Archive for the 'Festival Organizing' Category

Karen Chace - Story by Story - Building a School Storytelling Club

Karen Chace will be interviewed on the podcast on Tuesday May 20th at 8 p.m. be sure to join us live on the conference call. Karen has a great resource of storytelling links and other goodies that are worth your time at http://www.storybug.net

On a warm, spring night in June of 2003 nineteen third and fourth grade elementary students took center stage in the school auditorium. The event was the first Student Storytelling Festival where their dedication and talent came together for a glorious evening of folktales, fables, myths and legends from around the world. Each child had personally selected their tale and their work quickly becoming a labor of love. Without hesitation each teller stepped to the microphone and whisked us away on the wings of story to England, Africa, Serbia, Russia, Canada, Tibet and beyond. It was an evening filled with individual and family pride, one which showcased not only the personality and skills of each student, but illustrated the virtues of camaraderie and team spirit. They gave it their all and succeeded beyond their wildest imaginations.

Why was this remarkable? According to scientific research, one of our greatest fears is public speaking. Yet these young children took to the stage with confidence and poise, faced an audience of family, teachers, administrators, friends and peers, and for one hour held them in the palm of their hands.

How did it all begin?
With one sentence. In 2002 I had been storytelling for only a few years when I approached one of the teachers and boldly stated, “I would love to start a student storytelling club.” With her support we bravely approached our principal with a proposal and the rest as they say is history!

I am now in my sixth year guiding the Story Explorer’s Troupe.
Since its inception I have been privileged to work with over 140 children. I am continually amazed at the innovative, fun and creative work they offer their audiences but more importantly, the changes their teachers and parents observe in their classroom performance, personal confidence and positive peer interaction.
Throughout the school year we work on basic storytelling skills, including voice intonation, body language, gestures, improvisation, and stage presence. Our goal is to take the show “on the road.” When the storytellers are ready I organize small group presentations for the teachers and students. The number of audience members increases with each performance; the storytellers continue to gain confidence and we end the school year with a storytelling festival for family, friends and community members. To read an article on last year’s event go to: http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070621/NEWS/706210378

Storytelling is a fun and exciting activity but it also aligns with many benchmarks of the educational curriculum across the country. Oral storytelling is rooted in tradition and myths, legends and folktales. It is the conduit that passes on the customs and values of other cultures, while enhancing a student’s view of the global community. The National Council of Teachers of English has published their Position Statement on the value of using storytelling in the classroom and Howard Gardner’s original Seven Styles of Learning (an eighth has now been added to the list: Naturalist Intelligence) offers guidelines on how storytellers and teachers can use the power of story to tap into each child’s specific learning style. In addition, storyteller Kendall Haven has compiled definitive research on how we are innately “hardwired for story.” He has generously given me permission to list some of his work on my website at http://www.storybug.net/teachers.htm. Kendall has recently published Story Proof, which offers a multitude of additional research on the wide-ranging, positive impact storytelling has in the classroom and beyond.

Since our first tentative steps the Story Explorers troupe has continued to grow, partnerships have been forged and I have witnessed many astonishing and unexpected success stories. This June, on two separate evenings, 30 students will use the stage as their canvas and words as their paintbrush to craft a world colored by the magic of their imaginations. In 2002 a group of eager students took a chance with me and with themselves. Their first, tentative steps led them to explore the magic of storytelling and they in turn paved the way for others to discover that they too have stories to share.

Gardner’s Multple Intelligences and their Applications to Storytelling

Verbal/Linguistic Intelligence
➢ Enjoy listening and talking to people.
➢ Enjoy listening and telling stories.
➢ Always successful learners by listening and hearing.
➢ Enjoys word games, puns, rhymes, tongue-twisters, and poetry.

Logical and mathematical Intelligence
➢ Like to ask questions and investigate.
➢ Enjoy strategy games, logical puzzles and experiments. (Riddle stories)
➢ Like to use computers. (Use Clip Art to storyboard)
➢ Looks for logical sequences and patterns. (Tangrams)

Visual/Spatial Intelligence
➢ Take information and translate it into images and pictures in their mind.
➢ Have the ability to retrieve the information through the images and pictures.
➢ Good in visual arts, sculpture, architecture and photography. (Storyboarding)
➢ Has the ability to reproduce clear images in their mind. (Visualization)

Bodily kinesthetic Intelligence
➢ They are good with objects and activities involving their body, hands and fingers.
➢ More successful in learning if they can touch, manipulate and move or feel whatever they are learning. (Props)
➢ Children with high Kinesthetic Intelligence learn best with activities: games, acting, hands-on tasks, building.
➢ Uses their body well to express themselves. (Mime, origami, cut and tell)

