ALA Members

 View Only
last person joined: 16 hours ago 

Deadline extended: Apply for Great Stories Club grant by March 29!

  • 1.  Deadline extended: Apply for Great Stories Club grant by March 29!

    Posted 6 days ago

    The application deadline for Great Stories Club: “Deeper Than Our Skins” and “Finding Your Voice” grants has been extended to March 29, 2023. Apply now via ALA Apply!

    ALA invites library workers to apply for ALA's Great Stories Club (GSC), a thematic reading and discussion program that engages teens who are facing difficult challenges through literature-based library outreach programs. Interested librarians are encouraged to get in touch if there is a specific need for flexibility with the program model or requirements. 

    Visit the project guidelines and apply online via ALA Apply by March 29, 2023 at 11:59 PM Central Time.

    ALA will distribute implementation grants to 100 libraries to host GSC programming on two themes: "Deeper Than Our Skins: The Present Is a Conversation with the Past" and "Finding Your Voice: Speaking Truth to Power." These themes, created by scholars Maria Sachiko Cecire and Susana M. Morris, will feature books that explore questions of race, equity, identity and history.

    For each theme, ALA will award up to 50 grants to eligible institutions. Up to 50 libraries will be selected to receive a "Deeper Than Our Skins" grant, and up to 50 libraries will be selected to receive a "Finding Your Voice" grant.

    Applications will be accepted from all types of libraries (public, school, academic, and special) in the United States and its territories that meet one of the following criteria:

    • The applicant library is located within an organization that reaches underserved, under-resourced and/or at-risk teens (e.g., alternative high school, juvenile detention facility, tribal library).

    Or

    • The applicant library is working with a partner organization that reaches underserved, under-resourced, and/or at-risk teens. Possible partner organizations include but are not limited to juvenile justice facilities, drug/alcohol rehabilitation centers, nonprofits serving teen parents, alternative high schools, agencies serving teenaged foster children and shelters serving young adults and families experiencing homelessness.

    Selected libraries will receive 11 paperback copies of theme-related books to use in the reading and discussion groups as well as a $500 programming stipend, online training, an array of program resources and support throughout the grant term.

    Participating libraries will work with small groups of approximately 10 teens; provide up to four theme-related books for each participant to keep as their own and convene opportunities for exploration and discussion of relevant humanities content among peers. Book discussions will be led by an experienced programming librarian, often in cooperation with staff from a partner organization or department, such as teachers and counselors.

    Libraries selected for a "Deeper than Our Skins" grant may choose up to four books from the following reading list:

    • "Between the World and Me" by Ta-Nehisi Coates

    • "The Revolution of Evelyn Serrano" by Sonia Manzano

    • "Dreaming in Indian: Contemporary Native American Voices," edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale

    • "The Shadow Hero" by Gene Luen Yang, illustrated by Sonny Liew

    • "Mother of the Sea" by Zetta Elliott

    • "Always Running: La Vida Loca: Gang Days in L.A." by Luis J. Rodriguez

    Libraries selected for a "Finding Your Voice" grant may choose up to four books from the following reading list:

    • "The Poet X" by Elizabeth Acevedo • "I Am Alfonso Jones" by Tony Medina

    • "Gabi, A Girl in Pieces" by Isabel Quintero

    • "Piecing Me Together" by Renée Watson

    • "American Street" by Ibi Zoboi

    •  "Anger is a Gift" by Mark OshiroBecause the Great Stories Club seeks to engage libraries in different areas of the country, serving high-need and diverse groups of teen readers, ALA invites interested librarians to get in touch if there is a specific need for flexibility with the program model or requirements.

    Implementation of both series is supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.



    ------------------------------
    Emily (Em) Gallaugher
    They/Them/Theirs
    Program Coordinator, Public Programs
    American Library Association
    egallaugher@ala.org
    ------------------------------