ABOUT LOVE LEARN LIBRARIAN

Welcome to Love Learn Librarian! I hope you can use this website to spark new ideas to engage your little learners at home!

I’m Jasmine, a full-time mother of two little learners and a former public librarian. I began my library career in 2007 and completed my Masters in Library Science from the University of North Texas in 2010. I worked in early literacy outreach as part of the library’s Every Child Ready to Read program for three years. During that time, I traveled hundreds of miles all across the city to schools, clinics, recreation centers, daycares and more to reach parents with young children, give away free childrens book and instill in them the importance of reading to their children from birth.

My work in early literacy quickly evolved into developing library programs to address the learning needs of the entire family. In 2014, I was featured by PBS/KERA as a local American Graduate Champion, and in 2015, I was selected as one of fifty librarians nationwide to be a library Mover and Shaker by Library Journal. In 2016, one year after having my first child, I decided to focus my energy on my growing family and have been a stay-at-home-mombrarian ever since. One of my final (and favorite) library projects was Books for Dallas Babies, an initiative to put books in mothers’ hands as soon as their babies are born.

I still have a passion for early literacy and public libraries that I just can’t shake. In fact, I’ve been to more library storytimes and have checked out more library books as a mom than I ever did as a working librarian. After the onset of the Great Quarantine, I found myself in need of a creative outlet that combined my previous work life with my current mom life, and to be a resource to families who are new to at-home learning, and that’s how Love Learn Librarian was born.

2 thoughts on “ABOUT LOVE LEARN LIBRARIAN

  1. Hello Jasmine,
    I too have a love for felt characters. I create them for my children’s programs at the North Canton Public Library. After 22 years of creating characters, I have two large boxes filled with each set contained in a ziplock bag. I am finding it increasingly difficult, as I create more sets, to adequately organize and store the sets. Storage is at a premium in the Children’s Department workroom which adds to the dilemma. Do you have any ideas/tips you can pass along? TIA, Carolyn

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