"Recognizing that high-tech teens are still teens, author and educator Jacobson draws together tools for reflection, along with the latest research and practical solutions. In this authoritative guide, she helps library colleagues understand and address issues relating to youth and technology, answering key questions to help instill appropriate values in teens as they travel the cyber-landscape." "Jacobson shares practical guidance for dealing with the thornier issues of hacking, cheating, privacy, harassment, and access to inappropriate content. She also provides tips on how libraries can incorporate Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) into new policies for teen-friendly tech spaces." Presenting thoughtful and commonsense solutions for high school, middle school, and public youth librarians, I Found It on the Internet is a proactive guide that addresses challenging technological issues facing teens and the librarians who serve them.
The author describes how "information and communication technologies" (Internet, chat, IM, blogs, social networking) play a big role in teens' social lives and impact how they seek information (whether on a formal or informal basis). She discusses ways that librarians can teach teens to learn how to separate the online wheat from the chaff. Also, regulating teens' actions online goes beyond filters and rules of conduct. They must also learn online ethics in order to become intelligent citizens of the virtual world. To that end, librarians must accept and understand ICT as an essential part of library service.
This book was read for a class on teens I'm the public library, but was written for school libraries,making it functionaly useless for class. Outside of that, the book repeated itself too much and the author clearly has some outdated views (like my professor). A big waste of money and time, so much so that I didn't finish the book. But since I had to sit through presentations about it, I don't feel that I really missed out.
As someone who "came of age online" (i.e. Millenials, Generation Y, those born between 1980 and 2000), this book did offer me a great deal of insight. It told me things I already knew, but phrased in an academic style. That said, it wasn't inaccurate or overly philosophical/preachy. Probably good for school and academic librarians who do not belong to the above-mentioned age group or anyone writing on teens and the Internet who needs something to quote from.
p 18 can an individual school library add subject headings for a book so a student search has more chances to "hit" p22 children/teens better @ recognition than recall given a list (or pyramid) of search terms, can recognize what they need http:// www.tlsdelivers.com p23 Kid's catalog p27 open directory www.dmoz.org p43 school librarians electronic disc. group www.eduref.org/lm_net/archive