Library Policy
effective Date:
1) Mission & Values
The Al Huda Islamic School Library nurtures a love of reading, information literacy, and lifelong learning within an Islamic ethical framework. We support coursework across KG1–12, character education (adab), and community engagement. We promote:
- Amanah (trust): Responsible use of shared materials and spaces.
- Adab (character): Respect, kindness, and academic honesty.
- Ilm (knowledge): Access to quality, age‑appropriate resources in print and digital formats.
2) Scope of Services
- Print Collection: Picture books, early readers, fiction/nonfiction, reference, Islamic studies, Arabic, STEM, and teacher resources.
- Electronic Resources: eBooks, audiobooks, research databases, encyclopedias, and curated websites/OPAC.
- Technology & Equipment: Laptops/tablets, headphones, calculators, chargers, document cameras (as available); makerspace basics (paper circuits, LEGOs, craft tools) where offered.
- Instruction & Programs: Library orientations, research skills, digital citizenship, author visits, reading challenges, book clubs.
- Reader’s Advisory: Personalized book recommendations, classroom support lists.
3) Access & Eligibility
- Students (KG1–12) and staff may borrow materials with an active school account. Parents/guardians may visit during posted family hours (check‑in at the office).
- Equity of Access: Reasonable accommodations are available; alternative formats can be provided upon request. The library observes prayer times and ensures schedule alignment with school worship breaks.
4) Collection Development
- Selection Criteria: Age/level suitability, curriculum relevance, accuracy, quality of writing/illustration, diversity of perspectives, alignment with school values, and demand.
- Islamic Resources: Qur’an translations/tafāsīr, sīrah, fiqh for youth, Muslim biographies—selected for age appropriateness and reputable scholarship.
- Review Process: Librarian (chair), two teachers (rotating), and administrator review new categories/controversial topics. Vendor lists and reputable review journals are consulted.
- Weeding (Deselection): Outdated, worn, duplicated, or low‑use items are removed per CREW‑style guidelines; records updated and items disposed of per school procedures.
5) Gifts & Donations
- Acceptance: Donations are reviewed using the same selection criteria as purchases. The library may decline items not meeting needs/condition standards.
- Disposition: Accepted items may be added, offered at school book sales, or recycled. Acknowledgment letters are available upon request (no monetary valuation).
6) Cataloging & Classification
- Materials are cataloged in the school’s OPAC with age/grade levels and subject headings. Dewey Decimal (or simplified) is used for nonfiction; fiction by author; Arabic titles labeled with language codes.
7) Circulation Policy
Loan Periods (Standard)
| Patron | Item Type | Limit | Loan | Renewals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| KG1–Gr2 | Picture/Early Reader | 2 | 2 weeks | 1 if no hold |
| Gr3–Gr5 | Fiction/Nonfiction | 3 | 3 weeks | 1 if no hold |
| Gr6–Gr8 | Books & Audiobooks | 4 | 3 weeks | 1 if no hold |
| Gr9–Gr12 | Books, Audiobooks | 5 | 3 weeks | 1 if no hold |
| Staff | All print | 15 | 6 weeks | As needed |
Reference/Reserve: Library‑use only unless approved by librarian.
Holds: Available through OPAC; holds expire after 5 school days.
Overdues, Lost, & Damaged
- Fine‑Free for Students: No daily late fines. Borrowing may pause if items are 14+ days overdue.
- Lost/Damaged Fee: Replacement cost + $2 processing. Family may provide identical replacement (new/like‑new) with librarian approval.
- Notifications: Email reminders at 7 and 14 days; final notice at 21 days.
Special Items
- Equipment/Devices: Daily checkout for class use; some items require signed Equipment Agreement. Late return may incur usage block and device‑specific fee schedule.
8) Electronic Resources & Devices
- Access: Students log in with school credentials; off‑campus access may require SSO/VPN as provided.
- Filtering & Safety: Internet filters per school IT/AUP settings; educator‑approved platforms prioritized. The library complies with applicable laws (e.g., CIPA) and school policies.
- Use Guidelines: Research first, entertainment last; headphones for audio; respect battery/charging stations. Staff may limit session length during peak times.
9) Acceptable Use & Academic Integrity
- Respectful Conduct: Quiet voices, care for materials, and kindness toward peers and staff.
- Academic Honesty: Cite sources; avoid plagiarism; follow teacher citation style (MLA/APA) as assigned.
- Privacy: The library protects the confidentiality of circulation and search records consistent with school policy and applicable laws (e.g., FERPA). Parents/guardians may access their child’s records upon verified request.
10) Space Use & Supervision
- Elementary Classes: Visit with teacher/aid; small groups with passes.
- Middle/High School: Pass required during class hours; independent study allowed when space permits.
- Events: Book fairs, author talks, and clubs scheduled through the librarian; room reservations via Library Event Request.
11) Behavior & Safety
- Expected: Mindful movement, food‑free stacks, capped drinks at tables, clean work areas, and adherence to dress/modesty rules.
- Prohibited: Disruptive behavior, vandalism, unsafe play, and bypassing internet filters. Staff may redirect, document, and notify administration.
- Emergency: Follow school emergency procedures; exits and muster points posted.
12) Instruction & Collaboration
- Teacher Requests: Submit Instruction Request Form (at least 5 school days prior) for research lessons, database demos, or book tubs.
- Curricular Support: Co‑plan units (inquiry, STEM, Islamic studies, ELA, social studies); align with Arizona academic standards and school goals.
13) Inclusion & Accessibility
- Multiple reading levels, high‑interest/low‑readability options, large print, audiobooks, and bilingual/Arabic materials available where possible. The library strives for culturally responsive titles and representation.
14) Challenged Materials Procedure
- Share concerns with the librarian for informal review.
- If unresolved, submit a Reconsideration Request.
- A review committee (librarian, administrator, teacher, and parent rep) evaluates the item using selection criteria.
- Principal issues a written decision; appeals go to the Head of School/Board designee.
15) Data & Records
- Circulation Data: Retained minimally for operations, then anonymized/cleared per IT policy.
- Inventory: Conducted annually; discrepancies reported to administration.
16) Volunteers
- Roles: Shelving, displays, book fairs, read‑alouds, processing.
- Requirements: Orientation, confidentiality agreement, and background clearance per school policy.
17) Communication
- Updates via school newsletter, announcements, and library homepage/OPAC. Families may opt into reading challenge emails.
18) Review Cycle & Amendments
This policy is reviewed every 2 years or as needed by changes in curriculum, enrollment, technology, or law. Revisions are approved by the Principal.
Appendices (Templates)
- A. Student/Parent Library Account Agreement
- B. Equipment Checkout Agreement
- C. Instruction Request Form
- D. Event/Room Request Form
- E. Reconsideration Request (Challenged Materials)
- F. Volunteer Agreement & Confidentiality Statement
Notes for Implementation
- Publish OPAC link and quick‑action buttons: Search Catalog, Place a Hold, Request a Title, Pay Replacement Online (if enabled).
- Add Ramadan/Exam‑week hours banner as needed.
- Keep a visible “New & Noteworthy” shelf and an Islamic Studies spotlight display.