Teen Ideas
Leah Langby
October 31, 2011
Keeping Up With Kids

Teens at the Normal Public Library learn how to cook Southwest staples, from flickr

Last week I attended the webinar Teaming Up with Teens @ Your Library, presented by Diane Tuccillo and Kelly Johnson. The webinar was sponsored by Web Junction and YALSA, and Diane and Kelly presented some terrific ideas!

You can view the archived webinar and see resource lists yourself at your convenience. Definitely worth an hour. The chat logs themselves are full of amazing ideas and sharing between librarians.
One of the great things they talked about was the need to make sure that if you have a Teen Advisory Board (or whatever you want to call it), you need to make sure your meetings are fun, expect teens to be teens, and build community within the group. One way of doing that (aside from serving food, which every single teen librarian I’ve ever heard speak insists is crucial) is to pick a few ice breaker games to play at your meetings before getting down to business. Diane Tuccillo listed a few great sources for these games on her resource list:

http://www.ydnetwork.org/Icebreakers

https://www.ultimatecampresource.com/camp-activities/ice-breakers/ 

http://www.cplrmh.com/icebreakers.html

What is your favorite thing to do with teens? (yes, I mean you!)

search all blog posts using keywords or title, date, categories

Archives

Categories

Related Articles

Raising Wisconsin’s Children Conference

Thanks to our friends at UW-Madison Department of Extension for putting together an excellent, free virtual conference--great to share with parents and caregivers, also great for library workers who serve youth and families.  Take a look!  Raising Wisconsin’s Children...

Resources for Games and Gaming!

The American Library Association's Games and Gaming Round Table have been busy!  If you want to add some well-vetted board games to your circulating collection or to your programming toolkit, check out their recent Platinum Play winners, "evergreen titles well-suited...

Guest Post: Goodbye Dewey? Rethinking Youth Nonfiction

Thanks to Katie Halama, Youth Services Coordinator, L.E. Phillips Memorial Public Library, for this guest post!  Katie received a scholarship from IFLS to attend the Wisconsin Library Association Annual Conference.  She shared insights and resources from a session by...