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Storytelling : Children Families and Schools |
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| Tel:
01628 639313 Home David England : My Story Email Me (Subject field ENGWEB) Storytelling Children Families & Schools Diary of Public Gigs Storytelling Programmes My Stories Testimonials Links My Psychotherapy Website My Coaching Website |
Storytelling With
Children
For me, there is more
to storytelling than telling stories. I work with teachers, children’s centre
coordinators and other professionals with a common purpose. This is, to use
storytelling to help children develop emotional literacy, language skills, and
communication skills. The way I do
storytelling with children is to have a dialogue with the group – repeating
words and encouraging the children to respond, to answer back, repeating
movements, making faces and funny noises and inviting them to do the same, singing and dancing,
playing silly instruments, perhaps most of all listening to and responding to
what the children say – so they are engaged and involved in the storytelling
process. Sometimes, I invite the
children to sit in the storyteller’s chair and tell stories. Some of my richest
moments have been listening with awe to children telling stories, often for the
first time. Sometimes the children spend hours preparing to tell or act their
story. Sometimes they tell their story spontaneously, making it up in the
moment. Always it is a joy for them and for me, and they tell to an enraptured
audience. Moreover, storytelling
with children and families and in schools has distinct educational benefits,
helping to develop emotional literacy, language skills, and communication
skills. Benefits Of
Storytelling With Children
Storytelling Fosters Emotional Literacy Storytelling can make an important contribution to the development
of emotional literacy and the social and emotional aspects of learning: Self Awareness To tell a story is a
conscious act of self expression through which a child can experience
themselves. Telling stories, a child can develop non-verbal skills of gesture,
posture and tone of voice. Learning to tell stories can help develop self
confidence, self esteem and a deeper sense of their own being – their thoughts,
feelings, body and spirit. Managing Feelings Storytelling is a way
of talking about our feelings and thoughts without intruding on personal
issues. Telling, listening to, and discussing stories helps children learn and
build their emotional vocabulary, by asking questions like, “What is the
heroine feeling?” “What makes her feel this?” “How do her feelings change
during the story?” Many storytellers who
work with children comment how children with emotional and behavioural
difficulties respond enthusiastically to storytelling. Motivation The use of storytelling
in interactive, cooperative work can support children to paint pictures in
their mind’s eye of what the future might be for them. There are many stories
about heroes and heroines – often the
youngest or least fortunate in the family –
and how they face and overcome obstacles through wit, fortune, the
kindness of strangers or the wisdom of the natural world. Empathy Telling stories and listening to others telling stories helps develop the capacity to recognise and understand
another person’s feelings. Empathy is
the counterpart of self awareness. Watching and listening to another person
telling a story, a child can learn to relate to the other person’s way
of expressing emotion and to their gesture, posture and tone of voice. Social Skills Storytelling helps
foster social understanding and competence. Stories impart wisdom about how to
live; for example, the well known story of The Emperor’s New Clothes is partly
about how the fear of being thought stupid leads to stupid behaviour. Telling
and talking about stories helps children think about moral issues and develop a
sense of values. Cooperative storytelling games can help develop such social
skills as initiating and allowing eye contact, taking turns and understanding
rules, increasing assertiveness and dealing with conflict. Storytelling Helps Develop Language Skills As a small child, avidly
listening to my schoolteacher father and his colleagues telling yarns was an
invaluable life experience which I have never forgotten. I learnt the use of
language by hearing it well spoken. I learnt how to structure sentences long
before I was taught grammar. I learnt to understand the meaning of words by
hearing them used in their correct context. I expanded my vocabulary by hearing
unfamiliar words being used; I have an actual memory of discovering the word
‘idea.’ So, listening to
stories aids the learning of language: We learn language best when we hear
it well spoken. We implicitly learn the correct way
to structure sentences. We learn to understand the meaning
of words by hearing them used in context. We expand our vocabulary when we
grapple with unfamiliar words. What is even more
beneficial than simply listening to stories, is that storytelling can be used
to help children become good storytellers themselves, developing their
competence and facility with language and using language to express the
richness of their imagination. Children learn, by telling stories, to be
self-confident in using language to articulate their feelings, thoughts and
ideas. Storytelling Helps Develop Communication Skills Speaking And
Listening Telling and listening
to stories helps develop interpersonal skills of discourse and presentation. Storytelling
helps develop attention and concentration skills. Self Expression Telling stories, a
child can develop those non-verbal skills of gesture, posture and tone of voice
discussed earlier. Learning to tell stories can help develop self confidence,
self esteem and a deeper sense of their own being. Thinking Skills The power of the
narrative helps the child remember. Talking about a story helps children to ask
questions, formulate ideas, give reasons for what they think, listen to
different ideas, argue their point of view, learn to stand their ground and to
change their minds. Creativity The use of imagination
and metaphor in storytelling helps a child to develop his or her creativity. Making
up or working up a story and then telling it is a way in which a child may express
their creativity. Interpersonal Skills Friendships and close
relationships are fostered by reciprocal storytelling. Becoming familiar with
storytelling helps a child learn and understand the verbal and non-verbal cues
in what others express. To Find Out More …
… about my storytelling work with children, families and schools, or to book me for your event, please telephone me or email me (with ENGWEB in the subject field). I hold a CRB Certificate. As a Member of Equity, I have Public Liability Insurance. Recommended for Further Reading 'Telling Tales - Storytelling as Emotional Literacy' by Taffy Thomas and Steve Killick, published 2007. |