The Art of
Digital Storytelling
Craig Roland
Lastly, check out Adobe’s Digital
Kids Club section on digital storytelling (
www.adobe.com/educa-tion/digkids/storytelling), which
includes advice on teaching digital
storytelling, tips on constructing a
digital storytelling script, classroom
strategies, and tutorials on using
Adobe products to produce digital
stories.
Everyone has stories to tell,
and digital media offer
rich, new ways to capture
and share our stories with
others. Digital storytelling is the
art of using digital content—still
images, video clips, voiceovers,
sound effects, and music—to create compelling narrative movies.
As an expressive medium in the
classroom, digital storytelling can
be used to integrate subject matter,
knowledge, and skills from many
areas of the curriculum. Visit the
following websites to learn more
about digital storytelling, how to
teach it in your classroom, and to
see student examples.
Getting Started
A good place to start learning about
digital storytelling is Wikipedia,
which provides a brief discussion
of the term, its history, and a list of
links to other digital storytelling
sites (
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digi-tal_storytelling).
Another good source of information is Daniel Meadows’ Digital
Storytelling Tutorial ( www.photo-
bus.co.uk/dstory_01.html), which
includes advice on equipment and
software, scripting, and step-by-step
instructions on the production process.
Apple has a unit plan on their website titled “Digital Storytelling:
Tell Me A Story” ( ali.apple.com/
als/2ndmult/projects/ 3024.html)
that provides an overview on how
to transform a story into a digital
story; step-by-step instructions on
storyboarding, capturing images,
compressing the final stories, and
posting them to the web; assessment strategies; and links to other
digital storytelling resources. There
is also an excellent PDF guide on
using Apple’s iLife suite of software
to create digital stories available on
the Apple Learning Interchange site
( edcommunity.apple.com/ali/story.
php?itemID=9552).
Mechelle De Craene offers practical classroom strategies to enable
your students to get the most out of
a digital storytelling project in her
2006 article titled “Digital Storytelling: A Practical Classroom Management Strategy” (terry-freedman.
org.uk/artman/publish/printer_804.
php). To help students understand
the importance of planning before
they begin filming, I recommend
“Acting with a Pencil: Storyboarding your Movie,” (www.exposure.
co.uk/eejit/storybd) which provides
an overview of the storyboarding
process and three downloadable storyboard templates.
Digital Stories by Students
If you are looking for examples to
inspire your students, take a look
at the Hawaii Department of Education’s annual IslandMovie Contest ( islandmovie.k12.hi.us), which
features digital stories created by
students at all levels. Also, visit
the iCan short film festival (www.
sfett.com) website, which includes
a wide range of digital stories created by students from San Fernando,
California over the past seven years.
While on this site, check out the
Flickschool ( flickschool.com), which
includes instructional podcasts on
a variety of media-related topics by
Marco Torres, social studies teacher
and media coach at San Fernando
High school. Another site worth
seeing is Streetside Stories (www.
streetside.org/stories/digital-sto-ries.htm), which features digital
stories created by middle school
students enrolled in an after-school
Tech Tales program.
For additional digital storytelling resources on the web, see ArtEd
Online in the March 2006 issue of
SchoolArts.
Craig Roland is an associate professor of
art education in the School of Art and Art
History at the University of Florida in
Gainesville, Florida. He is the author of
The Art Teacher’s Guide to the Internet
(Davis Publications, 2005). rolandc@ufl.edu