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Digital Storytelling

Digital Storytelling: a new spin on an old tale. Creating their own stories or telling stories using digital means challenges students to move beyond being the consumer and instead become creators by adding multi-media to their narratives. That same story also becomes accessible to a broader audience by adding videos, graphics, and audio, through web-based platforms or other applications.

We can also recognize that incorporating storytelling in learning environments helps to support the First People’s Principles of Learning and has been shown to support the preservation of cultural knowledge and tradition in some cases.

A digital story is the use of technology to tell a story (Robin, 2015). It is a process of weaving together oral story, images, sound, and music to create a short film (Lambert, 2010). Within the process, traditional aspects of storytelling are integrated with multiple layers. Digital storytelling is increasingly being used for educational purposes (Robin, 2015), leaving legacy (Hausknecht et al., 2019) and as an approach to preserving cultural knowledge (Cunsolo Willox et al., 2013; Iseke & Moore, 2011).

From: Hausknecht, S. (07/2021). Sharing indigenous knowledge through intergenerational digital storytelling: Design of a workshop engaging elders and youth Taylor & Francis. doi:10.1080/03601277.2021.1927484

Digital storytelling is not limited to personal narratives and the range of topics varies from historical timelines, personal reflections on local or global events, and even exploring the community and sharing one or many perspectives. Choosing to create a digital story allows the creator to choose and expand their audience and increases accessibility and interactivity for the ‘readers’ or ‘viewers’. A story can go beyond the page as readers engage with the visual and auditory elements that a digital story provides.

an eight step cycle diagram of creating a digital story from propose an idea to research to storyboard, gather images and create.

from Transform Learning by Samantha Morra https://samanthamorra.com/2013/06/05/edudemic-article-on-digital-storytelling/

Getting started

  1. The first step is recognizing what type of story your students are expected to share. You can follow Samantha Morra’s Process Model or get inspired by her post. Remember, the options for content are virtually limitless. You can expand this topic to include recounting mathematical discoveries, retellings of famous fairytales, or provide explanations of scientific theories. Here are a few slides co-created with a colleague, Sharon, that helps to outline ‘one process’ for this… Once you have an idea of your story and how you want to share it, then you might start thinking about the medium (digital or otherwise)
  2. Choose the tool(s) you want students to use to edit and share their work (or allow students to select a tool with which they are familiar). It is helpful for students to have the opportunity to play with the tool and become more adept and familiar with the program before fusing this with their story. We’ve listed some tools below to help you get started.
  3. Plan! Make sure students have a clear goal they are researching or writing about. This could include scripts, storyboards, comic strips, sequences, or even timeframes. You may also want to scaffold students by having them create a storyboard and then a paperslide video depending on their experience.
  4. Teach about copyright so that your students know where to find and how to cite/attribute appropriate images, sounds, or videos. Access Creative Commons media or record and use your own. For professional images that don’t require attribution visit Unsplash, Pixabay , Pexels. or elementary students might find pics4learning easy to use (with copy/paste attribution). Depending on the device, students can also use Garageband or Audacity to create their own music.
  5. Create the digital story and select the appropriate audience. If it’s going public, remember to get the appropriate permission forms signed that may be district dependent. Be aware of student ages and also where the website or application is based because they will follow different privacy laws.
  6. Provide feedback through peer evaluations, self-evaluations, and even a rubric that students can use throughout the creation process. Visit this link to Kathy Schrock’s Guide to Everything for some sample rubrics and additional resources.

Watch this video to preview a variety of tools being used to create digital stories.

Video: Hans Tullman (2015). Digital Storytelling by Hans Tullman

 

Or this interactive Genially presentation by Tamara, Peer Mentor 2023, highlighting several different multimedia tools (with examples and hyperlinks).

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Filed under Curriculum, Digital & Media Literacy, Not Subject Specific, Planning, Resources, STEAM, Storytelling, Technology, The Arts

StoryWeaver

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A digital story platform that hosts numerous multilingual stories so that students can have access to an endless stream of stories in their home language to read and enjoy independently or with others. It is also an Open Educational Resource!

