ImaginOn and Founders Hall Library will be closed May 2-4 for the Lovin’ Life Music Fest.

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Get to know the West Boulevard Branch community

March 21, 2023

The West Boulevard Library is conveniently located along the West Boulevard Corridor on the bus line for ease of access. This close-knit community on the westside of Charlotte houses several long established neighborhoods. Serving as a meeting place for its residents, West Boulevard Library is a warm and welcoming community hub. The West Boulevard Branch’s world language collection contains a wide variety of Spanish materials for all ages, along with a sprinkling of other languages. The community looks to the staff of the West Boulevard Library for its digital literacy needs. This Library branch strives to develop and support partnerships with other community resources to enrich the lives of the residents.

Located within a mile of the Library is the Arbor Glen Outreach Facility, home of Clanton Road Community Park and Arbor Glen Recreation Center. The recreation center offers programming and sports for all ages. The park houses basketball courts, play equipment for children and features an outdoor bike playground where kids and adults can practice road biking etiquette.

Another community staple nearby is the Stratford Richardson YMCA. The Stratford Y boasts of innovative programming and hosts seasonal community block parties which give newcomers and longtime residents an opportunity to connect with Library staff and other community organizations.

The West Boulevard Library is a proud partner of the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition, a non-profit organization that focuses on improving public health, economic development, and education for the West Boulevard corridor residents.

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Make sure to visit the Three Sisters Market across the street from the Library. This community garden was created by the West Boulevard Neighborhood Coalition to meet the grocery needs of the West Boulevard Corridor. Through WNC’s program called Seeds for Change, neighborhood youth are educated on urban farming and leadership development training as they work in the community garden that supplies the Market. At Three Sisters Market, you will find the freshest vegetables in the area and don’t forget to pick up a jar of local honey.

“New to Charlotte? Explore other neighborhoods through the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library blog and WelcomeCLT, a digital space created for newcomers to Charlotte.”

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What began as a small monthly book club with staff at Sugar Creek Library and local fifth graders, has turned into a weekly sounding board for students to have intimate, and sometimes intense, discussions on racism through a shared love of reading.

What is so special about reading?

March 30, 2023

This blog was written by Alicia Harris, library assistant at South County Regional Library.

Reading allows complex, conceptual thoughts to be understood in a gradual, methodical way.  Using narrative, ideas and thoughts are formed in a linear fashion, allowing them to be encoded into memory.  It is true that when writing and reading became the mode of communication during Socrates’ time, this “new technology” was criticized, according to author Nicholas Carr in his book, The Shallows: What The Internet Is Doing To Our Brains, for cheapening thought processes that had historically used rote memorization and oration as the means of expression.  No longer needing to memorize in order to later recite, it could be said something was lost as many now suggest that heavy use of disruptive media is harming our minds by disallowing deep thought and shortening attention spans.  Reading is also restorative and private.  It allows one to digest another’s ideas and stories in a dialectical manner, mulling over the assertions or descriptions while perhaps eschewing the finer points.  In the process, the imparted knowledge expands perspective and enables linkages to previously read material.  Understanding grows more complex and therefore nuanced.

        

Carr futher goes on to say:

          “The contents of our long-term memory lie mainly outside of our consciousness. In order for us to think about something we’ve previously learned or experienced, our brain has to transfer the memory from long-term memory back to working memory. ‘We are only aware that something was stored in long-term memory when it is brought down into working memory,' explains Sweller.”’ It was once assumed that long-term memory served merely as a big warehouse of facts, impressions, and events, that it ‘played little part in complex cognitive processes such as thinking and problem-solving.’ But brain scientists have come to realize that long-term memory is actually the seat of understanding.”

     This is why reading may be such a powerful mode to long-term knowledge and understanding. It is in its gradual nature that allows what is being read to be stored.  Attention is concentrated and sustained with certain resonant facts and impressions being retained.  What one then “knows” is largely in the unconscious until brought into awareness again when challenged or refined by new information.  The new knowledge must be reorganized and remapped into what was previously learned, editing out “facts” no longer supported.  It is in this editing phase that most highlights the dialectical process that reading promotes and engages the reader and thereby ensures a lasting impression.

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Get to Know the Pineville Community

April 3, 2023

The Pineville community has a brand-new library! Located in the heart of downtown Pineville, the Pineville Branch Library is the newest jewel in the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library System’s crown.

Pineville Branch Library occupies the first floor of the new Pineville Town Hall, right in the center of the vibrant Pineville community. The town is tucked between southwest Charlotte and South Carolina. The branch’s 18,000 square feet footprint offers a beautiful community room, quiet room for adults, five (5) study rooms, plus dedicated areas for teens and children. In the children’s area, families can find a calming room and family restroom.

The branch offers a wealth of resources, helpful staff, and programs for all ages. There are materials in several world languages including Gujarati, Hindi, Spanish, Tamil, Chinese, French, Ukrainian. The new building also has a green space out front that it shares with the Police Department. Visitors should take a moment to enjoy the History of Pineville and the Holt School of Fine Art’s displays in the lobby of the building.

The library is hardly the only draw to Pineville, though! The town may only be about five and a half square miles, but this little town has a lot to offer.

Continue a journey of learning at The President James K. Polk History Site. They offer guided tours for the historic cabins on site, and so much more including cooking demonstrations from the time period and the digital learning opportunity: The Enslaved Polks.  It also happens to be a connector for the Little Sugar Creek Greenway. Speaking of outdoor opportunities, the library sits right next door to the Jack Hughes Park, which hosts local children’s sports tournaments, and features picnic areas, batting cages, and a walking trail. Only a few minutes further away from the library is the Pineville Lake Park. There, folks will find playgrounds, picnic areas, fishing, Bocce Ball, the Shay Stage amphitheater, the Commons Dog Park, and, during the summer, the Splash Pad. Both parks feature a StoryWalk all year round! The Belle Johnston Center, nestled into Lake Park, offers activities, classes, and services. Lake Park may soon connect to the Little Sugar Creek Greenway, and in the meantime, there’s easy parking access to the McMullen Creek Greenway a short drive away.

Pineville offers a unique variety of dining and entertainment venues including the staff favorite Margaux’s Wine, Pizza & Market. There are lots of shops and services to explore, and of course, the library is only minutes from Carolina Place Mall. The town itself hosts fun events throughout the year, including Fall Fest and Rockin’ and Reelin’—a series of movies and concerts. To find out what great offerings are coming up next, check out the “Upcoming Events” section of the Town of Pineville Website. There is no shortage of things to do in Pineville!

New to Charlotte? Explore other neighborhoods through the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library blog and WelcomeCLT, a digital space created for newcomers to Charlotte.

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