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Teen library internships are becoming increasingly common in both
school and public libraries. Librarians seeking guidance on how to
launch or grow their teen internships will find help in this
practical handbook. They will discover: Rationales and helpful
advice for providing support and funding for meaningful internship
opportunities. Shining examples that can be emulated and adapted in
other library settings that comprise the book's central focus.
Testimonials by interns, librarians and library staff, and other
adults who have worked with employed teens that will enhance
points, give insights, and generate enthusiasm. Step-by-step plans
for creating tailor-made teen library internship handbooks that can
be used by teen interns, library staff, and others who are taking
part in training, evaluating, and teamwork during internships in
each unique setting. Advice on how to gain feedback and assess
outcomes to make internships more relevant and valuable. Ways and
means to adapt internship experiences during times of pandemics or
other emergencies. A path to promoting innovative youth
participation that will help teens to meaningfully develop
knowledge and skills for their futures while encouraging them to
become dedicated library users and supporters into adulthood. By
providing this new way of encouraging youth participation,
libraries can help teens to meaningfully develop knowledge and
skills for their futures while encouraging them to become dedicated
library users and supporters into adulthood.
Teen library internships are becoming increasingly common in both
school and public libraries. Librarians seeking guidance on how to
launch or grow their teen internships will find help in this
practical handbook. They will discover: Rationales and helpful
advice for providing support and funding for meaningful internship
opportunities. Shining examples that can be emulated and adapted in
other library settings that comprise the book's central focus.
Testimonials by interns, librarians and library staff, and other
adults who have worked with employed teens that will enhance
points, give insights, and generate enthusiasm. Step-by-step plans
for creating tailor-made teen library internship handbooks that can
be used by teen interns, library staff, and others who are taking
part in training, evaluating, and teamwork during internships in
each unique setting. Advice on how to gain feedback and assess
outcomes to make internships more relevant and valuable. Ways and
means to adapt internship experiences during times of pandemics or
other emergencies. A path to promoting innovative youth
participation that will help teens to meaningfully develop
knowledge and skills for their futures while encouraging them to
become dedicated library users and supporters into adulthood. By
providing this new way of encouraging youth participation,
libraries can help teens to meaningfully develop knowledge and
skills for their futures while encouraging them to become dedicated
library users and supporters into adulthood.
The library programs featured in this unique collection are those
that have been suggested, created, and led by youth with the help
and guidance of the supportive adults at their library. Many times,
librarians bring ideas to teens in hopes of getting them to buy in
and perhaps help them to run programs. In this book, you'll
primarily find a role reversal! Tweens and teens lead the way with
whatever adult information, support, and supervision they need to
see their proposals through. To accomplish this, the youth are
encouraged to create new ideas, are empowered to make decisions,
and are given control. Plus, the ideas they bring to life are not
just peer-focused. The programs, activities, and events they create
and lead can be for children, adults, or even for all ages or mixed
audiences, as well as for fellow tweens and teens. In addition to
finding a wide array of proven ideas, recommendations, and
testimonials from real tweens and teenagers, you will discover
helpful advice on using the philosophies behind allowing youth to
not only have a say but to take action; testimonials from adults
who have worked directly with youth having this level of
empowerment; suggestions on getting approval and providing funding
and other support for youth ideas; ways to evaluate such youth-led
programs; and sample forms, flyers, and other materials that can be
adapted.
The library programs featured in this unique collection are those
that have been suggested, created, and led by youth with the help
and guidance of the supportive adults at their library. Many times,
librarians bring ideas to teens in hopes of getting them to buy in
and perhaps help them to run programs. In this book, you'll
primarily find a role reversal! Tweens and teens lead the way with
whatever adult information, support, and supervision they need to
see their proposals through. To accomplish this, the youth are
encouraged to create new ideas, are empowered to make decisions,
and are given control. Plus, the ideas they bring to life are not
just peer-focused. The programs, activities, and events they create
and lead can be for children, adults, or even for all ages or mixed
audiences, as well as for fellow tweens and teens. In addition to
finding a wide array of proven ideas, recommendations, and
testimonials from real tweens and teenagers, you will discover
helpful advice on using the philosophies behind allowing youth to
not only have a say but to take action; testimonials from adults
who have worked directly with youth having this level of
empowerment; suggestions on getting approval and providing funding
and other support for youth ideas; ways to evaluate such youth-led
programs; and sample forms, flyers, and other materials that can be
adapted.
