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We all serve teens!. Baraboo Public Library In-Service December 13, 2007 Shawn Brommer, SCLS Penny Johnson, BAR. Introductions. Describe your teenage self Describe a teen in your life. Shifting perceptions. Who?. Some characteristics. Beloit College Mindset class of 2011.
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We all serve teens! Baraboo Public Library In-Service December 13, 2007 Shawn Brommer, SCLS Penny Johnson, BAR
Introductions • Describe your teenage self • Describe a teen in your life
Who? Some characteristics
Beloit College Mindset class of 2011 • What Berlin Wall?
Millennials (1982 – 2000) • Larger than the Baby Boom generation • 36% of the U.S. population. • 31% of this population are from diverse cultures • Most racially and ethnically diverse Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation, Neil Howe & Bill Strauss
Distinct qualities of Millennials • They are special • They are sheltered • They are confident • They are team-oriented • They are achieving • They are pressured • They are conventional Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation, Neil Howe & Bill Strauss
Teen Brain Development • Hormones vs. Brains! • Social development • Risk taking • Emotional response
Inside the Teen Brain, Frontline series http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/teenbrain/
Statistics • 87% of American teens use the Internet on a regular basis. • 1 out of 2 teens lives in a home with a broadband connection
How are they using the Internet? • 81% are playing games (over 17 million) • 76% are getting news (over 16 million) • 43% are making purchases (9 million) • 31% are seeking health information (6 million)
Where are they when they go online? • 89% - home • 75% - school • 70% - a friend or relative’s house • 50% - the library • 9% - a community center or house of worship —Web 2.0 and What it Means to Libraries (PEW Internet & Life Project)
Technology - realities • Teens live their lives online • Young people get their information from the Internet • Will always turn to it before other, seemingly traditional, resources. • This is where they are!
Reasons to provide: • Teens are future tax-payers and future library supporters. • This is the way teens seek, share and recommend information • Relevancy of public libraries
Benefits of social networking • Critical thinking • Reading and writing skills • Collaboration • Communicating with authors, experts, etc.—Social and cultural competence • Boundaries and expectations
Benefits (2) • Communication between those with special interests • Equalizing • Appearance, status, disabilities • Gaming: “Subversive Learning” • Learn skills • Form coalitions • Decision making • “Virtual malt shop”
What does this mean for libraries? http://www.myspace.com/lplconnects
Studies – library use is growing • Very recent PLA study tracks trends in public libraries. • 90% surveyed offer teen programs • 50% surveyed employ at least one FTE dedicated to teen programs & services • Up from 11% in 1995. • YALSA is the fastest growing division of ALA
Studies – library use is growing (2) • ALA study – Harris Poll (ages 8-18) • Significant amount responded that they use public & school libraries for personal use • Of these, 78% borrow items for personal use from public libraries • 60% borrow items for personal use from school libraries • 31% - visit the public library more than 10 times a year
What teens told the Harris Pollsters • 33% would use libraries more if there were more interesting items to borrow. • 25% (school) and 20% (public) would visit libraries more if computers didn’t block the information they needed. • 32% asked for more activities & events • 31% wanted longer hours • 22% wanted a comfortable, welcoming atmosphere http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/HarrisYouthPoll.pdf
Challenges • Staff • Programming • Collection Development • Teen spaces • Policies • Collection development • Acceptable use & behavior
Challenges: Behavior/Stress • Stress in teen lives: • School demands • Too many activities/high expectations • Changes in bodies & brains • Living in unsafe environments • Poverty
Challenges: Behavior/reaction • Stress leads to: • Anxiety • Depression • Illness • Drug/alcohol abuse • Aggression • “Fight or flight”
Adult interactions • Be attentive • Positive interactions rather than negative • Model stress management • Listen – do teens have a voice? • Provide safe space for down time • Help teens find solutions • Help teens prioritize • Clearly state rules
Methods for dealing with the madness • Teens prefer one-on-one communication: directly tell teens our expectations • Keep regulations simple and few. "Respect yourself, respect others, and respect property.” • Try not to forget what it was like when you were a kid • When teens are disrespectful, don't take it personally
Methods for dealing with the madness (2) • Don't have rules exclusively for teens • Consistency is key. • All library staffers need to be alerted when a teen has broken a rule more than once • Be consistent with rules • Develop relationships with teens
More help: • Young Adult Library Services Association: www.ala.org/ala/yalsa • VOYA: www.voya.com • Here Comes Trouble SLJ article: www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA429319.html • Fight Crime: Invest in Kids http://www.fightcrime.org/reports/schoolviol.htm • Beloit College Mindeset – class of 2011 http://www.beloit.edu/~pubaff/mindset/2011.php