2. According to CDS, digital storytelling is a
short, first person video-narrative created by
combining recorded voice, still and moving
images, and music or other sounds.
3. Element #1—Why was there a need for Digital
Storytelling
Element #2—The Research leading to Digital
Storytelling
Element #3—Development of Digital Storytelling
Element #4—How and when introduced to the
public
4. People needed a
way to tell a story
using video.
Technology
enabled those to
produce works
that told a story
using images and
sound that were
very similar to a
movie.
5. A group of media
artists, designers, and
practitioners, including Joe
Lambert and Dana
Atchley, came together in the
early 1990’s to San Francisco to
explore how personal narrative
and storytelling could be
incorporated in a form of
technology .
Digital Storytelling was also Joe Lambert discussing digital
used by Ken Burns in the storytelling
documentary ―The Civil War‖
7. • In 1986, Joe Lambert, the executive director of
the new Life On The Water Theater
Company, meet a local video producer named
Dana Atchley after she viewed a production.
• In 1988, Lambert and Atchley worked together
to collaborate and develop Atchley’s Next
Exit, an interactive theoretical performance
(White, 2010).
8. In 1993, Lambert and Atchely taught three
digital storytelling workshops for
documentary filmmakers at the American
Film Institute in Los Angeles, California.
These workshops were provided by the
Center for Digital Storytelling (White,
2010).
9. In the years between 1994 and 1998,
Atchley, Lambert and Lamber’s wife, Nina
Mullen created workshops which
converted home movies into digital
stories that were created by Life on the
Water (White, 2010).
10. In 1994, Digital storytelling was featured on CNN and MSNBC.
The San Fransico Digital Media Center, SFDMC, collaborated with
numerous organizations in England, Germany, and Denmark during
1994. (White, 2010).
In 1996, the first Digital Storytelling Cookbook was published
by SFDMC. It was a hands-on production tutorial using SFDMC
narration. ‚With support from Apple Computer, the SFDMC
publishes the first version of the Digital Storytelling Cookbook,
outlining the ‘Seven Elements’ of digital storytelling and offering
hands-on production tutorials‛ (Center for Digital Storytelling).
http://www.storycenter.org/cookbook.html
Preview of a digital copy of the
Digital Storytelling Cookbook
11.
12. Reference:
Center for Digital Storytelling (2005). Retrieved December 20, 2011, from http://www.storycenter.org/timeline.html
13. The intended users
were film makers
and people wanting
to create and to
share personal
narratives.
14. primary and
secondary education
higher education
public health, social
services, and
international
development
museums
libraries
15. What is the S- Curve?
S-Curve – Innovation
The S-shaped curve of adoption is the normal curve
that ―accelerates to a maximum until half of the
individuals on the systems have adopted. Then it
increases at a gradually slower rate as fewer and
fewer remaining individuals adopt the innovation.‖
(Rogers, 2003, p. 272).
Digital storytelling began in the 1990’s.
Digital storytelling hasn’t reached full potential or
complete adoption due to it’s newness.
16. The Adoption Process of Digital Storytelling
2002
2000
1998
1996
1994
1992
1990
1988
1986
1984
Adoption Process
17. Administrators of
the school systems
ELA teachers
Reading teachers
Technology teachers
Computer teachers
18. Teachers that
would include it in
their curriculum
Students that are
creating stories to
help them
understand
standards in their
grade level
curriculum
19. Staff members that are Strategies
not familiar with digital Professional learning
storytelling opportunities
Students that are not Instructional videos of
teachers using digital
exposed to technology storytelling the classroom
in regards to with their students
understanding Videos of students using
digital storytelling to
meet standards in core
classes
20. Reference:
Kieler, L. (2010). A Reflection: Trials in Using Digital Storytelling Effectively With the Gifted. Gifted Child Today, 33(3), 48-52.
Retreived from
http://ezp.waldenulibrary.org/login?url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=trh&AN=52217362&site=ehost-
live&scope=site
Hinweis der Redaktion
Center for Digital Storytelling (2005). Retrieved December 12, 2011, fromhttp://www.storycenter.org/index1.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_storytelling
Center for Digital Storytelling (2005). Retrieved December 22, 2011, fromhttp://www.storycenter.org/history.htmlhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=kH07o8etvmI#t=21s
http://www.nextexit.com/dap/conv1.html
Reference:Center for Digital Storytelling. (2009). The evolution of digital storytelling:An abbreviated history of key moments during the first sixteen years (1993-2006). Retrieved January 10, 2012, from http://www.storycenter.org/timeline.html
Center for Digital Storytelling (2005). Retrieved December 22, 2011, fromhttp://www.storycenter.org/history.html