Including Teens in the Library
Description
A brief webinar discussing how to include teens in your library. A supplementary document of clickable links discussed in the webinar has been included.
Passcode: &+PV6eMY
A brief webinar discussing how to include teens in your library. A supplementary document of clickable links discussed in the webinar has been included.
Passcode: &+PV6eMY
This summer at Chinook Arch we are doing adult and teen passive programming in the forms of Book Bingo and Bookopoly. These resource were all made on Canva and we can share those files directly with anyone who wants them so you can change and use them for your own library. We will be using these form from the start of July to mid/end of August for anyone 13+ to participate in summer reading and have a chance to win some cool prizes.
In recent years, young adult (YA) fiction has, like its Generation Z audience, turned to social justice issues and activism. At the same time, the discussion of social responsibility in librarianship has begun to include human rights and social justice, especially since public libraries provide education and information about issues of rights and justice.
For Jennifer's thesis research, she conducted a participatory case study with a co-designed virtual program through the Camrose Public Library. The case study investigated how teen readers engage with the social justice themes in YA fiction, how and if they find these themes useful for understanding and engaging in activism on their own, and the influence of public library programming on these actions.
This presentation provides an overview of what worked and what didn’t when it came to collaborative program design with teens and provides practical recommendations for young adult librarians who want to implement social justice programming.
I am planning a Virtual Teen Horror Program....here is what I have so far....
This document covers how to run a virtual training sessionj for teens participating in a virtual Reading Buddies program.
This program plan details how to run a virtual Reading Buddies program for kids and teens using Zoom.
Join Grant Stewart of Marigold Library System for a lesson on how to teach kids coding. Grant will show you the basics of the coding program he organized and delivered to dozens of patrons throughout multiple summers working for Marigold Library System. He will go over the resources that are the most useful, fun games, and coding toys like the Sphero and Code-a-Pillar that teach kids while they play!
Join Grant Stewart of Marigold Library System for a lesson on how to teach kids coding. Grant will show you the basics of the coding program he organized and delivered to dozens of patrons throughout multiple summers working for Marigold Library System. He will go over the resources that are the most useful, fun games, and coding toys like the Sphero and Code-a-Pillar that teach kids while they play!
Want to build a fun escape room program that appeals to families with children, teens, and adults, but feel like you don’t have the space to make it work? Have you seen pictures from amazing escape room programs in other libraries, but don’t have a dedicated space to commit to a lengthy program? I’ll share tips, tricks, and plans for three different escape rooms we have successfully run that fit (almost) entirely on a book cart and are easy to set-up and take-down. We’ll talk about rooms with doors that don’t lock, different types of puzzles that are easy to use, how to build multiple rooms using the same materials, and ways that participants can adapt these programs for their own library spaces.
Presented at the CATS Conference, Kelowna BC, Oct 7th, 2019.
This webinar looks at how to include teens in your library through collection development, use of space, teen advisory groups and programming.
Passcode: &+PV6eMY
Simple, fun, pared-down info sheet for teens with info on choosing valid sources, examining bias, fact checking, and fighting fake news
Ice cream analogy
Bias
C.R.A.A.P test
Scholarly vs. Popular Sources
Online vs. Print Sources
Fake News & Fact Checking
Tips for Fighting Fake News