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Students from multilingual backgrounds deserve to read books in their home language and digital dual language stories are a way to provide access from them. Storyweaver contains stories in 20 different languages so that students can read but also translate stories into their home language, a great opportunity for collaboration with peers or with families.

It also allows students to create stories, similar to Storybird, where students have access to illustrations from artists when writing. It also allows them to write words phonetically which is a benefit for early learners who may not have studied for multiple years in their home language.

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Visit the Storyweaver website.

Read a few stories and then learn to create and translate!

 

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Pratham Books (2015) Storyweaver Tutorial: Translate

 

Pratham Books (2015) Storyweaver English

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Popplet

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Popplet is a digital tool that can be used to capture ideas and then organize them in a mindmap format. It can be accessed freely on an iPad, smartphone, or computer.

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Popplet is a collaborative mind mapping software. It allows students to manipulate their thoughts more easily than on paper. They can prepare essays, timelines, and other assignments requiring planning with the added ability to move ‘bubbles’ around that can hold text, drawings, or images.

It’s a great tool to help students scaffold their own learning while documenting it at the same time. How? Students preparing for a presentation (pamphlet, poster, slides) can collaboratively put all their ideas down into the popplet, find evidence to support each topic (photos, websites, video links), and then continue to narrow down their ideas until they a refined draft that’s prepared to move to the next prototype – all in real time from different devices. Of course, teachers might also have students working together on one device to create a popplet (with students taking turns recording).

Popplet is also accessible because instead of typing in each thought bubble, the keyboard allows for voice predictive text to record their thoughts. When working in groups, this means every student’s ideas can be represented.

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Create

  • Choose your device – iPad Lite or Paid version OR online through a web browser
    • Lite doesn’t allow multiple popplets to be created but if you create an account online, you can create a limited number of free popplets (10 at the time of writing). It’s worth trying it out before purchasing.
    • If using popplet collaboratively, you will need to make your own account and student accounts
  • Make a NEW popplet
    • On the blank canvas, you can either double-tap or click to create a new popple (bubble)
    • Choose to write, draw, add an image, or include a vimeo video to the popple
    • Drag your mouse/finger from one of the grey circles on a popple to create a new link to a related popple
  • Browse other popplets
    • View ones that have been made public for inspiration
    • View templates/examples that popplet has created and modify them

Share

  • Tap on the export or share button
  • Choose to invite a collaborator or share a link
    • Search by email address or by username
    • Students would need individual accounts and ANYONE can add ANYONE – this is a great way to introduce the benefits of using an avatar and privacy considerations are essential – ensure appropriate permissions are in place depending on your context
    • Each popple created would have the creator’s name attached to the popple
  • Make it public
    • to embed the popplet in a class website or student blog
    • to share it via link

Additional Settings

  • Export as an image
  • Present – 2 variations of presenting
  • Change permissions (for sharing)
  • Add Content – Vimeo is offered in the free accounts
  • Duplicate your popplets (great for making multiples when working in groups)

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Bellow, Adam (2011) Popplet


Popplet is generally used in higher grades but it can be used in Kindergarten

Robinson, Staci (2015) Popplet in a Kindergarten Classroom

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AWW App

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AWW stands for A Web Whiteboard, which is exactly what it is. An online digital whiteboard that can be curated by a single or multiple users.

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This digital whiteboard is device-responsive, web-based, and FREE which means it’s quick to access for multiple users. A teacher can pre-create a board and invite students to brainstorm on it or students can create their own board to be shared. On the digital canvas you can draw, add text, and upload images.

You can also use this app to transform your projector into a “smart board” by using the AWW app on your tablet, connecting it to your projector, and then displaying your interactions.

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  1. Visit the website awwapp.com and it automatically will present you with a blank board.
  2. Use a blank page or create an account so it can be saved and revisited.
  3. Pre-create a board for students to use OR have students create their own boards.
    1. You can use templates! Find the title of your board, click the black drop-down arrow, click on “Create from Templates”
  4. Save the board & export it to a PDF.
  5. Share the board with others or keep it private.

