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PAIN IN THE BRAIN: TEEN LIBRARY (MIS) BEHAVIOR 101 Presented by Beth Gallaway for NHLA, May 2009

Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

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Page 1: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

PAIN IN THE BRAIN:TEEN LIBRARY(MIS) BEHAVIOR 101

Presented by Beth Gallaway for NHLA, May 2009

Page 2: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Beth Gallaway: Contact & Slides

Email: [email protected]

Cell: 603.247.3196

Slides: http://slideshare.net/informationgoddess29/

Links: http://delicious.com/informationgoddess29/brain

Page 3: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Do you have Ephebiphobia?

(Fear & Loathing of Youth)

Page 4: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Library Behaviors

Groups Blocking entrance

or access Roaming Taking up space

“Courting” Behavior

Backtalk and “disrespect”

Eating & drinking Cell phone use

Page 5: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Library Behaviors

Language Sex Vandalism Theft Violence Cyberbullying

Page 6: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Differentiate between the 2 Ds:

Disruptive Normal Annoying

Dangerous Abnormal Harmful to self & others Illegal

Page 7: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Why Do Teenagers Act That Way? They hate the library! They hate YOU (the librarian)! It’s a contest!

(not really)

Page 8: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Influences on Teen Behavior Cultural Sociological Psychological Biological Personal

Page 9: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Cultural

Who taught you how to behave in the library?

How do patrons know how to behave in the library

Page 10: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Sociological

Who do teens spend their time with?

Page 11: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Psychological

What are teens going through during adolescence?

What are the unique experiences that characterize them?

Page 12: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

On Rules

Create a behavior policy Same rules for everyone No rules set up to fail The less rules, the better  Word rules in a positive way  Leave rules open ended

Page 13: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Developmental Needs

Positive Social Interaction with Adults & Peers Structure & Clear Limits Physical Activity Creative Expression Competence & Achievement Meaningful Participation Opportunities for Self-Definition

Source: National Middle School Association (1996). Research Summary: Young Adolescent’s Developmental Needs, 2006

Page 14: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Developmental Needs Positive Social Interaction with Adults & Peers

(seek attention, socialization) Structure & Clear Limits

(push boundaries, challenge authority) Physical Activity

(run from computer to computer, roam) Creative Expression

(vandalism, MySpace Competence & Achievement

(competitive behavior, Runescape obsession) Meaningful Participation

(opininated, socialization) Opportunities for Self-Definition

National Middle School Association (1996). Research Summary: Young Adolescent’s Developmental Needs, 2006

Page 15: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Biological

The corpus callosum stopped developing around age 5 (grows through adolescence)

The brain didn’t grow after age 10 (grows through adolescence)

Myelination was complete before puberty (continues well into young adulthood)

Page 16: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

BRAIN DIAGRAM

Source: http://www.thecuriousmind.com/brain-cm.html

Page 17: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Dopamine

Dopamine levels fluctuate

Controls: Smooth motor skills Pleasure centerResults in: Risk-taking, novelty

seeking Excitability, loudness

Source: http://www.3dchem.com/imagesofmolecules/Dopamine.jpg

Page 18: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Serotonin

Serotonin levels fluctuateControls: • Temperature• Mood• Appetite• EmotionResults in: Moodiness

Page 19: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Melatonin

Melatonin cycle differs from adults

Controls: Sleep/wake cycles Biological clock Results: Brain development REM sleep has been

linked to learning ability

Page 20: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Lack of Sleep

Sleep deprivation results in: Crankiness Depression Insomnia Perceived laziness Lack of energy Poor Judgement 

Page 21: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Myelin Sheath

The myelin sheath coats nerves and improves connection speeds

Facilitates: Intelligent response to gut

reactions Learning new things Concrete thought to abstract

thoughtResults in: Reacting Poor memory/recall Lack of focus and attention Poor organizational skills Bad impulse control

Source: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/images/ency/fullsize/9682.jpg

Page 22: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

The Brain and Gender

Girl’s brains myelinate faster than boys – may account for earlier “emotional maturity”

The amygdala prompter of gut impulses grows faster in boys, prompting development of physical and spatial skills, and other cerebellum processes

The hippocampus memory center grows faster in girls, prompting development in social cognition

Page 23: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Behavioral Strategies

Boundary setting is extremely important Address behavior in terms of actions and

consequences in a matter of fact, non-threatening manner

Page 24: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Set Boundaries

State unacceptable behavior Optional: explain why it’s unacceptable State consequence of continued

unacceptable behavior Ask patron to choose to cease behavior,

or find somewhere else to continue behavior

Page 25: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Examples

“John, it’s too noisy over here, and some people are trying to study. If you continue to be disruptive, I will need to ask you to leave. You can choose to lower the volume level and stay or you can choose to leave.

Mary, your computer time is up, we have

someone waiting. If you continue to violate the time limit, I will have to suspend your computer privileges. You can choose to log off now and get more time tomorrow, or lose your computer access for 2 days.”

Page 26: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Keep in Mind…

“Librarians do not kick teens out of the library. Teens get themselves kicked out of the library, because of their behavior.”

~ Nick Buron, NYPL, Queens Branch

Page 27: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Correcting Behavior

3 Strikes & You’re Out! Target the Group Leader Good Cop, Bad Cop Invade Personal Space

Page 28: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Follow Through

Welcome back Introduce yourself Discuss behavior incident Reinforce consequences of actions Start with a clean slate

Page 29: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Top 4 Ways to Nip Bad Behavior1. Create raving fans of the library  2. Develop personal relationships3. Give them a space of their own 4. Program them to death

Page 30: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Create Raving Fans

Brush up your customer service skills  Deliver excellent reference Deliver excellent reader’s advisory Cultivate meaningful youth participation:

Give them what they want Foster ownership of the library and teen

space 

Page 31: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Develop Personal Relationships Talk to teens when they do something

RIGHT Introduce yourself, repeatedly  Greet patrons by name Get out from behind the desk Get out of the library 

Page 32: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Give Them a Room of Their Own

More than just a shelf and a poster

Convert a meeting room to a homework center or program room a few days a week

Designate a staff person to serve teens

Page 33: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Program Them to Death

Engage them in meaningful participation

Give teens positive ways to expend their energy Offer after school

activities Cultivate a

volunteer program

Page 34: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Reminders for Librarians

Stay calm It’s not personal Teens are job security Learn to RAP  

Page 35: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

RAP

Remember Accept Project

Page 36: Teen Library (Mis) Behavior 101

Thank You!

Slides: http://slideshare.net/informationgoddess29/

Email: [email protected]

Links: www.delicious.com/informationgoddess29/brain

603.247.3196