban books in the first place. Banned book lists are available for download

News Director Eric Douglas spoke with Andrew Calderon about the project and what it means in West Virginia prisons. 

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Douglas: Explain to me why prisons ban books in the first place?

Calderon: From the perspective of the policies that we reviewed, it seems that there is a really big concern on books being a threat to order or security, be it because the books themselves can be used to smuggle in contraband or because information can be transmitted in them in the forms of notes or highlights. Sometimes the policies also make it clear that the format of the book itself can be considered a threat. For example, there are some systems that ban spiral binding or hardcover books. It’s unclear to me based on the reporting that I’ve done to what extent books have been used in those ways. Either they’ve incited violence or been used as part of gang activity or something to be able to smuggle contraband or information, but it seems that the policies themselves elicit a very explicit fear of that happening. 

We also spoke to many people who are trying to get books into prisons and have been doing so for decades. And from their perspective, the policies are overly restrictive and make it hard for both their programs, as well as family members of the incarcerated, to get much needed information into the facilities. For example, many people who try to get books into prison systems often rely on donations because price is a major concern. And there’s one example out of Wisconsin where a group sent in a number of new books that were beaten up by the mail carrier in the course of transport, and by the time they made it to the mailroom, the mailroom deemed them to be used because they were so mangled and sent them back. 

Douglas: Is this something that’s gotten more restrictive in the last 20 years? Or are these policies that have been in place for a while?

Calderon: I don’t have a clear answer on that. But what I can say is that there is a sense among people who are working on this space that because of the environment around book bans, in general, across the country, especially in the education system, that there might be ways in which the prison systems will respond and themselves also become more restrictive, because ultimately they are public entities. And many of these prohibitions happen much less publicly than they do in schools. And so it’s possible that it’s already happening. And it’s just really hard for us to know. 

From the policy review we did, we managed to get policies from 37 states. And we found that in four states plus the federal system, there’s an explicit ban on having a banned book list inside of the facilities. And so in those systems, it’s virtually impossible for us to know which books are being prohibited and which ones are being allowed into the facility.

Douglas: So they literally have a rule that says there can’t be a list of books that we’ve banned. But we are banning books.

Calderon: That’s right. I spoke with an official in Alaska, which is one of those states, and asked him about the pros and cons of this policy. And what he said to me was that he thinks that it’s better this way, because every single book is reviewed on a case-by-case basis and on its own merits. At the same time, he acknowledged that it does leave room for inconsistencies, but that in a system like Alaska is, which he said is small, it’s about 5,000 people who are incarcerated, and a small number of people who are working, they in part rely on institutional memory, to prevent those inconsistencies. And they also think that the appeals process for people who are incarcerated whenever they do receive a rejection, which is common in many states, can also be a corrective. 

Douglas: Let’s talk about West Virginia for a minute. I know you don’t have a whole lot of specific information on the state but you did get West Virginia’s policy. What is the state policy on books in prisons?

Calderon: So for West Virginia, in particular, there were specific criteria listed for when a book should or should not be banned. That included some of the common things that we see in other policies like nudity, violence, etc. West Virginia also has an appeals process that allows people who are incarcerated who receive a rejection to appeal that process through the grievance system. And also in the policy, there’s room actually for the possibility that people in the mailroom who are reviewing the books who may not have all of the knowledge or understanding of the book necessary to be able to make a decision about whether or not it should be banned. And so there’s recourse for the mailroom to consult with legal counsel, as well. 

There are also some specific deadlines that need to be observed, like the person who’s incarcerated has about 20 days to submit an internal grievance when they receive a rejection. And it’s important to note that because largely whether or not they receive the rejection in a timely manner, determines whether or not they’re able to file the grievance in a timely manner, which we’ve heard in some systems can sometimes be a problem as well.

Douglas: The way you’re talking about restrictions at the mailroom level, I would think decisions on what books can be allowed would be handled by a librarian, or by somebody in management, rather than just somebody in the mailroom who’s opening packages. 