Some Features (as of October 2018):

  • add text, shapes (circle or rectangle), drawings
  • upload pictures
  • add additional pages
  • share – through email, the automatically generated QR code or URL link, or embed it into a class website
  • choose from pre-created templates
  • FREE CHAT BOX **when logged in with an account**
    • people viewing a whiteboard can leave their questions and comments – great for providing feedback or distance collaboration – which the creator can answer

 


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Jackson, Holly (2018). Getting Started with “Aww App” Tutorial

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Filed under Not Subject Specific, Physical and Health Education, Resources

Digital Whiteboards

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Digital whiteboards are also known as Interactive online whiteboards. They are a blank canvas and depending on the application, you can add images, hyperlinks, draw or annotate them, upload videos, and some allow voice recording. Several allow real-time collaborative co-creation while some are more for individual use with sharing options. There are a plethora of options available today with many proprietary, paid options, a few fully free and some with varying levels. I’ve even found two ‘open educational apps’ FIPPA compliant (data housed in Canada) that are worth a try. See the ‘getting started’ section below for a few options.


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Digital Whiteboards provide a space for students to document their learning, often in multimodal ways. The blank canvas can include drawings, text, images, video, and voice recordings allowing students to create a raw presentation to be reviewed by the teacher or a polished edited version to share with others. Most whiteboard style applications allow for sharing with others and some have ‘collaboration’ options. Digital whiteboards might be incorporated into student assessment (‘showme’ what you know or understand about…), as brainstorming spaces or individual/group project planning or presentation spaces.

These applications can provide students with choice in how they want to display their learning!


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  1.  Decide on your learning objective and what you want students to achieve. Digital whiteboards can be used to capture various parts of a students learning journey.
  2. Learn what tools are available on your classroom or district devices because some are free while others have a cost.
  3. Download the application or visit the web tool and allow students to play and learn some of the basic functions before assigning structured tasks.

Here are just a few ideas of how a Digital Whiteboard could be used:

  • Explaining: Explain how they’ve come to a conclusion or answer by providing a visual explanation.
  • Presenting: Transform a powerpoint format into a presentation that features their annotations, explanations, and share it as a video that can be refined before being viewed by others.
    • Advantage: Students can hear their voice and re-record their narration until it sounds correct to them.
  • Collaborating: Work with a partner or in a group and record multiple ideas on the one application. This goes beyond a poster because they can add in videos, overlay them with graphs or additional images, and then record different voices to explain their creation.
  • Documenting: Students can create a portfolio that documents different projects or components on each canvas page.

Below are a few examples of interactive whiteboard apps. Click on one to learn more!

    Digital Whiteboards for online Co-creation:

  • AWW app – web-based with free templates
  • Padlet
  • JamBoard
  • WhiteBoard Chat allows for a teacher to launch student boards.
  • Whiteboard.fi is another free whiteboard application I only recently came across. It’s been developed by Kahoot so is worth a look. Teachers can create a ‘classroom’ and provide join links for students.
  • Miro is another whiteboard application with a variety of templates including mind maps and flow charts. Pin notes, type and free draw. Free access includes 3 whiteboards with unlimited team members collaborating. One thing I like about Miro is the ‘infinity board’ aspect… the board can be VERY large and just keep growing with a neat little map feature so you can see the whole board at a glance.
  • Etherdraw and Draw.io are both Open Source/Open Access Apps that are also FIPPA compliant are available thanks to the wonderful community at OpenETC!

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Filed under Not Subject Specific, Open Educational Resources, Resources

PeerWise


PeerWise features represented in icons

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PeerWise is a free program where you can create, share, evaluate and discuss assessment questions. It is simple to use and only takes you a minute to create your account and get started. It allows instructors to integrate collaborative learning and peer tutoring into a class.

Features include:

  • Designing and answering questions
  • Writing explanations
  • Question evaluation
  • Large test banks
  • Optimized for large classes

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By using PeerWise, instructors can see how students are performing and get early feedback. Allowing the students to create their own multiple choice questions (MCQ) questions gives instructors the opportunity to then use that as a test bank for a quiz or test and enhance collaborative learning, especially in large classes.

Students benefit from using PeerWise by reinforcing concepts when having to write an answer explanation, understanding the learning outcomes for the course when creating questions and assessing their own understanding of concepts when answering questions. Creating good quality MCQ questions together with effective distractors is not an easy task. However this process provides opportunities to improve knowledge of the subject matter and develop awareness of the relevant curriculum for specific learning. Moreover, by providing feedback to their peers’ questions, students become mindful of their own misunderstandings and appreciate different styles of learning. Finally, since the identity of the MCQ creator is anonymous, the process of feedback, assessment and evaluation of questions can be completely honest.


