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“Digital Storytelling and Compositions:
the Perfect 21st Century Paper”
Write to Learn Presentation 2009
Gary Ryan: Christian
Brothers College High School
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In this workshop, you will learn how a National Writing
Project teacher has used digital compositions to teach basic writing
skills and, in the process, have changed the social and political
dimensions of the learning environment. Mr. Ryan will show models
of student multimedia compositions and discuss how each step in
the drafting process reflects an increase in techno-literacy, problem
solving, collaboration, while honoring traditional writing and reading
skills. |
First Screen |
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"Certain materials are included under the fair
use exemption of the U.S. Copyright Law and have been prepared according
to the fair use guidelines and are restricted from further use."
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First Handout: Observation Chart--Two Digital Compositions
First Digital Composition: The Beats PowerPoint

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The research says that a digital reading and writing
environment can positively influence literacy. Multimedia Composing
presents a means of self-expression and provides support for development
of reading and writing skills. Dynamic multimedia presentations allow
students to feel their work could have a greater voice, which in turn
encourages them |
| to put more effort into it…But is a PowerPoint
presentations on The Crucible featuring the South Park devil really
academic? ….Yes!to put more effort into it…But is a PowerPoint
presentations on The Crucible featuring the South Park devil really
academic? ….Yes! |
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The research says that a digital reading and writing
environment can positively influence literacy. Multimedia Composing
presents a means of self-expression and provides support for development
of reading and writing skills. Dynamic multimedia presentations
allow students to feel their work could have a greater voice, which
in turn encourages them to put more effort into it…But is
a PowerPoint presentations on The Crucible featuring the South Park
devil really academic? ….Yes! |
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| Multimedia presentations are changing the dynamics of
the Rhetorical Triangle, but they are not changing the fundamentals
of teaching composition. Traditionally we believe that: |
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| A: Teachers can best influence student writing by commenting on
drafts in process rather than by marking finished products. |
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B: Writing teachers introduce collaborative group assignments,
to encourage students to experiment with ideas; think divergently;
take risks; express opinions; speculate, hypothesize; and think
metaphorically. |
| C: Increasingly, as the future of literacy moves into
the digital environment the text must to include graphics, sound,
interactivity, and communication. |
Seven Ideas: Two Assumptions |
| 1. |
Storytelling is an age-old way of transferring knowledge—instructional,
persuasive, historical, or reflective. |
| 2. |
Digital storytelling involves combining narrative with digital content
to create a short movie. |
| 3. |
The resources available to incorporate into a digital story are
virtually limitless, giving the storyteller enormous creative latitude. |
| 4. |
However, no media is good for everything; each has costs and benefits
in terms of what skills each develops. |
| 5. |
Reading develops imagination, induction, reflection and critical
thinking. |
| 6 |
The relationship between word and image is becoming increasingly
unstable, and the nexus of control is the way in which text gathers
around the image and supervises its reading (See Jay David Bolter). |
| 7. |
Students spending much more time with visual media, their critical
thinking skills suffer, yet their visual intelligence is actually
rising. |
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Two Assumptions |
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| Assumption Number One |
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"As students spend more time with visual media and less time
with print, evaluation methods that include visual media will give
a better picture of what they actually know."
--Patricia Greenfield, UCLA distinguished professor of psychology
and director of the Children's Digital Media Center, Los Angeles.
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| Assumption Number Two |
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Make sure your course design focuses on critical thinking, collaboration
and revision and includes a balanced diet of media in order to develop
visual intelligence and social intelligence. |
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2nd Digital Composition: The Dreseden Bombing
| Let’s compare the PowerPoint Dresden composition
to the paper script created for the same project. |
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The Bombing of Dresden Was
Unnecessary-- A Student |
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During the last year of World War II, Britain’s Royal Air
Force sent 300 Lancaster bombers to attack Dresden. At the end of
the bombing raid, 2,690 tons of explosive and incendiary bombs had
fallen on the German city and more than 25,000 people had died. Over
the years, many questions have arisen as to whether or not the bombing
was justifiable. Why Dresden? It had no anti-aircraft guns or any
form of defense; it also lacked any real military forces. Royal Air
Force officials believed bombing the town would stop the flow of German
troops. The fact is, German troops were already retreating and there
were very few left in the town during the attack. Why bomb a town
with barely any military men or even military factories? Another thing
that makes this raid very difficult to rationalize this raid is the
fact that highly questionable tactics were employed. Part of why the
town was attacked was to terrorize civilians into surrender-this is
highly controversial, and it ultimately failed miserably in having
any effect on Germany’s surrender. Even still, the war was almost
over. One of the last major battles in the Ardennes forest, the Battle
of the Bulge, already ended in Allied victory. The reality was that
Dresden was a revenge attack by the British and Americans for civilian
losses during the Battle of Britain. Both nations knew and fully understood
massive civilians casualties would be taken; yet it was of little
concern. From this, we can conclude that not only was Dresden unnecessary
because it failed to bring the Germans to surrender, but that the
massive casualties lost were for no justifiable cause at all. |
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Evaluation--Traditional
writing and reading skills |
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In both compositions, there is a thesis and a balance of argument
with evidence. There is also a clear beginning, middle and end. Finally,
the students are looking at primary and secondary sources. |
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However, it it most important to remember that these
digital compositions are part of a writing, reading, and revising
process. I tend to think of them as "drafts". |
Recommendations: (with a
tip of the hat to Clifford Lee) |
| 1. |
Scaffold the writing process in clearly defined, separate
pieces, with the ultimate goal of creating the text, image, sound
and voiceover narrative. |
| 2. |
Include an authentic demonstration of their work in some type of
exhibition, so that students are motivated to complete the project
for mastery, rather than completion – AND it gives the students
a sense of purpose for their writing. |
| 3. |
Scaffold EVERY aspect of the digital story project: •
Show models of strong storytelling techniques and analyze those together.
