Bringing Home the Concept of Where We Come From: Library Programs on Human Migration

Kids using LPL Air at Lester Public Library

In 2023, the Lester Public Library in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, was one of just 15 libraries in the nation selected to host “World on the Move: 250,000 Years of Human Migration,” an exhibit developed by the American Anthropological Association, the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, and the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, and administered by the American Library Association (ALA). The exhibit explored why people move, how migration changes individuals and communities, and what those movements mean for our shared future. Our hosting period was March 20–April 23, 2024.

Hosting this exhibit was a big deal for this library in a small town of fewer than 13,000. Some of the other entities hosting included San Jose, Houston, and Kansas City (Kansas) public libraries. Our single, one-floor library faced a bit of a challenge physically accommodating this exhibit, but we managed—thanks to the acquisition of wheeled shelving a couple of years prior, which allowed us to open up floor space. An additional, more important goal was to support the exhibition’s message by offering creative and meaningful programming for all ages.

Programs to help explore the question: Where do we come from?

Our adult programs featured authors and professors who spoke on topics including early settlement and immigration in our county prior to 1900; the Hmong American experience; contemporary U.S. asylum, refugee, and immigration policy; and the Volga German experience.

Recurring programs like our Book Discussion Group and Genealogy Club were modified to align closely with the exhibit. Family programs included a performance by a folk duo renowned in our region, who sang the stories of people who’ve moved from place to place and country to country.

Community Collage instructions
Community Collage instructions
LPL Air in action
LPL Air in action

We hosted a community collage. We had a station outfitted with paper strips, letter stamps and ink pads, and adults and kids were invited to stamp the one word they would use to describe home. They could personalize their pieces with Sharpie flourishes. 

Our dramatic play center became the site of LPL Air. Think ticket counter, passenger and baggage x-ray, maps, flight schedules, and the ear protectors, reflective vests and wands needed to equip aircraft marshallers. Plus, of course, a cockpit complete with an instrument panel and a big flashing light, and a passenger cabin outfitted with beverage and snack carts. It was all about folks on the move. Two families reported that LPL Air prepared their children for their first air travel experience!

To extend these experiences beyond the library, we created a special take-home Family Activity Pack that invited families to explore the question at the heart of World on the Move: Where do we come from?

Each pack included “My Family and Me: A Family History Fill-in Book” by Cara J. Stevens (purchased with local community foundation funding), a color world map from Geology.com, and materials to build a creative family tree. We encouraged families to start with a simple “blueprint” of who they wanted to include—whether immediate relatives, extended family, or chosen family—and to focus on creativity and connection rather than genealogical accuracy.

The tree itself became a centerpiece: a large sheet of brown paper (about 3’x3’) hand-painted with a bare tree, accompanied by colorful paper leaves, cardstock frames for drawings or photos, and glue sticks for assembly. (In hindsight, I’d recommend providing the materials and letting families paint their own unique trees—mine were a labor of love painted one by one, with help from my teenage daughters!)

The result: beautifully personal trees celebrating family—past and present—while deepening the exhibit’s message that movement and connection shape who we are.

Materials included in the take-home Family Activity Pack
Materials included in the take-home Family Activity Pack

 

Terry Ehle is youth services coordinator at Lester Public Library in Two Rivers, Wisconsin. This story first appeared in Programming Librarian on November 4, 2025. Photos courtesy of Lester Public Library.

How you can support libraries

With library funding being gutted and censorship on the rise, supporting libraries is more critical than ever. If you’re looking for a way to help (and to help fund programs like the one you just read about), we urge you to become a Supporter of the American Library Association by donating. 

At the American Library Association, we are here to protect libraries — today and for generations to come. What does your donation do? It helps a neighbor gain skills to start a business. It helps a child discover themselves through books and programs. And it helps keep libraries strong, open, and free for everyone.

Become a Supporter

Help us fight back. Your donation powers our advocacy on behalf of libraries and library workers everywhere.

Subscribe to the I Love Libraries newsletter! You’ll get news from the library world, advocacy updates, author interviews, book lists, and more delivered to your inbox every month.

Related Post