storytelling: tools of engagement

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Twitter:@kkapp Tools of Engagement: "Tools of Engagement: Storytelling By Karl M. Kapp

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Page 1: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Twitter:@kkapp

Tools of Engagement: "Tools of Engagement: Storytelling

By Karl M. Kapp

Page 2: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Story Creation Steps

1. Identify Learning Objective – Choose Only One

2. Choose Characters (Teacher/Learner)3. Create Plot (What Happens)4. Develop Questions (Advance Plot)

– Only use one-two questions.

5. Create Tension (Between Characters)6. Develop Resolution

Page 3: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Let’s Examine the Elements of the

Story

Page 4: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Parts of a Story…

Page 5: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Stories needCharacters…

http://tinyurl.com/txstory

Page 6: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Stories need Plot…

What is happening…

Page 7: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Stories need Tension…

Page 8: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Stories need Resolution…

Page 9: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Stories need Resolution…

Page 10: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Stories need Conclusion…

Page 11: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

1. Characters

Stories Need

2. Plot (something has to happen).

3. Tension

4. Resolution

5. Conclusion

Page 12: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Storytelling

Page 13: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Researchers have found that the human brain has a natural affinity for

narrative construction.

Yep, People tend to remember facts more accurately if they encounter

them in a story rather than in a list.

And they rate legal arguments as more convincing when built into narrative tales rather than on legal precedent.

Carey, B. (2007) this is Your Life (and How You Tell it). The New York Times. Melanie Green http://www.unc.edu/~mcgreen/research.html. Chapter 2 “The Gamification of Learning and Instruction.

Page 14: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Speer, N. K., Reynolds, J. R., Swallow, K. M., & Zacks, J. M. (2009). Reading Stories Activates Neural Representations of Visual and Motor Experiences.Psychological Science, 20(8), 989–999. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02397.x

When a person reads about certain activities in a story, the areas of the

brain associated with those activities are activated.

The research found that different brain regions track different aspects of a story. If the character moved, the

corresponding region of the brain for physical movement became active.

Page 15: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Story Type Goal of StoryExpressive Teach content or convey existing

information.

Strategic Promote certain ways of working or thinking—cultural shifts.

Reflective Captures complexities embedded within a situation or points out absurdities of a current state of affairs.

Transformative Describe a possible new future or a new way of operating.

Alterio, Maxine & McDrury, Janice. Learning Through Storytelling in Higher Education: Using Reflection and Experience to Improve Learning. Routledge. 2003.

Page 16: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Become a Story Connoisseur—Observe how movie makers, television directors, and novelists craft stories.

Ask to Hear Stories—When debriefing a person providing information for a course, ask for stories illustrating key

points.

Ask Story Questions—Stories follow a structure, ask structured questions around which stories are built.

Page 17: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

90 Days of Premium: Free

1. Create a free account2. Email code: K_Kapp

to [email protected]

Automatically downgrades to the standard free plan after 90 days

Page 18: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Questions…

Page 19: Storytelling: Tools of Engagement

Story Creation Steps

1. Identify Learning Objective – Choose Only One

2. Choose Characters (Teacher/Learner)3. Create Plot (What Happens)4. Develop Questions (Advance Plot)

– Only use one-two questions.

5. Create Tension (Between Characters)6. Develop Resolution