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Cargando... Club Programs for Teens: 100 Activities for the Entire Yearpor Amy J. Alessio
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"A good problem for libraries to have is a group of teens that grows increasingly bigger at each program until staff are unsure how to manage it. A huge group is still a challenge, and developing a teen club is a solution. What is a Teen Club? In many cases, it is a popular teen school or public library event that the teens want to revisit based on specific passions, such as writing, food, gaming, fashion, or green initiatives...In each of the themed chapters in this book, we present a club for teens with at least seven ideas for meetings, with most programs offering suggestions for variations and online aspects"-- No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)027.62Information Library and Information Sciences General Libraries; Reports, etc. For special groups and organizations By AgeClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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Certain other tasks, like learning how to make pie crust from scratch, might be pretty frustrating without an expert on hand.
A good resource for your staff development shelf, provided there are multiple staff who'd be able to access it--not sure I'd buy it just for one or two librarians, depending on the librarians. I.e., most of these projects would be a bit too ambitious for someone who also has to manage storytimes and children's programs and school visits and adult programs and volunteers in addition to the usual desk duties, but a dedicated teen librarian with perhaps more staffing help might have no trouble finding the time. It looks like something that would come in handy when one of your introvert teens finally feels comfortable enough to suggest a program idea, and then you've got two months or so to figure out how to make it happen--this book could tell you how to make it work, or probably at least it could point you in the right direction to get started.
The other thing I'd like to note is that some of the projects contain a lot of URLs (which are likely to become obsolete after a couple years or so), so check for a newer edition if one exists, or maybe just borrow it through LINK if you're not sure.
REVISIT (2018): some ideas if you are looking to change up your teen programs, though at this point (having done several years of teen programs that may or may not be tired/worn-out) I can't imagine trying these out. Perhaps if I were less burnt out, or perhaps if I worked with different teens... I was also hoping to get more teen service ideas (since my teens always need hours but rarely volunteer ideas for service projects)--I may just ask some colleagues for ideas to refresh since I didn't pick up much here. ( )