• Do a workshop with the incorporation of the "right"
type of music that serves to complement your story. • Play
student-made and adult-made digital stories as models to critically
analyze and evaluate prior to their assembly. • Have students
go through peer-edits in the writing AND reading of their voiceover
narrative.
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| 4. |
Push students to be more meta-cognitive about their inclusion of
visual and audio clips, making sure that the visual does dominate
the text; emphasize and model critical thinking skills at every step
in the process. |
| 5. |
Teach students the importance of word choice, and when to use the
image or sound to carry the narrative argument, through workshops
and models, to emphasize how to make an important point with fewer
words. |
| 6. |
Create a community of learners who are comfortable with collaboration
and socializing the process of composing and revising. |
| 7, |
Understand that assessment is going to be complex and rewarding.
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How We Conference Students
in American Studies |
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Experienced writers play with their ideas. They socialize
by writing multiple drafts and seeking feedback. Teachers comment
on drafts, use peer reviews and collaboration in order to get students
into the habit of experienced writers. We want our students to view
writing as a recursive, rather than a one time experience. Students
need to understand that revision means rethinking their argument
and balancing their evidence in the light of new understanding.
Students need to see writing as a social process and not as a solitary
experience. They need to seek out a circle of critical friends,
a community of writers who can give encouragement and significant
feedback.
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So in our American Studies curricular design we ask them to write
(play) a lot and view their writing as an evolving, everyday practice.
Since the American Studies is an advanced college credit level course,
the writing is mostly argumentative. We build in a time for feedback
and for socializing the process of writing, reading and research.
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Initially we focus on low pressure activities, such as brainstorming
or creating timelines or responding to primary sources. We include
time for lots of early, “crazy” drafts. Then we help
the students to narrow their topic and balancing evidence and argument.
We place a premium on our students being responsible of outside
sources, and we help them evaluate sources and then integrate evidence
into their research perspective.
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We set high expectations and focus the majority of our feedback
(both written and spoken) on higher level thinking priorities. We
set up a regular schedule of individual conferencing, peer reviews,
and collaboration. Short papers (2-3 pages) are usually experiments
in critical thinking; for example we might expect a one page synopsis
and two pages of their own ideas. Or we might expect a quick multi-media
presentation on the Beats or on the Harlem Renaissance, or on the
targeting of Dresden. On longer papers, we give our students time
to change their minds later.
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These digital compositions must be viewed as "chapters"
in the 1818 course digital sourcebook. They must be argumentative
and reflect superior research, analysis and citation. The students
are working together jointly to accomplish a common intellectual purpose
in a manner superior to what might have been accomplished working
alone. |
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A Community of Writers |
One of our great experiences with the
SLU 1818 program has been our annual field trip to the Pius Library
to learn research methodology and our presentation by Sue Mendelsohn,
the Writing Center Coordinator at St. Louis University, on the habits
of experienced writers. (See the handout.)
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SLU Preservice: Writing Across the Curriculum
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Based upon Nancy Sommers “Revision Strategies of Student
Writers and Experienced Adult Writers,” one might conclude
the following principles of composition: |
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Writing is rewriting; and revision is rethinking |
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Writing is a Social Process |
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Teachers help their students best by giving feedback and concentrating
critical thinking--on a student's argument and ideas and on higher
level thinking priorities. |
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Teachers should try to create in their classrooms, and beyond, a
community of writers. |
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College Level Expectations, as Sue Mendelsohn suggests, is that
the student fashion “a complex argument presented in simple
language.” |
Grading:
Treat the writing as in-process rather than a fixed product.
