[Publib] Age ranges for Teen Services
Darla Wegener
dwegener at ci.lincoln.ca.us
Wed Jul 11 18:36:21 EDT 2007
The state library has designated young adults as 13-18, so this is used
for our statistical circulation category. Our teen program will serve
6-12 grades, as our schools are broken down by grades 6-8 and 9-12.
Darla
Darla Wegener
Director of Library Services
Lincoln Public Library
590 Fifth Street
Lincoln, CA 95648
916 645-6377
916 645-7924 FAX
________________________________
From: publib-bounces at webjunction.org
[mailto:publib-bounces at webjunction.org] On Behalf Of Dieden, Cynthia
Sent: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 3:00 PM
To: publib at webjunction.org
Subject: RE: [Publib] Age ranges for Teen Services
Rather than use an age range at our library, we use grade levels.
Grades 6-12 (regardless of age) fall into YA programming and we use this
as a guide for selection of YA titles.
Cynthia Dieden
Collection Specialist Librarian
Mount Prospect Public Library
847-253-5675 ext. 3647
cdieden at mppl.org
Opinions expressed are those of the sender and not of Mount Prospect
Public Library
________________________________
From: publib-bounces at webjunction.org on behalf of Kathleen Horan
Sent: Wed 7/11/2007 3:31 PM
To: King, Kathryn; publib at webjunction.org
Subject: RE: [Publib] Age ranges for Teen Services
Hi, Kathryn,
Boy, does your situation sound familiar! We use the generic YA to
distinguish our teens, 11-17, although: a) those aspiring to teendom
(9s & 10s) are desperate to break rank with their younger counterparts,
b) the term usually connotes teens between 13 & 15, and c) no
self-respecting high-schooler over 15 would be caught dead in a YA
program. Those in the latter category come to the library to study, do
homework, text each other, and perform the usual mating rituals.
We have a manga group that meets each week to talk, read and trade
manga, watch anime, and eat popcorn. Ages: 12-15, but mostly 13 & 14.
I've done booktalking with this group and they actually do borrow the
titles I push . . . IF they have a library card.
We have a Monday night storytime that we bill as "Family Night," and
that allows the children's librarian to read some longer picture books
or even a short chapter book. We often get 9s and 10s at this program.
They also do a craft.
We have a program called "Pizza & Pages" on Fridays during the school
year, during which basically they get to eat pizza while the children's
librarian booktalks. It wasn't wildly popular. The kids would show up,
eat through the pizza boxes to get to the slices, then leave the
children's librarian babbling and traumatized. I borrowed my Dad's
persona and "read them the riot act," after which they committed to
staying for the entire, excruciating half-hour of the program. I must
say, though, that once, when the pizza didn't arrive on time, the
children's librarian very apologetically gave them Oreo cookies, and the
teens thanked her and told her not to feel bad. Awwww, garsh, y'all . .
. By the end of the school year, the group had changed some and the
teens were a little nicer and more enthusiastic readers.
Here in the Rio Grande Valley, the kids (as, I suspect, in many places
around the country), teens and even 'tweens must have the coolness
factor in anything they do. If I offered a program called "Sit on your
tush for an hour at a time doing MySpace and Runescape," I'd have stats
through the roof! (Some gaming programming to come.)
I wish we had a Youth Services Librarian, as well as a Children's
Librarian. I am open to ideas that would spark interest in our (mostly
Mexican-American) teens (whatever their ages), but it's difficult to get
them to attend programs.
BTW, where y'at in Texas?
-- Kathleen
"Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right
answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets
for each individual." -- Victor E. Frankl
Kathleen P. Horan, M.L.S.
Branch Manager
Palm View Branch Library
McAllen, TX
956-688-3322
________________________________
From: publib-bounces at webjunction.org on behalf of King, Kathryn
Sent: Wed 7/11/2007 2:39 PM
To: publib at webjunction.org
Subject: [Publib] Age ranges for Teen Services
PUBLIB-ers--
I am trying to gather some information about how other libraries
classify their teens, specifically what age ranges do you teen services
serve.
We have a special situation because we have Teen (15-17+) and Juvenile
(8-11) and then a netherworld called Middle Zone (ages 11-14).
The question has arisen as to why "teen" doesn't include all teens. Is
there a better term for High Schoolers that isn't school level specific?
Announcing that we have a great "high schoolers zone" doesn't sound like
it would entice any high schooler to come, hang out and (perchance to
dream) check out a book.
On a follow up question: Do you find more overlap between jr high
schoolers and high schoolers OR upper elementary kids and jr high
schoolers?
In a quandary in Texas,
Kathryn
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