TPiB: 3 cheap and easy after school programs
I’m always looking for small program ideas that don’t take a lot of planning time, are inexpensive, are flexible, and appeal widely. Here are three to try.
Sci-Fi Stitches – or – Embroidered notecards
You can be silly or serious with this one. I did both and both were fun. For the “sci-fi stitches” I printed a bunch of different old timey photos onto cardstock (check Pinterest, there are gobs of people who have boards full of quirky and interesting old black and white photos). For the embroidered notecards, I supplied some adult coloring sheets to use as templates.
Supplies
- embroidery floss
- embroidery needles
- small pieces of corrugated cardboard
- cardstock
- tape
- thumbtacks
- Draw your pattern onto the cardstock
- Place the cardstock on top of the cardboard. Using the thumbtack, poke holes along the pattern. If you’re using a coloring sheet as a template, you can punch right through the sheet itself.
- Thread your needle and start stitching into the holes. Use the tape to secure the floss at the back of the card.
Zenstones, aka draw on rocks
Seriously, drawing on rocks sounded kind of boring, but if you call it zenstones… or maybe rock-dalas… or meditation nuggets… suddenly it’s a THING!
Supplies
- bag of rocks
- permanent markers (black for light colored rocks, silver for black rocks)
This one was stone simple [lol!]. I had a bag of rocks left over from a gardening craft and I borrowed a few of the silver sharpies from the Tech Processing department and that was it. The kids did this for close to an hour. It was kind of amazing. This would be an easy pick for self-directed programming and could dovetail nicely with a number of seasonal themes.
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Emoji Spelling Bee
Hey look! It’s not a craft! I heard about the “First Ever Emoji Spelling Bee” that happened at last fall’s Emojicon (a celebration of all things emoji) and it seemed like an activity begging to be turned into a teen program.
Supplies
- a list of silly words and phrases
- teen supplied phones OR a computer projected onto a shared screen that can access an Emoji Keyboard Online
- a timer
Have the teens come up with the words and phrases to challenge each other or make a list ahead of time. For each turn, give a teen one word/phrase clue and set a timer. When the timer is up, they are done and the rest of the group gets to decide if the phrase is “spelled” correctly or not.
Filed under: Programming, TPIB
About Heather Booth
Heather Booth has worked in libraries since 2001 and am the author of Serving Teens Through Reader’s Advisory (ALA Editions, 2007) and the editor of The Whole Library Handbook: Teen Servcies along with Karen Jensen.
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JennB says
These are fabulous. I’ve been looking for “new to us” ideas for summer craft programs. I will definitely be using the embroidery and the zen-rocks!
Michelle says
Looks like they are not only cheap and easy but very interesting too. Thanks for the suggestions!