Twenty-four percent of school librarians have been harassed this past year over books or displays in their library. That’s according to a recent SLJ survey, which found the rate even higher among high school librarians, 30 percent of whom have experienced harassment.
Twenty-four percent of school librarians have experienced harassment during the last year related to books or displays in their library. That’s according to a recent SLJ survey, which found the rate even higher among high school librarians, 30 percent of whom report being harassed.
Those perpetrating the intimidation are most frequently parents, followed by organized groups, reports the Controversial Book survey fielded in May 2023 and garnering 729 respondents.
Open-end comments related to incidents involving books/displays in the library ranged in nature and severity.
Survey respondents told us:
To download the complete survey results, see our coverage:
Book Challenges Are Having a Chilling Effect on School Librarians Nationwide | SLJ Survey
Our research include comparisons with data gathered from SLJ’s 2022 controversial books survey. However, this is the first time we have posed a question regarding personal harassment.
METHODOLOGY
An email inviting recipients to take a survey about selecting books with potentially controversial subject matter was sent to a random sample of U.S. school librarians on May 1, 2023. Responses were anonymous. The survey closed on May 17 with 729 U.S. school libraries responding.
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