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Hate Library Fines? Allow Your Students to Read Off Library Fines!

Do you allow your students to read off library fines? I started doing this and haven’t looked back! My middle schoolers were notorious for having tiny library fines that just sat around, unpaid, for months at at time. These pesky little fines used to drive me and the teachers nuts! How many students were not checking out any books because they had a 55 cent overdue fine? That was totally ridiculous, but district policy to charge fines left me with my hands tied. Here’s what I did to help…

OVERDUE LIBRARY FINES? NOT A FAN.

I haven’t made any secret of my dislike for overdue fines. In all honesty, I’m just happy to have the book back so the student can check out some new ones. Fines were the bane of my existence at my last school, where some students–for whatever reason–made no effort to pay off these pesky little fines. Having a fine over 50 cents also meant they didn’t get any new library books until they paid their fine down to below 50 cents. In some cases, students even used their library fines as an excuse to not have a book to read in class.

I decided to give them another way to pay off fines. We tried doing a canned food drive, but we got very few cans and still had plenty of unpaid late fees. The R.O.B.O.T. Challenge (Returning Our Books On Time) also helped a bit, but it still wasn’t nearly enough.

Then I had an epiphany. All students need to read. They read for their classes. All are expected to read for DEAR time, and English teachers expect them to read at home, too. Reading is free, so there could be no excuse for not reading to pay off the fines.

READ OFF LIBRARY FINES – THE BASICS

  • One minute of reading = one cent off the fine. A fine of 50 cents could be cleared by reading a total of 50 minutes.
  • Students who told me they were reading off library fines were allowed to check out one library book at a time in order to make that happen. Even if their fine was over 50 cents (our limit for checkout). They can’t read off a fine if they do not have a book.
  • My middle schoolers could only read off their own fine. Reading off library fines for friends was a no-no.
  • The student’s parent/guardian or any of their teachers could sign the read-off bookmark. Allowing teachers to sign made it easier for students with delicate family situations. Many students did their reading in class anyways.
  • Reading minutes could be broken up over several days or, if necessary, a few weeks.
  • In most cases, reading off library fines only applied to overdue fines. Students who lost or damaged a book were still expected to pay for a replacement. You could, however, use it at your discretion for a student who, due to financial hardship or family circumstances, is unable to pay off their lost or damaged book.

HOW TO DO IT

I’ve got a set of FREE bookmarks make reading off library fines super-easy! Just print, cut, and hand them out.

For every minute students read, they subtract one cent from their library fine. Once they’ve read enough minutes to eliminate the library fine, they get their parent or teacher to sign the bookmark (verifying students read what they said they read) and voila! The fine disappears, and the student can finally get a new book! It’s truly win-win, especially for those students who are not checking out any new books because they owe a fine.

WHERE CAN I GET THE BOOKMARKS?

The bookmarks below are available in my Free Resource Library. The password changes periodically, but you can subscribe to my email list to get the current password. Open the PowerPoint file to edit the bookmarks to suit your library. There are six front-to-back bookmarks on each page, which will help save paper.

This is a free printable bookmark that helps students read off their library fines.

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