Iâm 35, and âteen summer reading programâ sounds only slightly more fun than âadopt a highway,â so, good luck firing up kids for that, right? Well, add cosplay and games and suddenly youâre talking.
The 40-plus strong of San Antonioâs Alamo Cosplay Troop are a regular act at the cityâs Forest Hills library, which buttresses its geek cred with anime, manga, and yes, gaming â safe and prosocial, usually rhythm games, but games nonetheless. The library is focusing on the ends, not the means â namely, stoke youngstersâ imaginations and get them to enjoy being in a place of creativity and learning. If that means dressing up like Ash Ketchum, fine. Writes the San Antonio Express-News:
If this sounds like an odd program for a library to put on, thatâs because it is. But the program wasnât effective when it focused solely on reading novels, [teen librarian Sylvia] Pachecano said.
âIf you say to a teen, âHey, letâs go to the library and read a book,â theyâre not going to want to come,â Pachecano said. âBut if you say to them, âHey, letâs go to the library and play video games,â theyâll come. So the gaming and the arts and crafts gets them in here, and then when theyâre here they realize they have something they need to do, like a report or some homework.â
Pachecano also said that many underprivileged young teens are dropped off at the library to spend whole days during the summer and the program gives them something to focus on while theyâre there.
Library Program Engages Teens in Costume Role-Play [San Antonio Express-News (and image) via TheBBPS