A short list of tweets posted over the last week that librarians and the teens that they serve may find interesting:
- So much I want to quote from this interview! Henry Jenkins interviews James Paul Gee: http://ow.ly/4iYdj (via @henryjenkins) – @TnCntrl
- We should all have this poster in our libraries and tech labs. re: image use http://bit.ly/eItniW – @Ms_Bock
- Teens like vinyl records!? http://slate.me/ijAzCC #Whodathunkit! #BogusTrends – @slate
- The Full Wiki Makes Wikipedia a Deeper, More Citable Research Tool http://lifehac.kr/ewQVvd – @lifehacker
- High-school seniors predict the future. We asked 18 students about their 10-year plans. Hear the answers. http://nyti.ms/e9AShT – @nytimesmagazine
- E-books enthrall young readers, so libraries try to keep pace http://ow.ly/4jf0T – @shannonmiller
- 5 Ways Twitter Has Changed Education | @MindShiftKQED: http://t.co/SSFbrkS – TimOlsonSF
- As E-book Sales Explode, Consumption Patterns Change http://dlvr.it/LCmZz – @gigaom
- cool blog post on creating a story w/ foursquare: http://bit.ly/ffsR97. check it out. – @amybfiske
- long article on how the game Oregon Trail was created http://bit.ly/gvgYhm (via @jkottke ) – @mikearauz
- Learning with Technology vs. Teaching with Technology – great post! http://schoolcio.com/ShowArticle/37446 – @nancyw
- The Facebook Essay: An English professor creates a new form of writing using Facebook’s “Notes” feature. http://bo.st/gnQcZ0 – @dmlcentral
- Nice, thoughtful post about the “invisible line in the sand” for sex and violence in YA fiction http://on.wsj.com/guXqcb – @Ms_Bock
Do you have a favorite Tweet from the last week? If so add it in the comments for this post. Or, if you read a Twitter post between March 25 and March 31 that you think is great, send me a direct message on Twitter (@lbraun2000) and it will go into the pool for consideration for next week’s Tweets of the week YALSA blog entry.