Storytelling: A Powerful Medium for Teaching
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Where Imagination Meets Expression: The Power of Storytelling in Student Development
Storytelling is an age-old art that transcends cultures and generations. In the classroom, it emerges as a transformative medium for teaching, offering more than just a captivating narrative. It is a bridge between abstract concepts and tangible understanding, a tool that can make learning vivid and memorable.It is the most enduring and proven pedagogy for engaging children and enhancing their knowledge, comprehension and recall capabilities is storytelling.
In the Internet age, there are limitless resources and new-fangled techniques to help children ‘learn’ and improve their memorisation capabilities. Yet perhaps the most enduring and proven pedagogy for engaging children and enhancing their knowledge, comprehension and recall capabilities is storytelling. It is the oldest form of communication between humans that has existed ever since language was invented, and since several millennia well-told stories have captivated and engaged young and old alike.
Bangalore-based Vikram Sridhar, curator of literary festivals and performance storyteller, believes that storytelling is the strongest medium of conservation and knowledge sharing. While his visit to NPS he quoted , “Stories are containers used to transfer knowledge and information. They are like bowls that hold water and if the water is knowledge, stories are channels that help transfer this knowledge to listeners. In education, stories are a powerful medium to enable children to understand, comprehend and retain information and facts,” says Sridhar, who travels across India narrating stories to teachers, children, parents, and community workers.
Stories not only deliver content but also stimulate critical thinking and creativity. Students can analyze plot developments, debate characters’ decisions, and explore alternative endings. This kind of analysis encourages deeper comprehension and fosters skills such as critical thinking, problem-solving, and empathy. When students create their own stories, they practice organizing their thoughts, structuring arguments, and expressing ideas creatively.
Storytelling also nurtures empathy by allowing students to step into different perspectives. Through stories, students can experience diverse cultures, historical periods, and life situations. This exposure promotes a greater understanding and appreciation of different viewpoints, helping to build a more inclusive and compassionate classroom environment.
It is important that parents and teachers to make efforts to create stories to teach different subjects.
Here are some guidelines for creating story-lessons.
Character. Choose story characters well, and attribute unusual habits or mindsets to each character.
Plot. What is the theme of the story? What problems/challenges need to be resolved? How do they affect the main characters, and who or what will help to solve them?
Setting and atmosphere. Set your story in a real or imaginary place. Help your children experience the sounds, smells, sights and feel of the place.
Ms. Priyanka Chugani
English Faculty
National Public School ITPL