Post on 07-Aug-2015
transcript
Twitter:@kkapp
Tools of Engagement: "Tools of Engagement: Storytelling
By Karl M. Kapp
Story Creation Steps
1. Identify Learning Objective – Choose Only One
2. Choose Characters (Teacher or Learner) 3. Create Plot (What Happens) 4. Develop Questions (Advance Plot)
– Only use one-two questions.
5. Create Tension (Between Characters) 6. Develop Resolution
Let’s Get Started
What story elements and tools of engagement are
used?
Twitter:@kkapp
Example: Interactive Story
The Quest for Learner
Engagement:
Karl M. Kapp
Presents:
The Case of the
t was a quiet Monday morning, very quiet, really quiet… almost too…
Then, out of nowhere, she flew into my office, like a boss who had a problem that needed solved …
Hi Boss.
I have a problem that needs to be solved.
We need more engagement.
She wanted to increase learner engagement and have more interactive stories to help learners connect with content.
You came to the right instructional designer that’s
what I do…
Yeah, I know…that’s why I hired you. Ugh..
Now take the new person here and go ask Clyde, he went to a
conference on the subject.
For some reason, she didn’t seem bothered by the fact that she was breaking the company’s no smoking policy…
Here’s where you come in. Help me figure out the clues …and fast.
We’ve got to solve this mystery. Help me figure out the clues …and fast.
Text KarlKapp to 37607 Or PollEv.com/karlkapp
First, take out your text machines.
K a r l K a p p
Choose your disguise…
Question Here
Stakes are high and time is short.
Learners are not Engaged? Why?
Learning eagLe June 24, 2016 See Section F for Coupons
Investigation Opened By Harry James Las Vegas, NV– It started out as just another normal day. Larry the Learner had just sat at his desk to embark on a learning journey. A journey that turned horrific within only a few moments. The result is unnecessary incident that could and should have been avoided by having the right instructional strategy coupled with the right content.
The news of disengaged learners was spreading…
We need to find Ivan…the Informant...
I knew one of his old haunts…
He was about as friendly as a fly at a fly strip convention.
Hello, Clueless…
Look I am going to ask you some questions, the right answer gives you
a clue to interactive storytelling.
He was about as friendly as a fly at a fly strip convention.
What do you and your detectives here have to say about this?
What is the key element of a learning story?
Question Here
Here, let me show you what I think is the key element.
He then grabbed his typewriter to show me the key element of instructional storytelling.
Plot—Something has to happen. There must be some action, event or scenario that moves the learner from point A to point B. Something the learner cares about.
Change: Character changes.
Good defeats Evil.
Character faces conflict & triumphs.
Ivan then grabbed his laptop to show me a demonstration.
Let me give you another example of how stories power
engagement.
Create Open Loops
Law & Order
Thanks, Ivan.
Get out of here….
This mystery of engaging stories was starting to take shape…
Let’s brief the boss on what we know so far…
So what have we learned?
So far, so good. Follow the next clue on the matchbook I found in my desk drawer….
I arrived at the place on the matchbook, as shady as a clump of oaks caught in an eclipse…
Enter Question Text Hmm… What could this location and clue mean??? Tell me. Do engaging stories start with Action or Information?
Question Here
Action draws in the learner and encourages further engagement.
Too often instruction is about the content and not about interacting or engaging with the content. It needs to be about what you
want the learner to do.
Make the learner do something
Answer a question
Identify a procedure.
Make a decision.
Solve a mystery.
Confront a challenge.
Pick a team.
Active learning increases student performance in science, engineering, and mathematics Scott Freemana,1, Sarah L. Eddya, Miles McDonougha, Michelle K. Smithb, Nnadozie Okoroafora, Hannah Jordta, and Mary Pat Wenderotha. PNAS Early Edition (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
Time for a recap with the boss…she looked a little frantic…she wanted to know one more thing.
I want to know one more thing.
What story elements can engage learners?
What game elements did we encounter today that can
engage learners?
Any Others?
Great stuff, you folks really seemed to have cracked the case as to what makes engaging
learning.
I thought my work was done but then….I found another pack of matches on my way home…
But we’ll have to leave that mystery for another presentation….
What game elements and tools of engagement are used
in this presentation?
1) Story/Genre2) Audience Input3) Questions4) Mystery/Curiosity5) Characters6) Action
QUESTIONS?
The End
Credits:
Detective Artwork Courtesy of Vanessa Bailey
Typewriter is MS Clip Art
Let’s Examine the Elements of the
Story
Parts of a Story…
Stories need Characters…
Stories need Plot…
What is happening…
Stories need Tension…
Stories need Resolution…
Stories need Resolution…
Stories need Conclusion…
1. Characters
Stories Need
2. Plot (something has to happen).
3. Tension
4. Resolution
5. Conclusion
Storytelling
Researchers have found that the human brain has a natural affinity for
narrative construction.
Yep, People tend to remember facts more accurately if they encounter
them in a story rather than in a list.
And they rate legal arguments as more convincing when built into narrative tales rather than on legal precedent.
Carey, B. (2007) this is Your Life (and How You Tell it). The New York Times. Melanie Green http://www.unc.edu/~mcgreen/research.html. Chapter 2 “The Gamification of Learning and Instruction.
Speer, N. K., Reynolds, J. R., Swallow, K. M., & Zacks, J. M. (2009). Reading Stories Activates Neural Representations of Visual and Motor Experiences.Psychological Science, 20(8), 989–999. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02397.x
When a person reads about certain activities in a story, the areas of the
brain associated with those activities are activated.
The research found that different brain regions track different aspects of a story. If the character moved, the
corresponding region of the brain for physical movement became active.
Story Type Goal of Story Expressive Teach content or convey existing
information.
Strategic Promote certain ways of working or thinking—cultural shifts.
Reflective Captures complexities embedded within a situation or points out absurdities of a current state of affairs.
Transformative Describe a possible new future or a new way of operating.
Alterio, Maxine & McDrury, Janice. Learning Through Storytelling in Higher Education: Using Reflection and Experience to Improve Learning. Routledge. 2003.
Become a Story Connoisseur—Observe how movie makers, television directors, and novelists craft stories.
Ask to Hear Stories—When debriefing a person providing information for a course, ask for stories illustrating key
points.
Ask Story Questions—Stories follow a structure, ask structured questions around which stories are built.
Questions…
You Try It!
Divide into teams. Decide what you want to teach.
Create story. Use Poll Everywhere Add to PowerPoint.
Story Creation Steps
1. Identify Learning Objective – Choose Only One
2. Choose Characters (Teacher or Learner) 3. Create Plot (What Happens) 4. Develop Questions (Advance Plot)
– Only use one-two questions.
5. Create Tension (Between Characters) 6. Develop Resolution