October 28th - November 1st
Thank you for supporting our book fair! This year we made $4000. Well done Logan!
Want to see what kind of books will be at the book fair. Click on one of the buttons below for a closer look.
eWallets can be created up to three weeks before the Fair start date. Get started by searching for your school’s Book Fair homepage by clicking on the ewallet image above. From here, go to the eWallet section, then either sign-in with your existing Scholastic account or create a new account.
SHOP ONLINE DURING OCT 28 – NOV 1 TO SUPPORT OUR SCHOOL!
Scholastic will give back 25% in rewards to our school when you shop online during the Fair.
Kids can shop online with their family during and after the in-person Fair
August 19 - December 13 2024
Middle School Students here is a chance to show what amazing readers Logan Lions are. Come by the library to choose one of six books (or read them on Sora), read it, write a reflection at this link above. Return the book and come choose another book. Write another reflection. Repeat. Your reflection can be done digitally at the link below or a paper copy that you can pick up at the library. Or, you can read any book from Sora or the Logan Library and do a reflection.
When eighth grader and aspiring journalist Indigo breaks an important story, exposing an unfair school policy, she's suddenly popular for the first time.
The friends who've recently drifted away from her want to hang out again. Then Indigo notices that the school's disciplinary policies seem to be enforced especially harshly with students of color, like her. She wants to keep investigating, but her friends insist she's imagining things.
An immigrant teen fights for her family, her future, and the place she calls home.
In the spring of 2018, Guatemalan American high school senior Milagros "Millie" Vargas knows her life is about to change. She has lived in Corpus Christi, Texas, ever since her parents sought asylum there when she was a baby. Now a citizen, Millie devotes herself to school and caring for her younger siblings while her mom works as a housekeeper for the wealthy Wheeler family. With college on the horizon, Millie is torn between attending her dream school and staying close to home, where she knows she's needed. She is disturbed by what's happening to asylum-seekers at the U.S.-Mexico border, but she doesn't see herself as an activist or a change-maker. She's just trying to take care of her own family.
When you read about war in your history book or hear about it in the news, do you ever wonder what happens to the families and children in the places experiencing war? Many families in these situations decide that they must leave their homes to stay alive. What happens to them?
According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, 70.8 million people around the world have been forced to leave their homes because of war or persecution as of 2019. Over fifty percent of these people are under the age of eighteen.
English teacher Victorya Rouse has assembled a collection of real-world experiences of teen refugees from around the world. Learn where these young people came from, why they left, and how they arrived in the United States.
Twelve-year-old Enly Wu Lewis needs to go to band camp this summer.
It’ll help him follow in the footsteps of his dad, a musician who died when Enly was too young to even remember him. Enly isn’t sure if he has his dad’s talent, but he wants to find out.
There’s just one hitch: The camp is too expensive, and Enly’s mom is saving every penny for his older brother’s college tuition. So Enly sets out to earn the money for camp on his own by busking—playing music on the sidewalk in the touristy part of town. What could go wrong?
PSS 118 is just your typical school--except that it's a rickety old spaceship orbiting Jupiter. When the school is mysteriously attacked, thirteen-year-old Jack receives a cryptic message from his father (the school's recently-fired-for-tinkering-with-the-ship science teacher). Amidst the chaos, Jack discovers that his dad has built humanity's first light-speed engine--and given Jack control of it. To save the ship, Jack catapults it hundreds of light-years away and right into the clutches of the first aliens humans have ever seen. School hasn't just gotten out: it's gone clear across the galaxy. And now it's up to Jack and his friends to get everyone home.
After the entire population of Earth's solar system is whisked away by alien technology, Jack and his classmates and teachers aboard the PSS 118 are the only humans left. But it’s a new school year aboard the new and improved PSS 118, and the public school spaceship is on a mission to find and rescue the rest of humanity from the evil Minister’s plans. If they can avoid the aliens hunting them down, steer clear of a robot civil war, and figure out who among them might be a traitor, Jack and his friends might just survive middle school.
Logan entered the LAUSD reading challenge on Sora. The school in each region who checks out the most books from Sora wins a grand prize. Logan is up for the challenge.
Thank you for visiting.
Matt De La Pena talks about his childhood and growing up to be a writer.
Elementary students learn about his latest book The Perfect Place.
Questions from the audience.
All students in the school received Matt De La Pena's latest book. Thanks LAUSD.
For middle school students Matt De La Pena talks about what it was like growing up so close to the border.
Middle School students have lots of Questions for him.
Matt takes time to talk to some middle school students and encourages them to continue to write.
All middle school students receive one of his books, some of them are signed copies.
2023/2024
Elementary champions
Abdiel Perez-Garcia Champion
Axel Ortiz
Runner up
Middle School champions
David Reoyo Champion
Alexander Gonzalez Runner up
Middle School and Elementary School students participated in Logan's Chess Tournament
During February 27 - March 3, Logan celebrated reading and books with five days of themes, book tasting, guest read alouds, bookmark making, and dressing up as our favorite characters!
October 31- Nov 4th
Thank you for supporting our book fair. We made $7000 dollars half of which we get to use to buy new books for the library. GO LIONS!!
Set up eWallet, a safe cash-free way for your child to shop the Fair.
Want to see what kind of books will be at the book fair. Click on one of the buttons below for a closer look.
In September students explored new books and old in our book tasting in the library and in Ms. Ruan's and Mr. Hancock's classroom. Expanding our reading horizons and finding new books to read and love helps students become life long readers.
On March 2nd for Read Across America Logan Library held a school wide read-a-thon. Weeks leading up to March second students from all grade levels created bookmarks and book covers and the winners were announced on March 2nd. Students and staff came to school dressed as their favorite book characters.
Remember, reading is an adventure that never ends.
In the Spring of 2022 our garden was ready for planting and classes began with our ranger. Students helped plant tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers and flowers. They learned about the importance of insects, how plants grow and why eating organic is good for us and the environment. Thank you Enrich LA for our beautiful garden.