Telling Stories Differently

Telling Stories Differently
Author: Janet Condy
Publisher: AFRICAN SUN MeDIA
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2015-09-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1920689850

ÿThe aim of this book is to share a relatively loose collection of studies using digital storytelling as a pedagogical tool in Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT). The book takes an informed social justice approach to teaching and learning, at the heart of which is the exploration of DST as a practice of voice and agency. Voice and agency are important in excavating and recovering subjugated identities, and moving the concerns of those occupying subaltern spaces to the mainstream of teaching and learning. Yet this discursive shift is not without inherent challenges. Multi-modal technologies are reflective of wider inequities in the so-called technological divide. Whilst this is a book about higher education, there are important lessons for schooling. On the one hand, the book is a powerful demonstration of the potential of DST for enhancing learning in schools, particularly in schools serving the poor and marginalised. On the other hand, improving teaching and learning in higher education, through the creative use of technology, is essential to overcome the learning challenges of those entering tertiary level institutions.

The Instructional Value of Digital Storytelling

The Instructional Value of Digital Storytelling
Author: Patricia McGee
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2014-12-17
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135072744

Although storytelling has been recognized as an effective instructional strategy for some time, most educators are not informed about how to communicate a story that supports learning—particularly when using digital media. The Instructional Value of Digital Storytelling provides a broad overview of the concepts and traditions of storytelling and prepares professors, workplace trainers, and instructional designers to tell stories through 21st century media platforms, providing the skills critical to communication, lifelong learning, and professional success. Using clear and concise language, The Instructional Value of Digital Storytelling explains how and why storytelling can be used as a contemporary instructional method, particularly through social media, mobile technologies, and knowledge-based systems. Examples from different sectors and disciplines illustrate how and why effective digital stories are designed with learning theory in mind. Applications of storytelling in context are provided for diverse settings within higher education as well as both formal and informal adult learning contexts.

Digital Storytelling in the Classroom

Digital Storytelling in the Classroom
Author: Jason B. Ohler
Publisher: Corwin Press
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2013-03-26
Genre: Education
ISBN: 145227746X

A must-read for incorporating digital literacy into your classroom! Equip your students with essential 21st-century media literacy skills, as they read, write, speak, and create art within the context of digital storytelling, and reach deeper understandings in all areas of the curriculum! In this second edition, both novice and technologically adept K-12 educators will find: Practical techniques to combine storytelling with curriculum content Tips for exploring effective storytelling principles through emerging digital media as well as via traditional literacy skills in reading, writing, speaking, and art Visual aids and video clips that illustrate best practices in media composition

Digital Storytelling

Digital Storytelling
Author: Kay Teehan
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 110
Release: 2006
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1430300922

Digital Storytelling is a tool that was created to integrate the newest technology in the classroom. It has proven to be a powerful tool indeed. It is said that the reason for its power lies with the type of students we teach each day in our schools. Students today are multi-taskers, creative, and visual learners. They have grown up in a world of multimedia and respond to audio-visual in positive ways. Given the opportunity to tell their stories using digital storytelling models, they are transformed into self-motivated information consumers. Our job, as educators, becomes one of utilizing their natural gravitation to technology to fit our purposes of teaching state and national standards.

Teaching Digital Storytelling

Teaching Digital Storytelling
Author: Sheila Marie Aird
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2024-03-18
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1538172933

Everyone has a story to tell, and this book will inspire and guide readers to teach and learn through the production of digital narratives. This book presents the stories of educators who through digital storytelling inspire students from diverse communities to construct their empowering digital narratives. Educators from a wide range of disciplines present innovative case studies of teaching digital storytelling through the lens of personal narratives, metaliteracy, and information literacy. They describe how teaching students to tell their personal digital stories prepares them as learners who are reflective while playing active learner roles such as producer, publisher, and collaborator. As an innovative resource for teaching and learning with digital media, this book: Combines the theory and practice of digital storytelling with metaliteracy and the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education Explores how to inspire learners to share their original digital narratives Offers the opportunity to explore and address issues of race, class, and gender to give voice to these issues as part of the storytelling process Investigates the role of diversity, equity, and inclusion in writing and producing original digital narratives Examines novel approaches to collaborative digital storytelling and peer review Presents pioneering models for global digital storytelling among international learners online Describes empowering digital narratives constructed by students who found and shared their voices through this creative process Provides inventive models for teaching effective planning through well-written scripts and visual storyboards Offers openly-available resources such as rubrics, assignment descriptions, and digital technologies Showcases the application of metaliteracy OER in digital storytelling learning activities and courses Through this book, faculty, librarians, school library media specialists, and instructional designers will learn how to teach the theory and practice of digital storytelling. This innovative resource will also empower students to reflect on their roles as digital storytellers and metaliterate learners in today’s dynamic and evolving information environment.

Make Me a Story

Make Me a Story
Author: Lisa C. Miller
Publisher: Stenhouse Publishers
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2010
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1571107894

In this book, Lisa Miller shows how to use digital stories to lead students through all phases of the writing process, from planning to revising and editing. She leads teachers step-by-step through the process of creating a digital story in an accessible, instructional, and entertaining way.--[book cover].

Story Circle

Story Circle
Author: John Hartley
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 340
Release: 2009-04-27
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1405180595

Story Circle is the first collection ever devoted to a comprehensive international study of the digital storytelling movement, exploring subjects of central importance on the emergent and ever-shifting digital landscape. Covers consumer-generated content, memory grids, the digital storytelling youth movement, participatory public history, audience reception, videoblogging and microdocumentary Pinpoints who is telling what stories where, on what terms, and what they look and sound like Explores the boundaries of digital storytelling from China and Brazil to Western Europe and Australia

Digital Storytelling as Public History

Digital Storytelling as Public History
Author: Christina Fisanick
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2020-12-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 100028476X

Digital Storytelling as Public History: A Guidebook for Educators provides a practical methodology for teaching public history in the digital age. Drawing on a long-standing collaboration, Fisanick and Stakeley examine how and why educators in all arenas should adopt digital storytelling as a means for encouraging interest in local and regional history. The book shows readers how to implement the strategies necessary to help storytellers in a variety of settings create short films that showcase the collections at local and regional historical societies and museums. It also teaches storytellers higher executive functions, such as independent project management, peer and self-critique, and rhetorical savviness. By guiding storytellers through this process of creating public history digital stories, the book enables them to become connected to communities, improve their understanding of regional history, and expand their knowledge of the preservation of historical artifacts. Supported by online handouts and offering a comprehensive methodology for educators, this is the ideal guide for those teaching public history in the digital age across a range of educational settings, including the classroom, museum and community.