Musical Intelligence
➢ Have the ability to here and recognize tones, rhythms and musical patterns.
➢ These people enjoy listening to music and singing to themselves.
➢ Musical children usually play a musical instrument.
➢ They learn through rhythm and melody. (Incorporate songs, chants or use an instrument in their storytelling)

Interpersonal Intelligence:
➢ Sensitive to facial expressions, gestures and voice.
➢ Get along with others and they are able to maintain good relationships.
➢ Like to teach other kids, take part in school organizations and clubs. (Peer Coaching)
➢ Have the ability to influence people and are natural leaders.
➢ Feels comfortable in a crowd. (Storytelling Performance)

Intrapersonal Intelligence
➢ They have the ability for self discipline to achieve personal goals.
➢ These children are self-motivated. (practice stories on their own)
➢ Prefer to study individually and learn best through observing and listening. (Self Critiques)

Naturalist Intelligence
➢ Nature smart (Pourquoi stories)
➢ Likes to spend time in nature; recognizes subtle meanings and patterns in nature.
➢ Likes to speak out about animal right and earth preservation. (Environmental stories)
➢ They would enjoy using audio/visual equipment to record nature. (Digital Storytelling)

A FEW WEB SITES OF INTEREST
Enoch Pratt Libraries
Listen to some of our most beloved storytellers share their tales in streaming video; a delight for children and adults alike. http://www.prattlibrary.org/home/storyIndex.aspx

Storybug.net Karen Chace offers a global feast of folktale websites, each with a short synopsis. In addition, there is a smorgasbord of sites focusing on Oral History, Crafts, Arts Education, Puppetry, Grants, Teaching Tools and more! http://www.storybug.net

Story Lovers
With the help of Storytell listserv members, storyteller Jackie Baldwin has compiled an extensive array of stories and books. Click on “Exclusively for Storytellers” and you will discover your own private folklore library right at your fingertips. http://www.story-lovers.com/

Storytelling Arts of Indiana Teaching Guides, games, activities and resources from such quality tellers as Heather Forest, Doug Lipman, Rex Ellis, Doug Elliott, Janice Harrington and Ed Stivender. You can’t go wrong taking advice from this group! http://www.geocities.com/storiesinc/TeachersGuide.html#Games

Storytelling In Schools
After months of detailed research Jackie Baldwin and Kate Dudding have organized an amazing, downloadable booklet and brochure that will help you meet that question head on. Quantitative studies, innovative projects books, journals, articles and web sites are all at your fingertips, but the best part is that the project is not complete; it is an ongoing process that will be continually updated as new studies surface.
http://www.storynet-advocacy.org/edu/how-to/index.shtml

Turner Learning Network
An Educator’s Guide to Storytelling; tips on teaching storytelling, National Standards, Assessments and Cross Curricular Approaches. If you want to implement storytelling into your curriculum, this is a good place to start.
http://www.turnerlearning.com/turnersouth/storytelling/index.html

BIBLIOGRAPHY
These books contain stories that are perfect for beginning student storytellers
DeSpain, Pleasant Eleven Nature Tales; A Multicultural Journey Little Rock, Ark.: August House 1996
DeSpain, Pleasant. Thirty-Three Multicultural Tales to Tell. August House, 1997.
DeSpain, Pleasant Twenty: Two Splendid Tales To Tell From Around the World Volume One August House 1994
DeSpain, Pleasant Twenty-Two Splendid Tales to Tell From Around the World Volume Two August House 1994
Hamilton, Martha and Mitch Weiss, Children Tell Stories, Richard C. Owen Publishers, Inc., 1990.
Hamilton, Martha & Mitch Weiss. How & Why Stories: World Tales Kids Can Read and Tell. August House, 1999.
Hamilton, Martha & Mitch Weiss: Noodlehead Stories: World Tales Kids Can Read & Tell: Little Rock, AR: August House, 2000.
Hamilton, Martha & Mitch Weiss (1996) Stories in My Pocket; Tales Kids Can Tell Golden, CO: Fulcrum Pub.
Hamilton, Martha & Mitch Weiss Through the Grapevine: World Tales Kids Can Read & Tell Little Rock: August House Publishers, 2001.
Raines, Shirley C. & Rebecca Isbell Tell It Again!: Easy-To Tell Stories With Activities For Young Children Beltsville, Md. : Gryphon House, c1999.
Raines, Shirley C. & Rebecca Isbell Tell It Again! 2: Easy-To-Tell Stories With Activities for Young Children Beltsville, MD: Gryphon House, 2000

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Jeff Gere’s Tour of Georgia, Tennessee and Florida.

