Dipping Your Toe into the Advocacy Pool Communicating the Value of Library Services for Teens
Feb 21, 2016
Dipping Your Toe into the Advocacy Pool
Communicating the Value of Library Services for Teens
What is Advocacy?
A good definition comes from AASL:On-going process of building partnerships
so that others will act for and with you, turning passive support into educated action for the library program.
It begins with a vision and a plan for the library program that is then matched to the agenda and priorities of stakeholders.
What is NOT Advocacy?
Most of advocacy is not lobbying, but lobbying is a legally allowable and regulated form of advocacyIt is when your organization takes a position on
a piece of legislation & asks elected officials to support or oppose that legislation
Nonprofits are permitted to do some lobbying as part of their overall advocacyThe amount is based on the size of their budget
Why advocate?You can’t assume anyone else is
doing it.It’s a part of being an effective
librarian or library worker.The squeaky wheel gets the grease.The general public isn’t always aware
of what the library has to offer.Because many teens do not yet have
the skills to advocate for themselves.
Who do you reach out to?1. Community Members2. Policy Makers3. Press4. Library Staff
1. Community membersLibrary patronsTeensParentsGrandparentsLocal business ownersYouth serving groupsEducators
1. CommunityHold a YA Open HouseParticipate in and have a library presence
in local festivals, events & celebrationsStart or revive a “Friends of the Library”Speak about your library at a non-library
event (women’s club, bowling league, church group, historical society, etc.)
Use social tools to reach & engage peopleCreate multi-language library materials
2. PolicymakersTown CouncilSchool BoardMayorAnyone with influence
2. Policy MakersAdd VIPs to the library’s newsletter mailing
listMake sure VIPs have library cardsAttend a meeting (Chamber of Commerce,
School Board, Town Council, etc.)Invite VIPs to library eventsSend them photos or articles about recent
library accomplishmentsAttend an advocacy event like State or
National Library Legislative Day
3. pressNewspaperRadioTV (incl. public
access)BloggersLocal magazines
3. PressSend them a calendar of library eventsWrite letters to the editorWrite press releasesAdd them to the library’s newsletter
mailing listInvite them to attend library eventsSend them photos of recent eventsSend them public service announcements
4. Library staffTrustees or BoardDirectorLibrariansSupport staffVolunteersFriends of the Library
4. StaffShare information at a staff meetingPost articles or photos in the staff loungeForward relevant items from e-newslettersShare a brief weekly update with your
supervisor (email, phone, face-to-face)Create an online place for coworkers to
share knowledge (wiki, intranet)Hold a workshop or idea swap for
coworkers
Selected ResourcesAdvocacy Toolkit,
www.ala.org/yalsa/advocacy Being a Teen Library Services Advocate,
Linda W. BraunPowerful Public Relations: A How-To Guide
for Libraries, by Rashelle [email protected],
http://lists.ala.org/wws/info/yadvocacy-l
Continuing Education Resources
Stay current with developments in advocacy through YALSA’s webinars!offered monthly on the third Thursday at 2pm
EST, www.ala.org/yalsa/webinars The ALA Washington Office periodically
offers free advocacy webinars. Events are posted on District Dispatch, www.districtdispatch.org/
Please contact YALSA if we can be of helpYALSA50 E. Huron St.Chicago, IL 606111.800.545.2433 [email protected]/yalsa (web site)http://yalsa.ala.org/blog/ (YALSAblog)http://wikis.ala.org/yalsa/index.php (wiki)@yalsa on Twitter
Who is YALSA?YALSA stands for the Young Adult Library
Services AssociationHas over 5,200 members who are school
and public librarians, library workers, educators, grad students, retirees, library supporters and more!
Mission is to make libraries awesome for teens!
YALSA is a subspecialty of the American Library Association (ALA)
Questions, comments, ideas to share?