Don’t encourage obsession with correctness but do encourage
the habits of good writers.
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Evaluation and Assessment
of Contemporary Compositions |
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Assessment is a strange thing. For years I’ve
taught this Gatsby Magazine project where the students created a
magazine, first on paper and now as an in-house website. At CBC
every kid has a laptop and the whole campus is wired. So, naturally,
we have encouraged the students to include multimedia---music, film,
and flash into their projects. However, while the underlying composition
principles are the same, there are still problems when you try to
grade group work, or work of various skills. |
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Collaborative, multi-modal compositions
create a persistent challenge for the assessment of student work.
How can you effectively gauge student involvement and learning in
collaborative groups, when the amount of writing, editing, managing
is sometime uneven or hard to readily evaluate? Sometimes self-grading
helps assess student learning. Often, the teacher needs to learn how
to use different assessment criteria across the various projects (e.g.,
essays, web design, multimedia production, discussion board management
and sound effects), and how both individuals and small groups could
be accountable for their learning. The courageous teacher eventually
devises ways to address these assessments challenges, employing informal
assessment strategies (e.g., checklists, note-taking, observation
and conferencing) as well as formal strategies (e.g., grades for completed
projects). Yet, teachers may always remain concerned about whether
he/she was adequately gauging some students’ work. |
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| 1. |
My advice is to hold up high standards, yet be flexible in your
grading. Often it will take several years for teachers to become truly
comfortable in their evaluations of these projects. |
| 2. |
Look for unexpected successes. |
| 3. |
Focus instruction on student inquiry and critical thinking skills
by responding to students individual responsibilities in process and
carefully modeling critical thinking skills at every opportunity. |
| 4. |
It has been my experience that, even when student production has
appeared uneven, there is great promise in establishing a set of meta-cognitive
behaviors that have proven to develop better writers. Teachers often
see PowerPoint presentations as the end of the learning experience,
when they are really first drafts to a wider audience. |
The Future |
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I'm interested in making social networking the center of our classroom
in order to give our students a global voice. We now have a wiki where
we can present, in a safe environment, our work and comment in a supportive,
academic space. Hopefully, some of the other 1818 schools would like
to join us. |
Links and Resources:
| Digital Storytelling |
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| Equipment |
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• Access to personal computers with Windows XP operating system
(and therefore, MovieMaker software) • Digital cameras
• Access to the World Wide Web • Microphones
• Computer Video Projector (for presenting final projects)
• DVD burner (for creating movies to take home) •
Software for streaming video through Web (i.e, Quicktime) -- if you
consider publishing your movies on a school website (otherwise, not
really necessary) • Scanner |
| Web Sites that Allow Legal Access to Images,
Music, etc… |
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• Creative Commons
is this site provides links to a host of sites and organizations that
have agreed to some leniency of copyright protection.
• Discovery
School is this site is geared towards educators and students,
with free material that is intended to be used for school projects.
• The
Free Site is this site is loaded with free web-based things, and
this link connects you to their clip art index.
• Free Kids Music --
this site has children's music available from artists who have agreed
to share their work for free for children and educators. |
| The Readings: |
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Fun Reading--Everyone |
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Directions: Over the next week, read at least two
of the the below articles in depth and take notes in a Microsoft Word
document, as if it were a notebook, and be prepared to cut and paste
your answers into our class discusson board. At least skim over the
remaining article for key ideas. |
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No
Book Report: Skim It and Weep |
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Literacy,
ELL, and Digital Storytelling: 21st Century Learning in Action
:January 2009 A short video documents a semester-long digital writing
project led by two Bay Area Writing Project teacher-consultants. It
features my friend Clifford Lee.
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Digital
Storytelling Brings New Dimensions to Reading, Writing, and More:
Can digital storytelling improve reading comprehension, writing skills,
and media literacy? (Some of you might have read this last week.) |
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"Why
IT Has Not Paid Off As We Hoped" An examination of the courtship
between higher educaton and information technology.
Edward L. Ayers and Charlse M. Grisham |
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"Why
Teach Digital Writing?" from Writing in Digital Environments
(WIDE) Research Center Collective |
| Assessment and Assignments |
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Read, Write, Think:
Providing educators and students access to the highest quality practices
and resources in reading and language arts instruction. |
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ISTE: National
Educational Standards |
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International
Society for Technology in Education Student Profiles for grades K-12
A general set of profiles describing technology (ICT) literate students
at key developmental points in their precollege education. The profiles
highlight a few important types of learning activities in which students
might engage. |
| This site (and all the information it contains - except where specified)
is provided by Gary
Ryan. |
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