Title: Storytelling by: Laura Trellue
1Storytellingby Laura Trellue
2Storytelling
- Storytelling is an ancient profession, and
these stories are among our oldest possessions.
For many years before the white man ever came to
our homeland these legends were told over and
over, and handed down from generation to
generation. They were our books, our literature,
and the memories of the storytellers were the
leaves upon which they were written. - Chief Standing Bear, Ponca
Indian chief
3- If you dont know the trees you may be lost in
the forest, but if you dont know the stories you
may be lost in life. a Siberian
Elder - There have been great societies that did not use
the wheel, but there have been no societies that
did not tell stories. Ursula K. LeGuin,
author - A writers brain is like a magicians hat. If
youre going to get anything out of it, you have
to put something in it first. Louis LAmour,
author - People did not wait until there was writing
before they told stories and sang songs. - Albert Bates
Lord, author
4Why Storytelling
- It is empowering for a child to be able to
express his or her thoughts and feelings through
oral language. - Storytelling can be a tool for practicing both
listening and verbal skills. - Teachers can effectively model interesting,
expressive language for students to emulate. - New vocabulary can be introduced and easily
comprehended within a storys context. - Diverse ways in which language is used can be
depicted in folktales, including instructions,
recipes, secrets, riddles, warnings, questions,
and explanations. - Imagination can generate language.
- Comprehension, or the ability to make sense of a
storys plot, is facilitated by being able to
mentally map the storys main events. -
www.storyarts.org
5- Students who search their memories for details
about an event as they are telling it orally will
later find those details easier to capture in
writing. Writing theorists value rehearsal, or
prewriting, stage of composing. Sitting in a
circle and swapping personal or fictional tales
is one of the best ways to help writers
rehearse. - National Council of Teachers of
English
6- Listeners encounter both familiar and new
language patterns through story. They learn new
words or new contexts for already familiar words.
Those who regularly hear stories, subconsciously
acquire familiarity with narrative patterns and
begin to predict upcoming events. Learners who
regularly tell stories become aware of how an
audience affects a telling, and they carry that
awareness into their writing. - National Council of Teachers of
English
7Activities for Teaching Storytelling
- Favorite Object - Have students bring a favorite
object or picture of that object. Children will
name the object, explain where or how they got
the object, say why it is their favorite object.
(Later they can develop a story about the
object.) - React Game - (helps with visualization) Teacher
will read a phrase like the one listed below.
The students visualize themselves in that
situation and react with facial expression and
movement (and dialogue when appropriate).
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
8- My Favorite Place - Students will visualize their
favorite place and describe them to partners
using as many sensory words as possible. The
partners will tell the original tellers what they
saw as the tellers describe their favorite
places. Then partners switch. - Understanding Character - Teacher to tell or read
a well-known story (i.e. Red Riding Hood). Then
ask some of the following questions - traits - What kind of person is Red Riding Hood?
What kind of person is the wolf? - motivation - What motivates each character?
- relation to other characters - How is Red related
to wolf, mother, grandma, etc.? - purpose - What is the role of each character in
the story?
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
9- What do they Look Like? After teacher tells or
reads a story, have students write or draw
description of a character in the story. They
should include voice, physical characteristics
and qualities. - Guess the Action - Write activities on slips of
paper and place them in a box. Have each child
draw one slip of paper and act out the activity
on that slip of the class. Have the other
students guess the activity. - Guess the Object - Write the names of objects on
slips of paper and place them in a box. Each
child draws a slip and becomes the object. The
other children guess the object. - Guess the Creature - Write names of creatures on
slips of paper and place then in a box. Have
students draw slips and act out the creatures
while the others guess.
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
10- How You Say It - (helps with voice) Divide
students into pairs and have a list of ways to
say something (i.e. with sadness, with surprise)
and a list of words or sentences to say in that
voice. Students take turns playing the game. - Park Bench - Two students sit in two chairs
placed at the front of the room. The other
students sit in a semicircle facing chairs. The
two chairs represent a park bench where two
people meet and carry on a conversation.
Students draw cards indicating a mood or
personality trait they should assume. Students
stay in character as they talk with their bench
mate. After a while a third student comes up and
taps one of the players on the shoulder and
replaces that person. Play continues until all
have participated.
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
11- Adding Dialogue - Teacher tells a story without
the dialogue. Talk about how the characters
would have different dialogue. Have students
develop the dialogue for each of the characters
and add as the teacher tells the story. (i.e.
Once there was a little girl named Little Red
Riding Hood. One day her dear mother said (add
dialogue.)) - The Magic Storytelling Stick - Create a magic
storytelling stick. Have the class select two
main characters, three sensory words, and
emotional feelings. You can have a list ready or
have them make up their own characters. The
object is to create a story that eventually
includes all the characters, sensory words and
feelings that were selected. Teacher starts by
holding the stick and begins story. The stick is
passed as each student adds two or three
sentences to the story. Teacher or another
student can end story.
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
12- First Sentences - The teacher will develop a
folder full of first sentences. The sentences
can be used with the storytelling stick or for
writing. Students should be encouraged to add to
the first-sentence folder. - Last Sentences - The students are given the last
sentence in a story and are to build a story
around the sentence. This is more difficult than
the first sentence activity. - Just the Facts (adding details) - Have several
stories with the detail removed. Put one story
on the overhead and work as a class to develop
interesting and appropriate details. Have
students try the exercise with a partner or small
group.
