1 / 37

Beyond the Bookshelf Teen Programming

Beyond the Bookshelf Teen Programming. Instructor: Kelley Worman kelley.worman@fresnolibrary.org An Infopeople Workshop Fall 2006. This Workshop Is Brought to You by the Infopeople Project.

vince
Download Presentation

Beyond the Bookshelf Teen Programming

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Beyond the BookshelfTeen Programming Instructor: Kelley Worman kelley.worman@fresnolibrary.org An Infopeople Workshop Fall 2006

  2. This Workshop Is Brought to You by the Infopeople Project Infopeople is a federally-funded grant project supported by the California State Library. It provides a wide variety of training to California libraries. Infopeople workshops are offered around the state and are open registration on a first-come, first-served basis. For a complete list of workshops, and for other information about the project, go to the Infopeople website at infopeople.org.

  3. Introductions • Name • Library • Position • Thinking back to your teen years, name any program you attended (library or other) and tell what you remember liking about it.

  4. Workshop Overview • Foundations of programming • Program and outreach ideas for teens • Partnering • Funding • Marketing and evaluation

  5. Why Program for Teens? • Increase library use • Inform, entertain and enrich kids • Supports healthy development of youth • Promotes the library in the community

  6. Questions for the Group • What has been your best and worst experience with teen programming? • What makes a good program?

  7. Teens will find ways to… • Meet their basic needs • Build skills and values • Use skills, talents, energy, and time in ways that make them feel good Whether adults approve or not! Abrams, Stephen. The Kids are Alright: Millenials and Their Information Behavior. ALA Annual Conference 2006.

  8. Benefits of YA Programming • Offers teens a chance to participate actively, not react passively • Channels energy • Fosters positive relationships with peers and caring adults • Provides opportunities to develop life skills and to contribute to the community

  9. Barriers to Good Programming • Poor planning • Lack of support • Takes a lot of time and effort • Not understanding teens (no teen input) • Programs are too academic • Too focused on library goals Jones, Patrick. What’s the Frequency: a how-to-do-it workshop. Young Adult Services Institute. San Joaquin Valley Library System.

  10. Keys to Success • Teen involvement • Popular topic • Good planning • Appropriate marketing

  11. Teen Involvement • Getting input and ideas • Positives • Negatives

  12. Program Policies • Identifies purpose and need of young adult programming • Articulates scope of library programming • Defense for programming

  13. Questions for Group What elements are essential for a young adult program policy?

  14. Building Arguments for Programs • Brainstorm possible objections by administration and form intelligent debate. • Use program policy • Use Search Institute 40 Developmental Assets www.searchinstitute.org • Query list servs

  15. Getting Ideas • Teens • List servs • TV • Magazines • Websites

  16. Types of Programs • Informational • Recreational • Literature-related • Curriculum-related

  17. Single Event Programs Samples • Open Mic • Gaming tournament • Origami • College Knowledge • Mystery night • Movie program • Skool of Rock Self Defense Workshop for Teensby D.A.R.E. Instructor , Dave Johnson Thursday, February 12 6:30 – 8:00 p.m.

  18. Banned Books Week Teen Read Week Teen Tech Week Special and Themed Programs • Holidays • Heritage months • Young People’s Poetry Week

  19. Ongoing and Series Programs • Social issues • Career search • Book clubs • Animé clubs • Teen Council

  20. Steps to Planning • Approval needed? • Necessary resources • Time, date, and location • Checklist

  21. Why a Checklist? • Focuses your planning • Helps to make sure you think of everything • Leaves a pathway for others to replicate the program

  22. Outreach(Taking It on the Road) • Reaches teens that aren’t regular library users • May involve partnering with community groups • Time and financial commitment

  23. Opportunities for Outreach • Schools • Teen shelters • Hospitals • Detention facilities • Home school groups • Homeless • Teen parents • LGTB youth

  24. Community Partnerships • Flow out of the library’s mission and goals • Library-wide strategy • Centrally coordinated • Formal process

  25. Why Partner? • Reach new users • Reach current users in a new way • Tap into community assets and resources • Gain support for the library • Create new library resources • Shares costs and increases resources

  26. Types of Partnerships • Communicative • Cooperative • Collaborative

  27. Steps to Choosing a Partner • Know what you want to achieve • Make a list of potential partners in the community • Research a potential partner From “Developing Community Partnerships” by Barry Trott, ALA Annual Meeting 2006

  28. Funding Sources • Friends groups • Philanthropic organizations • Cultural groups • Grants • Partnerships

  29. Question for Group What are three key elements that must be present in any letter requesting a funding/goods donation?

  30. Key Elements • Clear statement of what you are asking for • How it benefits the community and library • What’s in it for the company

  31. Cutting Costs • Partnerships • Sharing program supplies • Using free community groups and County offices as presenters • Local business donations for refreshments, supplies, prizes, etc.

  32. Who is the audience for this program? How can I best reach this group? Media Displays Technology Smart Marketing • Schools • Community partners • Teen hangouts

  33. Flyers: Tips for Getting Noticed • Eye-catching • Not too cluttered • Font type • Graphics • Smart placement

  34. Reasons for Conducting Evaluations • Helps you know if you met your goals • Administrative support • Accountability • For suggestions to make the program better • To assess why a program didn’t work

  35. Types of Evaluation • Outputs - numerically measured - statistics • Outcomes - the “so what” of programming - anecdotes to demonstrate impact

  36. So Remember, Teen input and good planning + Well-thought-out promotion + Relevant evaluation = A GREAT PROGRAM

  37. And Finally… HAVE FUN!!

More Related