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Dont Forget
the Middle
Tweens at the public library and
the school library
Keep it Tween Friendly
Focus on building a relationship, not
controlling. Pam Leo, author of Connection
Parenting makes this point:
The level of cooperation parents get from
their children is usually equal to the level of
connection children feel with their
parents.
Many times, as school librarian or even as
public librarian, we are in loco parentis, so
we must think in terms of our parenting
skills.
Keepin it Tween Friendly,
contd.
Focus on praising good behavior,
not punishment.
Be as honest as possible without
being rude.
Programs for Tweens
 Programs should focus on what THEY like, not what you like. Choices
and buy-in are very important
 Activities focused on the self, surveys, quizzesadolescents are
building the self. Example: Abbreviated Myers Briggs survey.
 SLAM poetry: view video example, read examples and write our
own poetry (see next slide for details)
 Healthy Snack program: involved local food coop, they brought stuff
for a smoothie and had a trivia game about nutrition (use your links
to the community)
 Getting to know you activities to break the ice and build
relationships. Example: Snow Ball Fight.
 School environment: multiple intelligencesthey find out how they
learn best. Assessment of Multiple Intelligences.
 BEST OF program.
SLAM Poetry Program
Books I Read From or Offered as Inspiration
 The Rose that Grew from Concrete by
Tupac Shakur
 Poetry Speaks Who I am: Poems of
Discovery, Inspiration Independence and Everything Else
edited by Elise Paschen with CD of recorded poems
 Time You Let Me In, edited by Naomi Shihab Nye
Activities:
 Show some videos from YouTube of tweens reading their
own poetry as inspiration. Search for Middle School
poetry SLAM on YouTube.com.
 Write an example of your own to share with kids.
 If available, record their poetry readings on video or
audio recording device.
Poetry Presentation for School
 ..DownloadsPoetry(3).ppt Suitable for grades 6 to 9.
 Naomi Shihab Nye "One Boy Told Me
Survey sent to 6th grade classes &
Middle School
HAWK Hangout Survey
 What activity would you like to do this summer at the Mesa Public library
during Hawk Hangout (Tuesdays from 2:00 to 4:00pm)?
 What is your favorite book you have read recently?
 What is your favorite movie you have seen recently?
 What is your favorite music right now?
 What games would you like to play at Hawk Hangout?
 What are your favorite snacks to eat?
 If you have ideas or suggestions for Hawk Hangout, please contact Ms.
Ellie at eleanor.simons@lacnm.us
Survey Responses (real life
examples)
 Play games like Apples to Apples, DDR, Just
Dance, Twister, UNO, Poker & Duck-Duck Goose
 Do crafts like Duct Tape Crafts, Bead Bracelets &
coloring extra large Posters
 Do digital projects with apps like LaDiDa and
Songify
 Watch movies like: Holes, Yellow Submarine,
Howls Moving Castle, My Neighbor Totoro,
Twilight, etc.
 Water Balloon Fight party at the end of summer
Keep yourself connected
 http://www.teenreads.com/
 Middle School Matters
 Social media: Facebook, Pinterest,
Tumblr Ms. Ellie's pinterest board YS
 Good Reads website: look for groups like
Addicted to YA
http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/64233-addicted-to-ya
VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) in print and online
Blogs by colleagues:
http://www.fatgirlreading.com/ Angie Manfredi
Public Libraries Online:
http://publiclibrariesonline.org/2013/03/unattended-children-no-
easy-answers/
RSS FeedListServs, both easy ways to keep up with professional
ideas and writings. Ex.: PUBYAC ListServ
Orientation for School Library
 Examples:
 Prezi school Library Orientation
 Welcome to LAMS Library Media Center
Library Lessons
 Mythology Powerpoint and Mythology Assignment
Children's Literature: Creative Writing powerpoint
Folklore as Genre powerpoint
Since so many of my lessons depend upon computers being
available, I ALWAYS have an emergency plan for if the power
goes out. The Quote Box.
Bringing the Mountain --I take a cart full of attractive fiction
books to a classroom and do a book talk for several titles and
take my laptop to check books out to students after the book
talks.
Information is Power
Empower your students
 Using databases: Funded by state of New Mexico (free to
every school) Cengage Databases
 Every student who leaves middle school should know what a
database is and basically how to use it. (A database is reliable
information, a wiki is not.) They should know the difference
between these: 1) website 2) database 3) wiki 4) blog
 Evaluating information found on the internet (see next slide)
Evaluating WebsitesTeach
students to evaluate their sources
 Especially for Middle School Students
 Excellent video on YouTube about Using Websites
 Lesson Plan for teaching evaluation of websites
 Make sure your students know the difference between .org,
.com, .net, .edu, .UK, etc.