MArch 9- April 2, 2008

BRIEFLY: I had a BLAST in an exhausting collage of faces and places starting with Atlanta, Kennesaw (curriculum mixes drama and storytelling) with Irish teller Eddie Lenihan. Then up through the Smokey Mountains: Cleveland, Knoxville, and Jonesborough (SUCH A LITTLE TOWN!) Connie Gil hosted me. Met with NSN (Bobbie) and ISC (Susan/ Jimmy Neil) about a national story radio show. I did a workshop & tell there, then did lotsa ghost tours with my daughter in Savannah, and caught my breath at her house in Jacksonville, Florida. Then a wonderfully intense long weekend at the Florida Storytelling Camp and home on one of the last ATA flights. Continue Reading »

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Jeff Gere - Making waves: A Thinking Bigger Blueprint with Television and Radio


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Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call on April 15th, 2008 at 8PM ET when I spoke with Jeff Gere on Thinking Big with Radio and TV on the Art of Storytelling with Children podcast.

Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call on April 15th, 2008 at 8PM ET when I spoke with Jeff Gere on Thinking Big with Radio and TV on the Art of Storytelling with Children podcast.

A BLUEPRINT: I offer a blueprint based on my evolution here in Hawaii mapping a progression from a teller to a story producer of a Festival, a radio, and TV series. I believe it is vital for us to moving storytelling into the blood stream of the mainstream.

MY OPINION: Storytelling is like folk music before Peter Paul & Mary. Its self-image loves small and intimate, is largely adverse and suspicious of media and documentation while the REST of the Web Entertainment World explodes bland content in an ever-growing variety of methods and technologies. Content is King, storytelling is a DEEP WELL of PROFOUND CONTENT, but it/we are NOT reaching the fast-food masses. Our self-image does not serve us. I believe there’s a need for Storytelling. We have an opportunity: We who drink in this well ARE the ones to bridge this gap, get OVER our techno-phobia, and feed this rich story mana to the Masses. OK, you say, but HOW?

“The First impediment is self-imposed” Helen Keller.

A FLOOD BEGINS WITH A DROP: (you): Start with YOURSELF. Do your homework, find your Voice & polish coal into a jewel with your tongue. Tell tell tell tell and tell: THEN get biz card, resume, and website. Start small and Continue Reading »

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Onawumi Jean Moss - How to create a Storytelling festival with multicultural goals.


Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call on 9/25/2007,  Onawuni Jean Moss appeared on the Art of Storytelling with Children to talk about how to create a Storytelling festival with multicultural goals.

Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call on 9/25/2007, Onawumi Jean Moss appeared on the Art of Storytelling with Children to talk about how to create a Storytelling festival with multicultural goals.”

Onawumi Jean Moss is an deep storyteller to draw from with her rich history on college campus and with her commitment to storytelling. She brings a solid grounding to the often airy art form of storytelling. I hope you enjoy listening to our interview as much as I enjoyed recording it.

Eric wolf

——–about the Guest…
Onawumi Jean Moss of Amherst, Massachusetts is a storyteller, narrator, keynote speaker and author. Onawumi is a 2005 recipient of the Zora Neale Hurston Storytelling Award (November 2005), the highest award given by the National Association of Black Storytellers (NABS). She holds lifetime memberships in the National Storytellers Network (NSN) and the National Association of Black Storytellers (NABS). She is also a member of the League for the Advancement of New England Storytelling (LANES).

The performances of this talking book and rhythm master encourage pride of heritage, appreciation of cultural differences and recognition of kinship. This Tennessee native’s first stories were learned from her Continue Reading »

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Julie Mills - Building a successful storytelling festival at your library


Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call on 9/04/2007,  Julie Mills Festival Organizer of the Northern Kentucky Storytelling Festival talked about building a successful storytelling festival at your library.

Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call on 9/04/2007, Julie Mills Festival Organizer of the Northern Kentucky Storytelling Festival talked about building a successful storytelling festival at your library.

I think you will find that this interview can really help storytellers understand the librarians and libraries in their lives. If you are interested in storytelling at your local library this interview is must listen and if you are a librarian interested in having storytelling events in your library I would recommend listening as well.

Eric Wolf

—–More about the Guest…
Julie Mills began working as a Children’s Programmer at the Erlanger Branch of the Kenton County Public Library in August of 2001. Julie started with Preschool age children and in February of 2004, she began working as the Continue Reading »

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Carolyn Franzini - Running a Storytelling Festival and How Storytellers Become Candidates for Telling at the Festival.


Press Play to hear this interview on the art of storytelling with Children that was recorded as a conference call on August 28th, 2007,  Carolyn Franzini shares how to plan the Cave Run Storytelling festival.

Press Play to hear this interview on the art of storytelling with Children that was recorded as a conference call on August 28th, 2007, Carolyn Franzini shares how to plan the Cave Run Storytelling festival.