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
13Just the Facts - Rumpelstiltskin
- Miller very poor - one day brags to King that
daughter can spin straw into gold. - King demands she be brought to castle and put to
the rest. - Girl put in a room with spinning wheel and
spindle - if straw not spun to gold in morning
she will die. - Little man appears - does work - she pays with
necklace. - Next morning King astonished and greedy - puts
her in larger room with same command. - Little man appears, does work, and is paid with
her ring. - King takes her to a larger room to spin straw or
die. If she is successful, he will marry her. - Little man appears - millers daughter promises
her first born child. - In a year King and Queen have child - little man
comes to collect. - Queen upset so little man gives her three days to
guess her name. - Messengers go out to bring back all the names.
- Each day guesses get more bizarre.
- On the final day a messenger says a little man is
dancing around a fire chanting. - Queen guesses and Rumpelstiltskin is so mad he
stomps his foot and disappears deep into the
earth.
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas
14Other Storytelling Activities
- Sequence a story using a story map, an outline, a
flow chart or a time line. - Explore spontaneous speech by making up oral
poetry. - Create a story corner in the classroom where
stories are read or told by both teacher
student - Have a story exchange week.
- Make a class book of favorite folktale and send
to other classes. - Have students collect stories from their parents
or grandparents. - Find stories in songs.
www.storyarts.org
15Storytelling Skills Rubric
- When telling a story, an effective storyteller
demonstrates the following traits - Voice Mechanics speaks with an appropriate
volume for the audience to hear - Face/Body/Gesture expressively uses non-verbal
communication to clarify meaning of text - Focus concentration is clear, eye contact with
audience - Characterization dialogue is believable to
listener and differentiated from each character - Use of Space storyteller relaxed and confident
- Pacing story is presented efficiently and keeps
listeners interests
www.storyarts.org
16www.storyarts.org
17Teacher Books on Storytelling
- Bauer, Caroline Feller. New Handbook for
Storytellers with Stories, Poems, Magic, and
More. American Library Association, 1993. - Hamilton, Martha and Mitch Weiss. Children Tell
Stories, a Teaching Guide. Richard C. Owen
publishers, Inc., 1990. - Isabell, Rebecca and Shirley C. Raines. Tell It
Again! Easy-to-Tell Stories with Activities for
Young Children. Gryphon House, 2000. - Kinghorn, Harriet R. and Mary Helen Pelton.
Every Child a Storyteller a Handbook of Ideas.
Teacher Ideas Press, 1991. - MacDonald, Margaret Read. The Story-tellers
Start-Up Book. August House Publishers, Inc.,
1993. - Yolen, Jane. Favorite Folktales from Around the
World. Pantheon Books, 1986.
18Storytelling Websites
StoryArts http//www.storyarts.org Lesson Plans
Activities and links to stories provided
National Storytelling Network http//www.storynet.
org/ Tells you about the organization and offers
more links to other storytelling sites.
Storytelling Games http//falcon.jmu.edu/ramseyil
/storygames.html Offers three games that allow
students to develop storytelling techniques.
19Want to join a storytelling group? We have a
great one here in Houston. http//www.houstonsto
rytellers.org/index.html
Houston Storytellers Guild Everyone has a
story! Monthly- Story Time 7 p.m. the 3rd
Wednesday of each month. Borders Books, W.
Alabama _at_ Kirby Our gatherings are for sharing
stories, promoting storytelling, and having fun.
20Accommodations and Modifications
- GT and AP students
- Students to make up own stories meeting four
basic criteria - 1. Use descriptive language and nonverbal
expression - 2. Make sure plot of story is clear
- 3. Create beginning, middle, and end
- 4. Work to keep audience interested
- Special Needs Students
- Students can use non verbal in pantomime
- 1. Pantomime how you would look if you were
feeling angry, curious, sad, cold, sleepy - 2. Pantomime a short scene You eat spaghetti and
it slips off your fork. - 3. In small groups, pantomime a scene group
jumping rope.
21References
- Block, Cathy Collins. Teaching the Language
Arts. Allyn and Bacon, 1997. - Chaney, Ann L. and Tamara L. Burk. Teaching Oral
Communications in Grades K-8. Allyn and Bacon,
1998. - Christensen, Patti. (2004). PattiStory.
Retrieved 16 July 2005.
http//www.pattistory.com - Forest, Heather. (2000). Story Arts on Line.
Retrieved 6 July 2005.
http//www.storyarts.org - National Council of Teachers of English. (2005).
Teaching storytelling A position statement from
the Committee on Storytelling. Retrieved 9 May
2005. http//www.ncte.org/about/over/position
s/category/curr - Schwartz, Marni. Connecting to language through
story, Language Arts, 64(6), October 1987, pp.
603-610.
22- We are lonesome animals. We spend all of our
life trying to be less lonesome. One of our
ancient methods is to tell a story begging the
listener to say and to feel, Yes, that is the
way it is, or at least that is the way I feel
it. Youre not as alone as you thought. - John Steinbeck, author