School Librarian Delivers Books by Drone for Summer Reading

School Librarian Delivers Books by Drone for Summer Reading

A librarian at Montgomery County Public Schools has introduced book delivery services via drone, to keep kids reading during the summer. Librarian Kelly Passek, a Blacksburg Middle School librarian, pitched district leaders on the idea as a response to school closures related to COVID-19.

As she told reporters, she considers "free choice reading," the reading students do for themselves, "so important to the success of our students, both academically and in life in general. If we can get library resources into their hands, we can help them stay on a path to success."

The idea grew out of Passek's own use of a drone delivery services in Christianburg, VA, her community. In 2019 a company called Wing Aviation received Federal Aviation Administration permission to make air deliveries to homes in the Christianburg area. Wing, a company within Alphabet (the firm behind Google), struck deals with local businesses to deliver health products, food and beverages. Passek, an early fan of the service, eventually pitched the book delivery idea to Wing, which responded that they were "on board."

The company had already reached out to the school system, hosting field trips for high school and middle school students and making donations to the high schools, to enable them to purchase drone equipment and curriculum.

Wing drones are about 10 pounds and can carry up to three pounds of goods. Students order the books via a Google Form, then Passek places them into a cardboard container with a handle and delivers those containers to Wing's delivery facility. From there, the packages are hooked onto the drone via a tether or cord. The drone climbs to a height of about 150 feet, flies to the destination, slows, hovers and drops to an altitude of about 23 feet at the delivery address. The drone lowers the tether and automatically releases the package into the yard (either front or back), reels in the tether, climbs back to "cruise height" and returns to the Wing site.

School Librarian Delivers Books by Drone for Summer Reading

Students have been told to hang onto their books until the new school year begins and they can return them in person.

"We pride ourselves on finding innovative ways to serve our students," said district Superintendent Mark Miear, in a statement. "We are excited to continue our streak of innovation through this pilot program that brings library books to our students via drone delivery."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • AI-powered individual working calmly on one side and a burnt-out person slumped over a laptop on the other

    AI's Productivity Gains Come at a Cost

    A recent academic study found that as companies adopt AI tools, they're not just streamlining workflows — they're piling on new demands. Researchers determined that "AI technostress" is driving burnout and disrupting personal lives, even as organizations hail productivity gains.

  • laptop displaying a glowing digital brain and data charts sits on a metal shelf in a well-lit server room with organized network cables and active servers

    Cisco Unveils AI-First Approach to IT Operations

    At its recent Cisco Live 2025 event, Cisco introduced AgenticOps, a transformative approach to IT operations that integrates advanced AI capabilities to enhance efficiency and collaboration across network, security, and application domains.

  • sunlit classroom with laptops on every desk, each displaying a glowing AI speech bubble icon above the screen

    Copilot Chat and Microsoft 365 Copilot to Become Available for Teen Students

    This summer, Microsoft is expanding availability of its Copilot Chat and Microsoft 365 Copilot products for students aged 13 and older. Administrators will be able to grant access for students based on their institution's plans and preferences, the company announced in a blog post.

  • colorful geometric illustration features gaming devices, computer accessories, and stacks of books

    Gaming in K–12 Classrooms Is Powering the Future Tech Workforce

    Today's most forward-thinking schools are using gaming as a platform to train students for real-world roles in fields like aviation, robotics, remote operations, and data center management.