 Middle School Library website
 Professionalwebsite evaluation handout.pdf
Reading Nonfiction
Teaching the Skills
 Offer this to Language Arts teachers,
especially before research projects.
 Demonstrate effective nonfiction reading
on overhead, online or on the interactive
whiteboard (SmartBoard)
 Go through the techniquessee chart and
outline that follow
Tweens presentation
Teaching to Read Nonfiction
Reading Nonfiction or Textbooks
I. Preview
A. Look at title, subtitles & headings
1. gives you a map of what's ahead.
B. Look at pictures and tables
1. These give hints about the topic too.
II. Get the Gist
A. Find the main idea or theme
1. Make notes or highlight text
B. Summarize the main points
1. Take notes or draw a mind map.
What do you know and what do you need to know?
I. CLICK! I know about these things!
A. This is your foundation--everything ties to this.
II. CLUNK! I don't understand this.
A. Resolve: Get more information in order to understand
III. Make a record--usually notes or a graphic organizer
Resources I use over and over
 TeacherTube.com : Free downloadable educational videos
 際際滷share.com : Free shared powerpoints
 QuestGarden.com : search and find webQuests and/or make
your own. Example: Harlem Renaissance Free to search and
use, but to make your own, you must have a membership.
 Animoto.com : free Educators membership
 Prezi.com : really cool presentation app, free educator
membership.
 Camtasia app: super easy to use way to make screen capture
videosreally useful for instruction. See this Review.
 Padlet: I use this as a kind of scrapbook for our programs:
 Hawk Hangout Summer 2012
Insert Creativity
Creativity video wit Naomi Shihab Nye
Huge advantage the school Librarian
has:
We teach, but we do not grade.
Like the school counselorwe have an
opportunity to be an asset for the
students. See 40 developmental assets
Get out of YOUR story and into the BIG
story.
Graduate your tweens to the
Teen program
 Quote of one of our teen patrons: I didnt know who I was
till I read this book. About reading Through to You by Emily
Hainsworth.
 This is one of our patrons who is now in the Teen program
who was a tween program patron.
The big picture: Connecting
tweens to the world of BOOKS

More Related Content

Tweens presentation

  • 1. Dont Forget the Middle Tweens at the public library and the school library
  • 2. Keep it Tween Friendly Focus on building a relationship, not controlling. Pam Leo, author of Connection Parenting makes this point: The level of cooperation parents get from their children is usually equal to the level of connection children feel with their parents. Many times, as school librarian or even as public librarian, we are in loco parentis, so we must think in terms of our parenting skills.
  • 3. Keepin it Tween Friendly, contd. Focus on praising good behavior, not punishment. Be as honest as possible without being rude.
  • 4. Programs for Tweens Programs should focus on what THEY like, not what you like. Choices and buy-in are very important Activities focused on the self, surveys, quizzesadolescents are building the self. Example: Abbreviated Myers Briggs survey. SLAM poetry: view video example, read examples and write our own poetry (see next slide for details) Healthy Snack program: involved local food coop, they brought stuff for a smoothie and had a trivia game about nutrition (use your links to the community) Getting to know you activities to break the ice and build relationships. Example: Snow Ball Fight. School environment: multiple intelligencesthey find out how they learn best. Assessment of Multiple Intelligences. BEST OF program.
  • 5. SLAM Poetry Program Books I Read From or Offered as Inspiration The Rose that Grew from Concrete by Tupac Shakur Poetry Speaks Who I am: Poems of Discovery, Inspiration Independence and Everything Else edited by Elise Paschen with CD of recorded poems Time You Let Me In, edited by Naomi Shihab Nye Activities: Show some videos from YouTube of tweens reading their own poetry as inspiration. Search for Middle School poetry SLAM on YouTube.com. Write an example of your own to share with kids. If available, record their poetry readings on video or audio recording device.
