Children’s and Young Adult (YA) Publishing

Author(s):  
Mike Shatzkin ◽  
Robert Paris Riger

Why is children’s book publishing so often viewed as a world apart from adult publishing? You can tell if someone doesn’t work in children’s publishing if she can’t tell you the difference between the Caldecott and Newbery Awards. The American Library Association (ALA) awards...

Author(s):  
April M. Sanders ◽  
Laura Isbell ◽  
Kathryn Dixon

Educators looking for books to offer to children and young adult readers with LGBTQ+-inclusive themes can use these results to review award winning books and the themes found in the texts. This critical content study includes children's and young adult books winning the Stonewall Award from the American Library Association. The selected books are reviewed for themes applicable to mirrors and windows that are provided to readers in the text. Windows provide a way for readers to see an experience unlike their own while mirrors offer a reflection of experiences the reader has experienced. Both offer a way for readers to connect with the text.


Author(s):  
Silvana N. Fernández

In Canada today the children’s book publishing scene is quite different from what it used to be in the 1970s and 1980s. Even if most publishers are small and rely heavily on federal grants the sheer range of publishing houses which feature the multicultural composition of the country for children and young adult readers is vast. The pendulum covers houses such as Annick Press, Fifth house, Second Story, or Theytus Books. The situation forty years ago though was radically different. In those days one of the groundbreaking houses was Groundwood Books. In this article we intend to look into the origins of the project, the wider political, social and cultural context, and three works by minority voices which clearly marked the publishing house’s profile and aspirations (Paul Yee’s Tales from Gold Mountain, Thomas King’s controversial A Coyote Columbus Story and Shirley Sterling’s My Name is Seepeetza). Our aim thus is to afford insight into the part played by Groundwood Books in fostering a new poetics in children’s books within the framework of Canada’s nation-building process.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 141-143
Author(s):  
Hilary Bussell

A Review of: Subramaniam, M., Scaff, L., Kawas, S., Hoffman, K. M., & Davis, K. (2018). Using technology to support equity and inclusion in youth library programming: Current practices and future opportunities. The Library Quarterly, 88(4), 315–331. https://doi.org/10.1086/699267 Abstract Objective – To understand how public youth librarians use technology in their programming and what challenges and opportunities they face incorporating connected learning into their programming. Design – Qualitative study Setting – Phone calls and three library conferences (the Young Adult Library Services Association Symposium, the American Library Association Midwinter Meeting, and the Maryland/Delaware Library Association Conference) in the United States. Phone calls; in-person interviews; focus groups at the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) Symposium, the American Library Association (ALA) Midwinter Meeting, and the Maryland/Delaware Library Association Conference. Subjects – A total of 92 youth-serving librarians and library staff in rural, urban, and suburban public libraries across the United States. Methods – Subjects were recruited via social media, partner librarians, the project website, an association e-newsletter, and printed materials. The researchers conducted 66 semi-structured interviews between December 2015 and May 2016 and 3 focus groups between November 2015 and May 2016. The transcripts of the interviews and focus groups were coded using a thematic analysis approach informed by a connected learning framework. Main Results – A total of 98% (65) of interview participants said they use technology in their youth programming; 69% (18) of focus group participants mentioned using technology in their youth programming. Many youth-serving librarians use technology in ways that align with connected learning. Youth-serving library workers are successful in finding community partners to help plan technology-enabled programming, they strive to develop connected learning programming based on the interests of their youth patrons, and they often take on the role of “media mentor” by exploring technology collaboratively with their patrons. Youth-serving library workers face several challenges in implementing connected learning. These include difficulties with openly networked infrastructures, struggling to create learning environments that align with the hanging out, messing around, and geeking out (HOMAGO) stages of connected learning, and lack of confidence and experience in mentoring youth patrons on how to use technology. Conclusion – The authors recommend that library administrators improve access to openly networked technology both within and outside the library, and loosen overly-restrictive social media policies to give youth-serving library workers more flexibility and control. They also recommend that library administrators implement more training for library staff in skills relating to connected learning. The authors are creating a professional development toolkit to help public youth library workers to incorporate digital media and connected learning into their work with young patrons.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alonso Estrada-Cuzcano

Se revisan las fuentes internacionales sobre el acceso y libertad de información; así como los contenidos de las constituciones latinoamericanas. Existen coincidencias entre los investigadores en determinar que el artículo 19 de la Declaración Universal de los Derechos Humanos (DUDH) es el hito fundamental en este tipo de libertades. Desde entonces ha surgido una serie de figuras jurídicas relativas al acceso y libertad de información: hábeas data, autodeterminación informativa, acceso a la información pública, información de dominio público, el acceso y servicio universal, entre otras.A partir de la DUDH y como una vertiente se va configurando la “libertad intelectual”, que se considera un principio fundamental en la Biblioteconomía y Documentación y que tiene como elementos fundamentales a la privacidad y confidencialidad y al acceso equitativo a la información, que han adquirido importancia especialmente en entornos digitales. Se realiza una aproximación histórica de dos instituciones pioneras en la enunciación de la libertad intelectual: American Library Association (ALA) y la Internacional Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA).Incluye un estudio comparado de cinco países latinoamericanos: Argentina, Brasil, México, Chile y Perú, que tiene como finalidad demostrar que hay tres elemento fundamentales para que la libertad intelectual pueda desarrollarse. El primer elemento es el Estado, que promulga leyes y elabora los planes y políticas de gobierno; el segundo elemento son los gremios o colectivos profesionales, que deben incluir en sus códigos de ética este principio y, finalmente, la formación académica, que debe incluir en los planes de estudio a la libertad intelectual en su vertiente jurídica y ética.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document