Add This To Your Resource Collection:


Jaliyaa Storytelling

Get the Storyteller.net RSS Feed

TeleCourses


Workshops and Classes


Latest Podcast!


On ITunes

More Podcasts

Director's Blog Site

Listen To A Story:

Night in Scotland*
Told By Laura Bobrow

Listen To An Amphitheater Event:

Glenda Bonin/ETSU Program*
With: Glenda Bonin

Find A Teller
Search for a teller in your area or around the world.

Find An Event
Find an event in your area or enter an event in the calendar.

E-Mail List
Join our once per week newsletter. Enter your e-mail address to join. Your e-mail address will not be used for any other purpose.
html text AOL



More Podcasts


Looking for VoiceOver?



News

New April PodCast Posted: Storyteller In the Classroom
Posted: 2007-04-22 By SNStaff

I’ve posted our latest podcast from Storyteller.net and Seantells.com. The link is below or you can find it on Itunes. You can also find it on my Myspace page.


We did something a little different with this podcast. I recently spent a day as guest artist in a 7th grade classroom. That’s with young people about 12 and 13 years old. I recorded large portions of the day. I’ve narrowed those recordings down to a 35 minute podcast. There are four stories in there and a coaching moment. Even the coaching moment comes from the day with the kids.


You’ll hear this again on the podcast, but I wanted to talk a bit about this here. As you know, those of you who have taken my storytelling training or coaching, that although you as a teller and your stories may remain consistent, when you change your audience you change your style. So for this group, I was speaking specifically to a small group (25 or so kids) in a small room. It was a close and intimate environment as oppsed to a big stage or an entire school assembly. The kids had also just finished a week of Arizona’s mandatory testing, so they, and the teachers in the school, were pretty exhausted. We like to describe these mandatory tests as "no child left untested." We had a casual, informal day together.

The risk anyone takes when they put forth recordings of themselves is that the listeners will think, “Oh, that is the way they always tell.” That’s simply not true of any storyteller anywhere. Well, at least the ones who understand their craft.

As you listen to this piece, keep the above paragraph in mind. Like all tellers, I have a variety of styles to choose from (and have chosen from) when my audience is 2 or 2000, aged 12 or 72, big stage or small classroom.

And, before you write me (ha ha!) about the Hades and Demeter comment, please know that I know it’s Persephone that brings the Spring, not her mother.

Our podcasts are sponsored by StorytellingProducts.com. Please stop by and support our work by purchasing a CD or Book from there. Thanks.


I hope you enjoy this month’s podcast. Click here to get it now.

© 1999-2008 Storyteller.net. No content may be reproduced without the written permission of Storyteller.net. Privacy/Copyright