Carolyn Franzini is the Director of the Cave Run Storytelling Festival one of the most successful and prestigious storytelling festivals outside of Jonesborough in the United States in this interview she discusses how to run a storytelling festival successfully and How Storytellers Become Candidates for Telling at the Festival. She has kindly allowed the use fo the following ten tips on running a storytelling festival to be included on the Art of Storytelling with Children blog.

Eric Wolf

She writes
10 Tips for Organizing a Festival.

1. Know why you want to have the storytelling festival
2. Make sure your reasons for having the storytelling festival “fit” your community, sponsor etc because you need their support
3. Make sure all persons on the storytelling festival organization committee love storytelling
4. Try to make the preparation for the Continue Reading »

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Steve Otto - Bringing Storytelling to New Communities.


Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded on the Art of Storytelling with Children as a conference call on August 21th, 2007,  Steve Otto talks about bringing Storytelling to New Communities with the Chicken Storytelling Festival.

Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded on the Art of Storytelling with Children as a conference call on August 21th, 2007, Steve Otto talks about bringing Storytelling to New Communities with the Chicken Storytelling Festival.

Steve is one of those storytellers who has been around the block. Mastering his skill in storytelling over many years of dedicated work and effort as a storyteller. I found this interview about Steve’s work to bring Storytelling to new communities to be truly inspirational stuff. Storytelling can be for everyone.

Eric Wolf

Steve Otto has a degree in Speech and Dramatics, from the University of Missouri, with a specialty of Television Production. You have to realize that I got my degree when TV was in it’s infancy, and all production was done live (No video tape) and everything was done in Black and White. I worked at KOMU-TV Channel 8, in Columbia, Missouri, WPTA-TV, Channel 21, in Ft. Wayne, Indiana, and KETC-TV, Channel 9, in St. Louis, Missouri. I started out as a cameraman, and worked into production as a producer-director. I loved television and really enjoyed the opportunity offered to a right brain person to see images and create pictures before the camera collected them. KETC-TV was the local PBS station and things went well until they Continue Reading »

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Cristin Thomas - Exposing new audiences to storytelling.

Press Play to hear this interview that was recorded as a conference call at 8pm EST – August 14th, 2007,  Cristin Thomas talks about her experience as Director of the Tejas Storytelling Association and chief organizer of the Texas Storytelling Festival.
In this interview that was recorded as a conference call at 8pm EST – August 14th, 2007, Cristin Thomas talks about her experience as Director of the Tejas Storytelling Association and chief organizer of the Texas Storytelling Festival.

We will cover the following topics - s

1. Building a festival
2. Grants
3. Sponsorships
4. Marketing
5. Strategic Planning for an Organization
6. Positioning the organization for continual growth
7. The need for clarity

Planning for the future…Looking ahead is so important. Know the road that you are traveling with clarity of your mission and knowledge of your vision. Many organizations can trap themselves in the survival of day to day. When this happens it is extremely difficult to Continue Reading »

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Ellen Munds - The A B C’s of Running a Storytelling Festival.

Press Play to hear about how to take your The A B C’s of Running a Storytelling Festival with Ellen Munds on the 16th episode of the Art of Storytelling with Children podcast on July 24th, 2007
Interview with Ellen Munds recorded on Tuesday, July 24th, 2007.

In this interview we cover how to…

1. Create your mission statement or why you want to do a festival
2. Determine your target audience
3. Details such as indoor or outdoor, specific site for an event, accessibility, design and traffic flow of the site
4. Artistic Elements
5. Marketing and Public Relations
6. Funding
7. Budget
8. Volunteers
9. Care and Feeding of the storytellers, sponsors and volunteers
10. Evaluation of your Festival.

This interview should be heard by all members of the national storytelling network who are interested in running or creating there own storytelling festival. Storytellers who are serious about working the festival circuit should consider this episode required listening.

Ellen Munds is the executive director of Storytelling Arts of Indiana and one of three co-founders. She has served as the chair of the Continue Reading »

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Bill Mckell - Building a Storytelling Festival from the Ground Up.

Press Play to listen to Building a storytelling festival from the ground up Episode podcast on June 19th, 2007

by Bill Mckell interviewed at 7 PM EST, May 30th, 2007.

Creating the Southern Ohio Storytelling Festival in Chillicothe has been an interesting journey. I guess it began when my wife and I started attending the National Storytelling Festival in Jonesborough, TN when our daughters were quite young. When they became old enough to enjoy attending storytelling festivals, we were reluctant to invite them into the “get away” weekend we enjoyed in eastern Tennessee each year. So we searched for an alternate festival to which we could take them. We found the Cave Run Storytelling Festival near Morehead, KY and began taking them there. After attending a couple of years, my wife and I wondered if we could do something similar in our hometown of Chillicothe. The art and tradition of storytelling seemed a natural complement to the Continue Reading »

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