Tag Archives: YALSA

Summer reading list for teens

Are students asking you for titles to read this summer? Recently, we did a post about the YALSA top ten nominees list. Here are some more titles to suggest to your students, from YALSA’s 2016 Best of the Best awards. Tip: Ask your students if they have a public library card in order to keep them reading all summer long!

YALSA 2016 Top Ten Best Fiction for Young Adults (see the other categories and winners here)

simon vs.

Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertall
 six of crows   Six of Crows by Bardugo, Leigh
bunker diaryThe Bunker Diary by Kevin Brooks
  audacity   Audacity by Melanie Crowder 
  shadowshaperShadowshaper by Daniel José Older         
x a novel X: A Novel by Ilyasah Shabazz and Kekla Magoon
boy in the black suitThe Boy in the Black Suit by Jason Reynolds

bone gap

 

Bone Gap by Laura Ruby
challenger deep
Challenger Deep by Neal Shusterman

more happy than

 

More Happy than Not by Adam Silvera

 

New Teen Read Week theme: "Read for the fun of it!"

RainbowEncouraging teens to read can itself be a challenge. But what about inspiring a love of reading in teens that speak a language other than English?

YALSA is addressing this issue with their multilingual “Read for the fun of it” theme during Teen Read Week, October 9–15. According to their 2016 Teen Read Week website, 22% of the nation’s youth speak a language other than English at home. This year’s Teen Read Week poster features the theme in the six most spoken languages in the US: English, Chinese (Mandarin), French, Spanish, Vietnamese, and Tagalog.

YALSA encourages libraries to highlight services and resources for multilingual teens. Eligible library staff, afterschool providers, and educators can now apply for a YALSA 2016 Teen Read Week Activity Grant to support activities aimed at youth that speak English as a second language

Use the hashtag #TRW16 to join the conversation on social media!

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/omzxm4x, licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

YALSA shares top ten teen nominees

Tash reading on the beachLove young adult fiction? Get your reading lists ready!

YALSA has announced the 2016 Teens’ Top Ten Nominees, a list of 26 titles published in 2015. You can view a video and a list of the nominees, courtesy of the YALSA website. They are asking libraries to encourage teens to read the nominated books during the summer so they can be ready for the national Teens’ Top Ten vote, which will take place August 15 through Teen Read Week (October 9–15)

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/mogarhq, licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

 

YALSA Director weighs in on the future of book lists

librariansRecently, YALSA announced their recent round of book lists. Naturally, there are some great books on the lists, but an interesting blog post by Diane Colson, YALSA Director, takes their release as an opportunity to examine the process and generation of YALSA books lists. In particular, she wonders if the current model works in a time of social media, eBooks, and instant access.

Current Model

YALSA currently puts out book lists choosing topics that might be of interest to teens. “The books must be available in paperback, to keep them within easy purchasing range.” Colson mentions that “these lists have long been resources for both readers’ advisory and collection development, keeping library staff abreast with the new and wonderful.” But as Colson also points out, its currently not uncommon for library staff to discover books before they’re published! Sites like NetGalley, Edelweiss, and listserves like yalsa-bk listserv are full of book titles long before they make it on any formalized list.

Dynamic Lists

So what is the future of book lists? One suggestion by Colson is the idea of dynamic lists. Lists that can change at anytime. Lists that have books added and removed when it is appropriate. The idea of dynamic lists seem more aligned with current methods of book lists on sites such as GoodReads or Amazon. But even Colson admits that YALSA is at the beginning stages of this examination. Needless to say, book lists, dynamic or static, are here to stay.

Check out the whole post now for more about the discussion.

2016 Teen Tech Week is coming!

2016 Teen Tech WeekIts that time of year again when “libraries showcase all the great digital resources and services that are available to help teens succeed in school and prepare for college and 21st century careers.” We’re talking about Teen Tech Week of course.

Teen Tech Week is during the week of March 6-12, 2016 and to help you get ready, the Teen Tech website has toolkits galore! From Making to Event Planning to even Publicity they’ve got you covered. Get on board with this year’s theme of “Create it at your Library.”

Need help? Find out why teens need libraries.

On social media? Remember to use the #TTW16 hashtag.