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Incarcerated Youth. Terrilyn Chun Toan Lam-Sullivan Monique Lloyd Max Macias. "In 2003 there were 97,000 juvenile offenders held in residential facilities. This translates to 307 offenders for every 100,000 juveniles in the population.". http://ojjdp.ncjrs.org/ojstatbb/nr2006/.
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Incarcerated Youth Terrilyn Chun Toan Lam-Sullivan Monique Lloyd Max Macias
"In 2003 there were 97,000 juvenile offenders held in residential facilities. This translates to 307 offenders for every 100,000 juveniles in the population." http://ojjdp.ncjrs.org/ojstatbb/nr2006/
Serving Incarcerated Youth • Characterized primarily by their confinement • Their access to the ITP is limited by several factors • Economic • Political • Cultural
Information Needs • Literacy • Action fiction and graphic novels • Parenting skills/concepts • Technology training
ITP for Incarcerated Youth • Restricted constitutional rights • Prisoners have limited rights • Format restrictions • No magazines • No hardbacks • Limited access to computers • Costs limit what can be purchased • Limited access to the Internet
En Loco Parentis • Parent is not present to make decision • Librarian, Committee, or institution must make decision about what is appropriate • Policies must take this into consideration Whereas the public library seeks to provide free access—services to incarcerated youth have limits built in
Diffusion • Limited by abilities to read • Book talks help introduce • Reading/discussion groups create diffusion • Work with educational system to increase reading abilities and discussion
Motivation • Create Library Committees • This will create a sense of ownership • Preparation for real-world interactions • Create newsletter • Learn how to write with discipline, deadlines • Create a blog • This could also create ownership, pride, and motivation for more writing
Limited funding • Library programs and services… • They should be locked up and ignored.
Youths are severely restricted • Correctional staff not the friendliest
Librarians must be tough and adaptable like a chameleon
Being locked up is stressful and lifeless http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xr06ysyBX7A
Writing classes: Journal
Open funding account • Return to normal life quickly
Case study: Multnomah County Library Juvenile Justice Outreach • Donald E. Long Home (DELH) • Ages12-18 years • Offenses include assault, rape, burglary, car jacking • Terms range from a few days to several months • 80 youth at a time; 1,300 individuals per year
Library services at the Donald E. Long Home • Program began in 1996; LSTA grant • Full-time JJ outreach coordinator; volunteer • Department of Justice pays 1/3; Library pays remaining costs • Dedicated collection; budget to buy books • Weekly library • Classroom visits • Book discussions • Programming
How it compares to other western states: King County (Washington), California • DELH is very progressive, known • nationally for its approach for treatment and rehabilitation • Library staff vs. custody staff
Goals • Make available materials that meet the educational, recreational, information and cultural needs of detained youth • Aid the Juvenile Justice Department in the rehabilitation, school completion and eventual successful re-entry into the community by the youth
Selection policy • Librarian selects • Useful and popular • Standard review media • School Library Journal • Booklist • American Library Association (ALA) lists of best books for ages 12-18.
Special consideration is given to information, life experiences and characterization for this special population • Materials should reflect racial and ethnic interests • Be appropriate for various level of competency • Requests from the youth, recommendations from the staff
Materials not allowed • Gang-related material • Hate literature • Excessive violence • Explicit sexual content • Materials that constitute a threat to the safety of the residents and staff and the security of the institution • Exceptions: Materials with historic, cultural, and/or social value, which may be approved by the review committee.
Role and membership of the Review Committee • Custody services staff, MCL staff, Multnomah Education Services District staff • The American Library Association stringently and unequivocally maintains that libraries and librarians have an obligation to resist efforts that systematically exclude materials dealing any subject matter, including gender, sexual orientation, and religion
Destruction of library materials • Loss of library privileges • Confinement in room • Restitution such as erasing project
Current evaluation of program • Reading grades given by teachers • Survey of how much the kids read before they came in versus after (three books per week versus three books per year)
Suggested improvements to this service • Involving youth more • Reading incentive program to increase comprehension (Accelerated Reading Program at Illinois Youth Center) • Monitored computer/Internet access • Follow-up services, transitioning back to the outside • Larger space for collection, activities, office space • Part-time assistant
Funding and partners for additional services • Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) grants, corporate, private funding, library funding (long term) • Schools, school districts, school-to-work programs, vocational schools
Evaluation of additional services • Reading comprehension scores • Number of youth who get library cards and use them after leaving • Number of youth who participate in summer reading program • How many books read after leaving • Maintaining reading comprehension, skills
Going Behind the Bars: Providing Library Service to Incarcerated Youth http://ccb.lis.uiuc.edu/Projects/youth/breakfree/index.html
Young Adult Library Services AssociationServing Teens Behind Bars Blog http://blogs.ala.org/yalsa.php?title=serving_teens_behind_bars&more=1&tb=1&pb=1
State of the City's Homeless Youth Report: Incarcerated Youth; http://www.empirestatecoalition.org/rincarcerated.html