Libraries, Schools Join In - School Library Journal
Log In to your Account                Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to SLJ Magazine


ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in a few seconds.

Library Journal: Library News, Reviews and Views

Virtual College Fair Attracts Teens

E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |

<a href="https://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/subscribe.asp?screen=pi8">Sign up now!</a>

Lauren Barack -- School Library Journal, 11/06/2007

Teens looking for the inside scoop on universities assembled in Teen Second Life (TSL) last month for its first Virtual College Fair.
As if attending an event from the comfort of your own PC wasn't good enough, this event also offered free (virtual) T-shirts.
More than 176 students meandered the 20 or so booths set up on Eye4You Alliance, an education island inside the teen portion of Second Life, the virtual environment run by San Francisco-based Linden Lab. Students could meet with representatives from various colleges, including Penn State, the University of Kentucky, and the University of North Carolina at Pembroke. There were also speakers representing a range of employers, from NASA to Amazon.com, who chatted about life—and work—after college.
“They talked about how skills teens use in Second Life, like computer scripting, can translate into a career in technology,” says Kelly Czarnecki, technology education librarian with ImaginOn at the Public Library of Charlotte & Mecklenburg County, who helped run the event on October 20 and 21.
Czarnecki, Beth Kraemer of the University of Kentucky’s William T. Young Library, and teens on the island helped the colleges build booths and create some of the virtual objects such as the T-shirts and flip books that students could copy and take with them. 
Because of the ample prep time required (any adult entering Teen Second Life must have a background check), a few colleges applied too late to have a booth at the fair. But Czarnecki will be there to help them set up for the next event.
“A lot of people didn’t know how to build objects, and we expected that,” she says. “But we worked with them, and we’ll be willing to do that again.”



E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |





 
Advertisement
-->

More Content

Blogs









Advertisements

-->

-->




About Us | Advertising Information | Submissions | Site Map | Contact Us | For Reviewers | RSS | Subscriptions
©2011 Media Source, Inc., All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc.