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Teen Book Clubs. Oakland Branch, Ruth Enlow Library of Garrett County. Where it Started. Oakland Branch Ruth Enlow Library 6 North Second Street Oakland, MD. Garrett County. Social and Economic Profile Estimated population of 29,555
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Teen Book Clubs Oakland Branch, Ruth Enlow Library of Garrett County
Where it Started Oakland Branch Ruth Enlow Library 6 North Second Street Oakland, MD
Garrett County • Social and Economic Profile • Estimated population of 29,555 • 5.3% are under the age of 5, 21.5% are under the age of 18, and 17% are 65 and older • The median household income is $43,496 with 15% of the population being under the poverty level *U.S. Census Bureau, 2010, Quick Facts for Garrett County
Garrett County • 79.2% of persons 25 and older have graduated from high school with only 13.8% of this group achieving a Bachelor’s degree or higher • 98.4% of the population being white, and the remaining percentage being African-American, American Indian, and Asian • Spread out over large geographic area • Active tourism population in the spring and the winter • Mainly agricultural area with many small businesses. *U.S. Census Bureau, 2010, Quick Facts for Garrett County
Getting them in the Door • Mail them a letter • Email them (if you have access to this) • Put information on your website • Put up posters in the library • Slip Bookmarks in Random Books in the Teen Section • Start a Twitter and send notifications • Above all else……
The Club • The group meets on the last Monday of every month from 6:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. • The books for the next month are given out at the end of the book club meeting. • Each teen gets a copy of the book club book to keep, gets to have pizza, and participate in an activity or craft at every club meeting
The Group • Originally, the group had 23 members sign up • Current roster is at 15 members • Most sessions have between 7 and 12 teens in attendance • The group is comprised of males and females • The age range is 12 to 18 • Teens in the group attend middle school, high school, private school, and some are homeschooled
The Key to Interaction • Make it about Them (After all, it is) • Ask them what they like • Listen to them!!! • Follow Through on their Suggestions
What We Do • Start each meeting with a reminder of the rules • No pressures, a chance to communicate • Talk about the author and other books he/she has written • Go around and share what we liked, what we didn’t like, and if we’d recommend the book to a friend • Discussion-this takes on many forms and is dictated by the contributions of the teens • Film clips, craft projects, and activities, dependent on the book…extensions
Programming in General Tips • Start small-You don’t have to have the big event! • Use the Resources you Have • Beg, Borrow, and Plead for What You Don’t • If Food is a Draw, Get Area Businesses to Donate or a Kid to Volunteer to Bring a Different Item to Each Meeting • Partner with Your Local Businesses and Organizations
Obstacles to Operation • Funding: How do we pay for pizza and drinks? Where does the funding come from for books? • Picking books for males and females: How do we pick books to appease the entire group? • Retaining members: How do we keep teens coming? • Getting new members: How do we bring in new members?
Funding • Request donations from local businesses • Ask for local merchants to sponsor one book club meeting • Send letters to local organizations that donate to non-profits • Have a sign-up for a different teen to bring a snack in every month • Submit a proposal for funding from the Friends group • Submit a proposal for it to be added to the budget • Collaborate with local programs
Getting Books • We use Scholastic book clubs through our local schools • Parents place orders year round on flyer items • We coordinate, submit, pick-up, and distribute orders • For every order placed, we receive points • We use the points to purchase book club books • Some are hard back and some are paper back; always good quality and excellent selection • Scholastic also does a discount book program for reading clubs!
Appealing to the Group • Discuss at the beginning of the year • Take author and genre suggestions • Group agrees to rotate one female main character book one month and one male main character book the next • Group agrees to rotate different genres • Group agrees to read each book, even if it is not usually “their type”
Getting Them to Come Back • Constantly Seek Their Input and Involvement • Make the Atmosphere Physically and Mentally Comfortable and Supportive • Keep in Contact-Email, Text, Chat, Call, Write • Pick Nights for Programming that they are Available • Have Them Help Plan Events • Give Small Rewards for Bringing New Members • And above all else…….
Getting New Members • Be consistent • Keep talking to them • Update and repost advertising • Hold open house events to talk about the club • Give incentives (i.e. free galleys from attending ALA, donated books, gift certificates or coupons donated by businesses) • Try new social networking tools • Collaborate with your community
Coraline Where the Red Fern Grows The Sea of Monsters The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian Tunnels Magyk: Book One The Hunger Games The Found Listen Drums, Girls, and Dangerous Pie The Fashion Disaster So B. It Fablehaven The Compound Inkheart Book We’ve Read
This Coming Year’s Books • Sent, Book 2 • The Truth about Forever • What I Saw and How I Lied • Mockingjay • Savvy • Sherlock Holmes • The Red Pyramid • The Switch • Cut • Speak • Skeleton Creek * all cover images from wordpress.com