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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.
Published | Apr 30 2020 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 172 |
ISBN | 9781538130452 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Illustrations | 62 b/w photos; 37 textboxes |
Dimensions | 12 x 9 inches |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
...such a useful tool for teen programming. Not only has she collected a wide variety of programs created by and for teens, but she has also included information on why youth-led programs are so important, how to help programs get approval and funding, and how to evaluate the programs. . . . if after all these years I can get something new and useful from a teen programming book, you might consider taking a look yourself, especially if you hope to have successful teen programming.
Newspoke: The Newsletter of the Alaska Library Association
An innovative and well-researched guide for any library looking to harness their greatest resource: tweens and teens. This book contains a myriad of useful examples of how and why youth-led programs are important to libraries. Diane's unyielding respect for teens is palpable in her writing and collection of programs.
Valerie Davis, Teen Services Librarian, Newport Branch, Campbell County Public Library
I read this invaluable resource with growing wonder and admiration. Drawing on her more than forty years of YA librarianship, Tuccillo inspires, instructs, and comes up with exactly the right tools and examples for empowering teens to lead their own library programs and beyond that, to grow from the experience.
Patty Campbell, Young adult literature critic, author, and speaker
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