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1. Open the PeerWise webpage.

2. Choose your institution from the list.

 

3. Log-in with your registered username and password or

if you are a new user, register first (Make sure you have the Course ID and Identifier provided to you by the instructor).

4. Begin creating and sharing!

For more detailed information refer to the guide for students.


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Padlet – cloud-based collaboration

UPDATE: As of April 2018, Padlet has changed to a paid subscription model. Free access is now limited to 3 boards. Once you’ve deleted a board, you can create additional boards.

For those interested in exploring Open Educational options, you may wish to try a suite of apps from apps.opened.ca hosted in the ‘Sandstorm’ ecosystem (a Canadian housed space) – you can even host the apps on your own server. Scrumblr and Brainstorm are the closest I’ve found to Padlet. You might also be interested in Etherpad (like a google doc but FIPPA compliant!). For more information, please visit ‘Open ETech: Free Range Ed Tech’.

Visit this blog post for a description of digital whiteboards and a few alternative applications including: Jamboard


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Padlet is an online wall to which anyone with the link can easily add text, audio, video, images, hyperlinks and even make simple sketches! There are templates available including a gps located map.
Users can share their ideas from any device with internet access whether they’re inside or outside the classroom. These virtual sticky notes can then help keep track of and enrich classroom discussions or help when designing a project. Students are even able to comment or react to the posts of others (depending on how the teacher/moderator configures the settings).

A collaborative whiteboard or posting board is a great way to share information and collaboratively create content. Consider a classroom brainstorm that often entails students raising their hands and sharing, one at a time, while the teacher or another student records on the board… now think about the possibilities if groups of students or pairs of students have a shared Padlet wall open and are all adding and sharing ideas and resources in real time! Once the brainstorming has taken place, the teacher can follow up with a group discussion that might involve evaluating, sorting and classifying responses… something that can be difficult to make time for when the act of brainstorming and recording is lengthy.

Using the Mapping template, students might collaboratively create a geo-located map for place based learning activities, response to a novel that involves a journey, sharing information about cultures and places around the world, etc.

Embedding media like videos and images is simple, and Padlet even allows users to record videos or take pictures in real time and places them directly into their documents. Create and share mind-maps, plans, diagrams, portfolios, maps and more. Remember to always consider privacy and copyright permissions when sharing images, video or other content online.

Another valuable affordance of Padlet for teachers is that you can ‘moderate’ your posts using the privacy settings so that you view anything a student posts and approve it before it becomes ‘live’.

Important features and considerations:

  • Accountability: MODERATE your wall using the MODIFY menu (the ‘settings wheel’ in Top right corner) to help provide some accountability for students (‘Modify’ –> Require Approval). In a f2f classroom, the T can also circulate while students work and approve posts (using a mobile device) as T circulates, interacts/prompts/probes. You can also ask students to self-identify using initials or you can have students work in small groups or partners.
  • Privacy: Using the SHARE menu, you can adjust privacy. Consider: is the content sensitive at all? If so, there are also techniques like question boxes to support co-creating ideas/questions around more sensitive issues – the T can then preview the questions and discuss with the class the next day. Will students share their photos? names? what are the school/district norms and expectations or permissions needed? This is NOT a FIPPA compliant space so it is very important that students not be required to login and/or provide any personal or identifying info. (Metadata including things like location services in images provide data so it is important your students are aware of how to protect their own privacy)
  • Accessibility: You can create a custom URL using the ‘SETTINGS wheel’ (top right corner). This is also where you add a title and instructions/description. Consider: Do all of your students have devices? Will this be an individual or small group or partner? Are there visually impaired students? Other learning needs?

Visit https://padlet.com/ and click on “Create a padlet”. Then double-click anywhere to start writing, it is that simple! The URL can be shared with anyone. To explore some of the settings available, please refer to the video demonstration at the end of the post.

Padlet One Page Instructions

Padlet Tips & Tricks

 


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