Skip to content
J Student Reporters

J Student Reporters

featured by The Korea Daily

Menu
  • Home
  • About Us
  • How To Join JSR
  • In Print
  • JSR FAQ
  • Contact Us
Menu

Children’s Libraries Provide New Learning Environments

Posted on March 30, 2013April 2, 2013 by Suhjung Lee
Students discuss and write their reflection about a book with the help of the librarian (Image Credit: Suhjung Lee).

In the face of educational inequality, Korea’s public libraries are providing numerous programs to nurture academic improvement.

Students write a scientific report based on the experiment that they did in Elementary Science class (Image Credit: Suhjung Lee).

The fervor for education seems unlikely to come to an end in South Korea, and costs continue to increase for private educational institutes and supplementary lessons. Aiming to be accepted to prestigious schools, students strive to be excel at academics amid fierce competition. Many parents are pressured to send their children to expensive private institutions for further enhancement.

Nevertheless, there are children who are completely excluded from this whole phenomenon. Children under or slightly above the poverty line are not fully capable of going to expensive private institutions since they lack financial support. Thus, public libraries are stepping in to provide opportunities to these children.

One such library, Jongam-dong New-day Children Library, was founded in Feb. 2011 to be an active learning environment for children in Seungbuk-gu. It stores a total of 21,065 children’s books in areas of philosophy, religion, sociology, science, technological science, arts, language, literature, and history. Children are able to visit the library during the day to read as many books as they want.

The library specializes in diverse programming.  According to Seok Mi-hyun, the librarian in charge of administration at New-Day, it has over 25 programs designed for children. With various activities in art, science, English, Chinese, Korean, reading, theatre, movie, reading, storytelling, speech presentation skills, history and pottery, children experience a deeper sense of learning.

A program called “Elementary Science” was designed to foster students in developing scientific curiosity by participating in science experiments. “Traveling World History” was a program for students to study various history and culture of different people. Through these programs, students establish a firm foundation of habitual reading and academic curiosity.

As an ideal model of a children’s library, New-day endeavors to provide valuable lessons to children.

Avatar photo

Suhjung Lee

Suh Jung Lee is a rising senior at Seoul Global High School. Spending her youth in Japan, Canada and Korea, she enjoys communicating with diverse people and seeks to have a broader view about the world. She is enthusiastic about journalism and desires to write articles that can contribute to the society.

More Posts

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

search articles

About JSR

Visit the J Student Board Instruction Manual website to access your Editorial Group pages, sign up for office hours, or brush up on JSR style.

www.EduBridgePlus.com JSR 기사 보기

search articles

Categories

About JSR

Visit the J Student Board Instruction Manual website to access your Editorial Group pages, sign up for office hours, or brush up on JSR style.

Apply 22nd JSR

©2025 J Student Reporters | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb