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Unleash Your Students’ Voices: Digital Storytelling

You can also check out the post on using The Power of Storytelling.

Adapting the Story

As I’ve said, regardless of age, ability, or language, everybody has something to say. Previously I discussed why storytelling is one of the most persuasive and powerful tools there is, what happens in the brain when stories are told, and how to use it effectively with your students. The struggle comes when students encounter frustration somewhere between embodying their story and trying to express it in the manner the teacher dictates.  This can often be resolved if the teacher broadens their perspective in how stories can be created to include more than just words jotted onto notebook paper.

There are a few basic strategies you can adopt depending on the needs and the severity of a student’s challenges.

  1. Consider various levels of accessible technology. That might mean typing instead of writing or text to speech or even more advanced systems. You can also look into some Google accessibility add-ons or Microsoft accessibility tools in OneNote.
  2. Personal grammar rulebooks or dictionaries can be useful or apps like Grammarly can be a boon.
  3. Use visual graphic organizers to help students gather their thoughts.
  4. Follow my 6 tips for improving student storytelling which include high expectations & specific feedback.
  5. Consider moving towards adapted books or digital storytelling which allows students to express themselves in engaging and augmentative ways.

Digital Storytelling

Adapted Books Vs. Digital Stories

There is a distinct difference between adapted books and digital stories. While both can use technology to bring books to life for struggling students, they do it in drastically different ways. Adapted books, like those found at Tarheel Reader and Baltimore Books, use picture symbol software like Boardmaker or SymbolStix to create pictures to make a story accessible to non-literate (and possibly non-verbal) students. See the lovely laminated example above. Digital stories, on the other hand, totally change the nature of the story by adding visual, audio, and other components to make it more akin to a film.

The History of the Digital Story

In one sense digital storytelling has been an effective and influential tool ever since Orson Welles broadcast War of the Worlds back in 1938. In a modern context, we can look to The Civil War documentary by Ken Burns for using images, video, and other media to great effect (and no I wasn’t referencing the Ken Burns Effect). My favorite moment is the Sullivan Ballou Letter. I think I fell in love with ‘dearest Sarah’.

Dana Atchley’s work at the American Film Institute and Joe Lambert’s efforts at the Center for Digital Storytelling in the 1990s were amongst the first pioneering efforts in the field. That work continues on with Storycenter. You can check out Lambert’s Digital Storytelling Cookbook for more of his insights including the 7 steps of digital storytelling.

The main differences between digital and traditional stories are that the normal conventions no longer apply because the stories now contain images, video, text, sound, animation, and now virtual experiences. It adds to the stories expressiveness in addition to making it accessible by allowing visual, auditory, or even physical comprehension. It can also be much more interactive.

In education, this has been used to great effect for engagement and empowering at-risk students and initiating social change. Gladly I get to work with one of the amazing educational pathfinders in this area, Susan Abduleezer, who literally wrote the book on creating multimedia stories in classrooms. We also get to enjoy collaborating with great storytelling organizations like The Moth to help students find their voices.  By adding multimedia components to student stories you can increase participation, cooperation, communication, and other 21st-century learning skills. There are a number of apps that help make both the digital and the storytelling portions easier to create. I’ll share a few here.

Digital Storytelling Tools

Some tools like the iPad and some software like iMovie help to expand the capabilities of storytellers without having to master many multimedia skills. That allows the content of the story to remain the focus.

Thoughtful Storytelling

There are some steps to take to help your story creation work go well.

Here are some of my favorite tools at a number of skill levels.

Enhanced Writing

Notability

All of the following apps are basically like standard writing with a few additional features. This isn’t exactly digital storytelling as it is traditionally thought of, but I thought these were worth including.

There are a number of others like Mental Note or Fii Note, but the above offer everything you’ll really need.

Image Stories

If pictures are worth a thousand words, adding them your stories should making writing a lot easier. Telling a story with a picture is the basic level of digital storytelling and here some apps that keep it simple and fun. Find examples at University of Houston’s Digital Storytelling page.

Multi-Person Stories

Digital Books

There are a variety of apps that allow students to create and read digital books that are enhanced with a number of additional features.

Inside each of us is a natural born storyteller just waiting to be released.

– Robin Moore

Storytelling Films

There are other types of resources available to tell stories that I will cover in further posts, but these should be a solid starting point for teachers and students at any level. Get started on telling your story and helping your students tell theirs.

 

 

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