Teen advisory groups (TAGs) may flourish in many libraries today,
but many others are newly initiating them or hoping to revitalize
ones that are floundering. But even successful groups need tips and
best practices to make their TAGs even better. This updated and
revised second edition remains the go-to guide for planning,
running, and evaluating TAGs in both school and public libraries.
Its wealth of positive advice and information leads TAG teens and
their peers to meaningful experiences that encourage reading,
library use, and library support-into adulthood. In this
indispensable guide, Diane P. Tuccillo carefully explains and
explores the current, wide landscape of TAGs, covering funding to
bylaws; getting a new group on its feet to rejuvenating an old one;
planning traditional TAG projects to creating unique roles; and
community involvement to voting on adult library boards. Vivid
profiles of successful teen groups, organized into public and
school library sections, tell each group's story along with
pertinent teen feedback.Sample documents covering mission
statements, applications, parent permission forms, publicity
flyers, and teen book review ideas, as well as evaluation advice,
can be borrowed or adapted. A helpful bibliography and webliography
is included. Library directors, school administrators, library
educators, and librarians who work directly with teens in school
and public libraries will be unable to resist such compelling
testaments to the value of TAGs.
Teen advisory groups (TAGs) may flourish in many libraries today,
but many others are newly initiating them or hoping to revitalize
ones that are floundering. But even successful groups need tips and
best practices to make their TAGs even better. This updated and
revised second edition remains the go-to guide for planning,
running, and evaluating TAGs in both school and public libraries.
Its wealth of positive advice and information leads TAG teens and
their peers to meaningful experiences that encourage reading,
library use, and library support-into adulthood. In this
indispensable guide, Diane P. Tuccillo carefully explains and
explores the current, wide landscape of TAGs, covering funding to
bylaws; getting a new group on its feet to rejuvenating an old one;
planning traditional TAG projects to creating unique roles; and
community involvement to voting on adult library boards. Vivid
profiles of successful teen groups, organized into public and
school library sections, tell each group's story along with
pertinent teen feedback. Sample documents covering mission
statements, applications, parent permission forms, publicity
flyers, and teen book review ideas, as well as evaluation advice,
can be borrowed or adapted. A helpful bibliography and webliography
is included. Library directors, school administrators, library
educators, and librarians who work directly with teens in school
and public libraries will be unable to resist such compelling
testaments to the value of TAGs.
Combining information, inspiration, and relevant examples, this
guidebook encourages and enables both school and public librarians
to advocate for and incorporate active youth involvement that will
develop teen self-esteem and positively connect teenagers with
books, reading, and libraries, now and into adulthood.
Teen-Centered Library Service: Putting Youth Participation into
Practice is a practical guide that can help you get teens involved
in your library-in everything from book discussions, working with
children, and author visits to collection development, community
outreach, and even fundraising. Drawing on research and best
practices, as well as anecdotes and success stories from around the
country, Diane P. Tuccillo makes the case for youth participation
and shows you how to achieve it. Carefully organized chapters focus
on reasons to make library teen participation a priority, promote
understanding of historical perspectives pertaining to library
youth participation, and examine successful and exciting ideas that
today's school and public libraries can emulate. School and public
libraries that are ready to embark on youth participation endeavors
for the first time, as well as those that want to improve or
enhance programs already in place, will benefit equally from the
information shared here. Focus boxes and quotes highlight
viewpoints and information from a variety of experts and diagrams
illustrate pertinent points and solidify the chapters Includes
forms, flyers, applications, and other promotional materials that
can be readily reproduced or adapted to various library goals and
needs Photos of real teens in action as they perform their youth
participation duties serve to inspire readers and provide examples
to emulate A bibliography enhances the informational aspects of the
book by offering further reading and references to supplement study
and application, while further reading suggestions are also
provided under various topics in each chapter
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