Foreword by David D. Thornburg
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Part I. Storytelling, Education, and the New Media
1. Confessions of a Digital Storytelling Teacher: Twenty
Revelations About Digital Storytelling in Education
2. Defining and Discussing Digital Storytelling: Helping Teachers
See, Think, and Talk About Digital Storytelling
3. Digital Storytelling as an Educational Tool: Standards,
Planning, and Literacy
4. Assessing Digital Stories: The Opportunities and Challenges of
New Media Evaluation
Part II. The Art and Practice of Storytelling
5. Thinking About Story: The Story Core, Story Mapping, Story
Types
6. Applying Story Maps, Using Story Tables: Seeing the Core,
Mapping the Story, Creating a Story Table
7. Story Planning Considerations: Tips, Techniques, Lessons
Learned
8. Transformation Formations: How We, and the Characters in Our
Stories, Change
9. More Story Maps: From Aristotle to Present Day
10. Other Kinds of Stories: Other Story Forms and Story
Perspectives
Part III. Going Digital
11. The Media Production Process, Phase I: Developing the Story
12. The Media Production Process, Phases II-V: From Preproduction
to Performance
13. The Digital Storytelling Toolbox: The Tools Teachers and
Students Need to Tell Digital Stories
14. Media Grammar for Teachers: Assessing Media Expression
15. Copyright, Fair Use, and UOPS: Living in the Gray Zone, Doing
the Right Thing, and Protecting Yourself
Epilogue: If I Had a Time Machine
Resource A. Teaching Oral Storytelling
Resource B. Audio Techniques for Video Recording Oral
Storytelling
Resource C. Audio Techniques for Interviewing People
Resource D. Freytag′s Pyramid
Resource E. Grammar of Camera Angles
Resource F. What′s Scannable?
Resource G. Joseph Campbell′s Story Adventure Diagram
Resource H. Visual Portrait of a Story
References
Index
Learn more about Jason Ohler′s PD offerings
Jason Ohler is a speaker, writer, teacher, researcher, and lifelong
digital humanist who is well known for the passion, insight, and
humor he brings to his presentations and writings. He is author of
numerous articles, books, and teacher resources and continues to
work directly with teachers, administrators, and students.
Combining twenty-five years of experience in the educational
technology field with an eye for the future, Ohler connects with
people where they are, and helps them see their importance in the
future development of living, learning, and working in the Digital
Age. Although he is called a futurist, he considers himself a
nowist, working nationally and internationally to help educators
and the public use today′s tools to create living environments that
we are proud to call home.
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