The Great Prize Debate
Leah Langby
May 14, 2010
Keeping Up With Kids

How many of you have prizes for your Summer Library Program? I am very interested in the conversation about whether or not giving out trinkets as prizes for reading is a good or bad practice. There has been a lot of discussion on an Association for Library Service to Children list serv about using prizes to motivate kids to read, with compelling arguments on both sides.

Some kids who don’t like to read find that a small trinket is a motivation to keep reading and coming to the library during the summer, according to many of the librarians posting to the list. Has this been your experience?

I wonder about adding more cheaply-produced plastic to the world, and what other options there are…What do you do? How does it work? What do kids think?

One great idea from this discussion was asking kids to weed their own collections, and bring in good-condition books they no longer wanted to own. The kids who bring in books really enjoy taking ownership in this way, and the library doesn’t have to spend money on books!

What do you do about prizes? Please comment!

search all blog posts using keywords or title, date, categories

Archives

Categories

Related Articles

IFLS Youth Services Check-In: Play!

Great questions were asked, great ideas were swapped!  Here are a few highlights (sorry if I’m forgetting something):   Karen Magnusson (formerly of Woodville, now of Baldwin) gave a report about her experience at the Play, Make, Learn Conference in...

Great Halloween Cupcake Bake-Off in Phillips

Thanks to Linda Johnson, the new youth services librarian in Phillips, for sharing this fun collaboration.  Leveraging her existing connection with the school and with the Family and Consumer Education teacher, Linda organized a Great Halloween Cupcake Bake-Off for...

The Power of Partnerships (guest post by Valerie Spooner)

I had a great chat with Valerie Spooner, the youth services librarian in Ladysmith, this afternoon.  I LOVED hearing this story about the ways putting in the time for partnerships and relationships can pay off! In 2020 I was able to fulfill one of my library dreams -...