Calderon: We’ve heard from people who interact with the system, often when they’re sending books in, they’ll say that they often get rejection letters that show that there’s a complete misunderstanding of the substance of the book, or that in some cases, a book is rejected, just because the person who’s reviewing the book, the CO [Corrections Officer], doesn’t like the recipient, or has some problem with them, and will also reject it, just make it difficult for things to get to that person. That’s something that’s hard to prove, but it’s apparently not uncommon in the system for people to say that’s what’s happening.

Douglas: West Virginia is one of those states that does not maintain a list of banned books within the system. Is that correct?

Calderon: West Virginia is one of the states that explicitly bans the creation of a banned book list. 

Douglas: Anything else you can tell me about West Virginia specifically?

Calderon: Not to put too fine a point on it, but it’s in part because they don’t have a banned book list. If I had a banned book list, we’d be able to glean more about the system. And you know how these decisions are made when they’re made, the reasons that certain books are rejected, what kinds of books are rejected, and this speaks to, however well-meaning the policy of not having banned books are. To give credit to the institution or to be charitable to them, I’m sure that whoever wrote this down had some sense of the positives. But it does create an opacity that doesn’t allow us to glean what is happening inside of the system. And that doesn’t come without its disadvantages.

Douglas: What are some of the positive reasons for not having a banned book list?

Calderon: Well, from our conversation with an official from Alaska, he said that not having a banned book list in the state of Alaska makes it so that books aren’t just rejected outright because of their presence on the list, and that it forces the institution to review every book on a case by case basis to assess it on its own merits and to see whether or not it does or does not run afoul of the policy. I would assume that a similar logic might apply in other states that have decided to adopt this policy, as well. But it comes with the disadvantage that we simply can’t track what books are being banned and why.

Douglas: For the states that you do have data on, how big are these lists? I mean, what’s the scope of the problem? 

Calderon: The frequency with which books are rejected varies from system to system. So as you can imagine, Florida and Texas have some of the largest carceral systems, therefore have some of the biggest banned book lists. And then you have other states that have much shorter lists, you know, maybe only a couple of 100 entries. There’s always the possibility of data, errors or issues with data collection, so maybe more books are being banned and they’re not being entered into the system.

There are many books that are being banned, because they’re considered inflammatory. But oftentimes, those are books that have to do with Black empowerment, Civil Rights, there are also books that we found that perhaps are not about history, but have also been considered dangerous, like yoga books, or books about meditation. Sometimes books are banned, not because of the substance of the book, maybe a Yoga Book is banned, because somebody in the book, there’s an image of them that exposes a part of their body, like their chest, and the person in the mailroom might deem that it’s too salacious for the the facility and so they will reject it. 

For example, someone wrote to us to say that they wanted to send their brother a book of art by Ai Weiwei, a famous Chinese artist. And in one of the pages of the book the artist appears semi-nude. And they rejected the book in Arizona because of nudity. 

Douglas: Is there anything we haven’t talked about?

Calderon: We’re really interested in building relationships with people who have experience in this system, either from the inside or from the outside. If they want to reach out to us, we have tried to make that easy on our website, if you go to TheMarshallProject.com.

We also have an email that people can use to send us any tips or to write to us about their experience, which is BookBans@TheMarshallProject.com

Banning Books In Prisons On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, news about book bans have been in the spotlight lately, but books are also being banned in prisons without much public attention. The Marshall Project, a nonprofit newsroom focused on the criminal justice system, published a searchable database of the books banned in 18 state prison systems. News Director Eric Douglas spoke with Andrew Calderon about the project and what it means in West Virginia prisons.

On this West Virginia Morning, news about book bans have been in the spotlight lately, but books are also being banned in prisons without much public attention.

The Marshall Project, a nonprofit newsroom focused on the criminal justice system, published a searchable database of the books banned in 18 state prison systems.

News Director Eric Douglas spoke with Andrew Calderon about the project and what it means in West Virginia prisons.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from West Virginia University, Concord University, and Shepherd University.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

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