  • 6. Poetry Presentation for School ..DownloadsPoetry(3).ppt Suitable for grades 6 to 9. Naomi Shihab Nye "One Boy Told Me
  • 7. Survey sent to 6th grade classes & Middle School HAWK Hangout Survey What activity would you like to do this summer at the Mesa Public library during Hawk Hangout (Tuesdays from 2:00 to 4:00pm)? What is your favorite book you have read recently? What is your favorite movie you have seen recently? What is your favorite music right now? What games would you like to play at Hawk Hangout? What are your favorite snacks to eat? If you have ideas or suggestions for Hawk Hangout, please contact Ms. Ellie at eleanor.simons@lacnm.us
  • 8. Survey Responses (real life examples) Play games like Apples to Apples, DDR, Just Dance, Twister, UNO, Poker & Duck-Duck Goose Do crafts like Duct Tape Crafts, Bead Bracelets & coloring extra large Posters Do digital projects with apps like LaDiDa and Songify Watch movies like: Holes, Yellow Submarine, Howls Moving Castle, My Neighbor Totoro, Twilight, etc. Water Balloon Fight party at the end of summer
  • 9. Keep yourself connected http://www.teenreads.com/ Middle School Matters Social media: Facebook, Pinterest, Tumblr Ms. Ellie's pinterest board YS Good Reads website: look for groups like Addicted to YA http://www.goodreads.com/group/show/64233-addicted-to-ya VOYA (Voice of Youth Advocates) in print and online Blogs by colleagues: http://www.fatgirlreading.com/ Angie Manfredi Public Libraries Online: http://publiclibrariesonline.org/2013/03/unattended-children-no- easy-answers/ RSS FeedListServs, both easy ways to keep up with professional ideas and writings. Ex.: PUBYAC ListServ
  • 10. Orientation for School Library Examples: Prezi school Library Orientation Welcome to LAMS Library Media Center
  • 11. Library Lessons Mythology Powerpoint and Mythology Assignment Children's Literature: Creative Writing powerpoint Folklore as Genre powerpoint Since so many of my lessons depend upon computers being available, I ALWAYS have an emergency plan for if the power goes out. The Quote Box. Bringing the Mountain --I take a cart full of attractive fiction books to a classroom and do a book talk for several titles and take my laptop to check books out to students after the book talks.
  • 12. Information is Power Empower your students Using databases: Funded by state of New Mexico (free to every school) Cengage Databases Every student who leaves middle school should know what a database is and basically how to use it. (A database is reliable information, a wiki is not.) They should know the difference between these: 1) website 2) database 3) wiki 4) blog Evaluating information found on the internet (see next slide)
  • 13. Evaluating WebsitesTeach students to evaluate their sources Especially for Middle School Students Excellent video on YouTube about Using Websites Lesson Plan for teaching evaluation of websites Make sure your students know the difference between .org, .com, .net, .edu, .UK, etc. Middle School Library website Professionalwebsite evaluation handout.pdf
  • 14. Reading Nonfiction Teaching the Skills Offer this to Language Arts teachers, especially before research projects. Demonstrate effective nonfiction reading on overhead, online or on the interactive whiteboard (SmartBoard) Go through the techniquessee chart and outline that follow
  • 16. Teaching to Read Nonfiction Reading Nonfiction or Textbooks I. Preview A. Look at title, subtitles & headings 1. gives you a map of what's ahead. B. Look at pictures and tables 1. These give hints about the topic too. II. Get the Gist A. Find the main idea or theme 1. Make notes or highlight text B. Summarize the main points 1. Take notes or draw a mind map. What do you know and what do you need to know? I. CLICK! I know about these things! A. This is your foundation--everything ties to this. II. CLUNK! I don't understand this. A. Resolve: Get more information in order to understand III. Make a record--usually notes or a graphic organizer
  • 17. Resources I use over and over TeacherTube.com : Free downloadable educational videos 際際滷share.com : Free shared powerpoints QuestGarden.com : search and find webQuests and/or make your own. Example: Harlem Renaissance Free to search and use, but to make your own, you must have a membership. Animoto.com : free Educators membership Prezi.com : really cool presentation app, free educator membership. Camtasia app: super easy to use way to make screen capture videosreally useful for instruction. See this Review. Padlet: I use this as a kind of scrapbook for our programs: Hawk Hangout Summer 2012
  • 18. Insert Creativity Creativity video wit Naomi Shihab Nye Huge advantage the school Librarian has: We teach, but we do not grade. Like the school counselorwe have an opportunity to be an asset for the students. See 40 developmental assets Get out of YOUR story and into the BIG story.
  • 19. Graduate your tweens to the Teen program Quote of one of our teen patrons: I didnt know who I was till I read this book. About reading Through to You by Emily Hainsworth. This is one of our patrons who is now in the Teen program who was a tween program patron.
  • 20. The big picture: Connecting tweens to the world of BOOKS