As the school year winds down, school librarians often find themselves balancing celebrations, chaos, overdue books, and the long list of tasks to complete before summer begins. The final weeks of school can feel overwhelming, but a little planning now can make the transition into summer much smoother.
Whether you work in an elementary, middle, or high school library, these end-of-year priorities can help you close out the year well while preparing for a strong start next fall.

End-of-Year Priorities for School Librarians
1. Focus on Book Returns Early
One of the biggest challenges at the end of the year is getting library materials returned before students disappear for summer break. The earlier you start, the better.
Helpful Ideas:
- Send reminders home several weeks before the last day of checkout.
- Create colorful overdue notices or classroom reminders.
- Offer small incentives for returning overdue books.
- Encourage teachers to help remind students during class.
- Check shelves regularly for misplaced books before marking items as lost.
For younger students, turning the book return into a game or a countdown can help build excitement instead of stress.
2. Complete Inventory and Shelf Reading
Inventory season may not be glamorous, but it is one of the most valuable tasks you can complete before summer.
Consider:
- Running a full inventory scan.
- Identifying missing or damaged books.
- Checking for books that need repair or replacement.
- Pulling outdated nonfiction titles.
- Shelf reading carefully to correct mis-shelved items.
This is also a great time to evaluate which sections need refreshing before next year.
3. Clean and Organize the Library
The end of the school year is the perfect opportunity for a library reset.
Tasks to Include:
- Dust shelves and displays.
- Wipe tables, chairs, and technology stations.
- Organize storage cabinets and workrooms.
- Purge broken supplies or outdated materials.
- Straighten maker space materials and craft supplies.
- Re-label bins or sections that became messy during the year.
Even tackling a little each day can make the job feel more manageable.
4. Prepare Students for Summer Reading
Summer reading support is one of the most important things school librarians can provide before students leave for break.
Ways to Encourage Reading:
- Send home summer reading lists by age group.
- Create themed book recommendation displays.
- Share information about the local public library’s summer programs.
- Encourage students to set simple reading goals.
- Provide printable reading logs or bingo challenges.
- Highlight ebooks and audiobooks students can access over the summer.
For younger students, remind families that reading together counts too — picture books, audiobooks, magazines, and even recipes all build literacy skills.
5. Wrap Up Technology and Equipment
If your library manages devices or technology, this is an important time for organization.
Possible Tasks:
- Collect chargers, hotspots, headphones, or devices.
- Check for damages.
- Label and organize equipment for next year.
- Update passwords or tech records if needed.
- Remove old files from shared devices.
A little tech organization now can prevent major headaches in August.
6. Evaluate What Worked This Year
Before summer begins, take a few moments to reflect on the year while it is still fresh in your mind.
Questions to Consider:
- Which displays had the best engagement?
- What library lessons worked especially well?
- Which programs or events should return next year?
- What challenges kept repeating?
- Which areas of the collection need strengthening?
Keeping simple notes now can save you time when planning next year.
7. Save and Organize Your Digital Files
School librarians collect an incredible number of documents, lesson plans, flyers, bookmarks, and graphics throughout the year.
Helpful End-of-Year Tasks:
- Back up important files.
- Organize folders by grade level or topic.
- Delete duplicates and outdated versions.
- Save templates you want to reuse.
- Create a “Start of School” folder for August.
Future-you will be grateful.
8. Plan Ahead — Just a Little
You do not need to fully map out next year before summer begins, but a little preparation can ease the back-to-school rush.
Consider:
- Brainstorming themes for next year.
- Making a wishlist of books or supplies.
- Sketching out first-week lessons.
- Saving ideas for bulletin boards and displays.
- Ordering supplies before budgets close.
Even a rough outline can reduce stress later.
Remember to Take Care of Yourself Too
School librarians spend the entire year helping students, supporting teachers, solving problems, and keeping countless moving parts running smoothly. The end of the year can feel especially demanding, but it is important to remember that you do not have to accomplish everything perfectly.
Celebrate the wins from this school year. Your work mattered — even on the hard days.
And once the doors close for summer, give yourself permission to rest, recharge, read for fun, and return refreshed for another year of helping students discover the joy of books and learning.
Resources
Summer Reading Challenge Bookmarks
Read more Library Administration posts
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