Peace and quiet enables productivity

Joe Kyburz, Copy Editor

Everyone that’s been to the JC library just laughed and shook their head. Reinstating and enforcing a no-talking policy would allow the library, currently a social battlefield rivaling the ruckus of the cafeteria, to become the place it should be. A library should be a place to dive into books, not into conversation.

JC should be able to provide this sanctuary for students. A student will still be able to work on group projects in empty classrooms, the college center, the senior classroom, and the cafeteria – all places which allow for productive conversation and intellectual stimulation through companionship or a social escape from school.

Tutoring can happen anywhere. I’ve been tutored in Noodles and Company, IHOP, the senior classroom, the cafeteria, guidance counselor offices, the art wing, but I have only once been tutored in the library. Why? Because the environment is not suitable for intellectual growth. The JC library is always dense with people and arguably more social than the cafeteria.

Why, though, should those students who want to make a productive use of their time have to use a library that, at present, rivals an indoor recess? The library’s current atmosphere hinders productivity and encourages bad behavior. A policy enforcing silence would force this atmosphere and the troublesome students that flock to it, or fall into it, to a different location that is better supervised and better suited for this type of social activity.

A silent library would be impressive to people visiting the school for good reason. It shows that a learning environment is being maintained and students are given a diverse set of environments that are necessary to succeed. Supporters of a non-silent library may have too much faith in the students in the classroom or not enough knowledge of the silent communication that is easily enabled through technology when necessary.

Resources such as Khan Academy videos, which require a non-distracting environment to be utilized to their full learning potential that could replace tutoring, would be much more at a student’s disposal if they were given a silent environment in which to learn in peace with headphones.

High school students require a place to not be distracted, and a policy of silence would be a stepping stone to provide that for JC students. To study alone and not be distracted by friends takes a special place, and JC should do its best to accommodate academically-inclined students with this simple sanctuary.

Even in the far reaches of the library, the ruckus is too loud, the people are too social. Segregating such a crowded library into group areas and silent areas would do little to help this environment unless these rooms were removed from the library itself. As of now, there is no apparent sanctuary for students, and no efficiency.

The purpose of a library is to provide an environment where students can learn and get work done without being disturbed. Because students are imperfect, the library cannot achieve this goal unless they are enabled to do so with complete silence, which fosters creativity and productivity.

Joe Kyburz is a Copy Editor for The Patriot and jcpatriot.com.