Storytelling
Telling stories is how humans traditionally pass knowledge from generation to generation.
    Engaging children in oral storytelling (without the use of a printed book) is also an effective teaching
    practice for oral language development. 
     Storytelling is a special way of sharing ideas, language, and stories with children.
    The benefits of storytelling
    When educators share engaging stories with children, it provides numerous opportunities for language
    learning. As Arnold Zable has noted:
    Whether we are young or old, stories connect us and add meaning to our lives.
    Educators can use storytelling as an opportunity to develop numerous language foci including making
    meaning (listening skills), vocabulary, grammar, understanding of stories/narratives and more.
    Choosing your story
    We can choose any story that appeals to children, and that allows us to embed lots of new vocabulary,
    concepts, and grammar into the story. These can include:
           cultural/traditional stories (including Dreamtime or other Indigenous stories)
           fables and fairytales
           myths and legends
           other fictional stories
           recounts and personal stories (like educators’ or children’s own experiences).
    See the focus Stories and Narratives for a full list of different kinds of stories.
    When choosing your story, think about:
           the age and language skills of your audience
           what language (sounds, vocabulary, grammar) you would like to embed within the story
           how the characters and events within the story will appeal to your audience
           the length of the story.
    Creating your own story
    Creating your own stories is a great way to meet the learning intention of your experience. Educators can
    think up their own stories beforehand; or can come up with their stories in the moment—while they are
    telling it.
    A complete story episode
     When creating a story, try to include all the elements of a complete “episode”:
           Setting - characters, place, time
           Problem starting event
           Character - reaction and plan
           Attempt(s) to solve problem
           Consequences
           Resolution
    Some strategies for creating your own stories include:
           think of a clear setting
           create identifiable characters
           make the story’s starting event (or problem) interesting
           include character reactions, feelings, and plans
           explain how characters attempt to solve the problem (not all plans work out!)
           provide multiple attempts and consequences to the characters actions
           include a clear resolution
           consider what themes or messages can be embedded in your story.
    An example of a complete story episode
    Jack and the Beanstalk
    Setting - Jack is a young, poor boy who lives on a farm cottage with his mother and a dairy cow. One day,
    Jack's mother tells him to sell the cow at the market.
    Problem - on the way, a bean dealer convinces Jack to trade the cow for some magic beans. When he
    arrives home, Jack's mother is angry and throws the beans away.
    Reaction/plan - The next morning, Jack is thrilled to find a giant beanstalk has grown outside his window.
    He decides to climb the beanstalk.
    Attempt 1 - Jack enters a land high into the sky, sees an enormous castle, and sneaks in.
    Consequence 1 - But then, the castle's owner, a giant, comes home. He sees that Jack is nearby by
    smell, and yells: Fee-fi-fo-fum! I smell the blood of an English man
    Attempt 2 - When the giant falls asleep, Jack sneakily steals a bag of gold coins. But the giant wakes up
    and chases Jack down the beanstalk. Jack races down.
    Consequence 2 - Before the giant reaches the ground, Jack cuts down the beanstalk, causing the giant to
    fall to his death.
    Resolution - Jack and his mother live happily ever after with the treasure that Jack had brought home.
    Creating your own story downloadable.
    Storytelling preparation
    If you are telling a known story, make sure you know your story well enough to tell it without reading it.
    If you need to refer to any notes, keep a few dot points of ideas. However, if you are reading the story, it’s
    no longer a storytelling experience!
    Practice telling your story a few times before you use it in a learning experience
    Think about If you are telling a known story, make sure you know your story well enough to tell it without
    reading it what resources/materials you can use to tell your story (see below).
    Think about what questions or pauses for discussion you might use to engage children in the story.
    Storytelling components
    Spoken words:
            clearly pronounce the words of the story
            include all the parts of the narrative (setting, characters, plot, resolution)
            create emotional suspense by emphasising certain words and phrases, and by using pauses.
    Voice:
            use your voice to support children to make meaning
            use changes in your pitch (voice highs and lows), tempo (speed), and rhythm
            show changes in the emotions of characters
            use pitch and speed to build suspense and enhance the story meaning.
    Gestures, body language and facial expressions:
            use gestures to go along with key phrases in the story, to help improve meaning making
            how we move in space can help demonstrate how the characters interact, or events take place
          when there is a moment of suspense in the story, the storyteller can move or lean closer to the
    audience, and show the emotions of the characters in their facial expressions.
    Characterisation:
            different-sounding voices, body language, and gestures for different characters can be included in
    the storytelling to enhance the experience.
    (Fellowes & Oakley, 2014, p. 91) 
    Storytelling enhancements
    Props/costume:
            pictures, puppets, toys, or objects
            can help audience make meaning and keep their interest in story
            can be used to signify characters, actions, or parts of the scenery.
    Audience participation:
            we can encourage audience to contribute to the storytelling experience
            can ask audience to say a recurring phrase or rhyme
            can encourage children to provide sound effects
            can pause to ask for reflections, opinions, or predictions.
    Music or musical instruments:
            playing recorded music or sound effects to enhance mood or provide a soundscape
            instruments including drums and other percussion instruments, bells, whistles, keyboards
          can be used to show a change in tone or mood of the story, including when different characters
    move, arrive, or do certain actions(Fellowes & Oakley, 2014, p. 91).
    Key questions to engage audience
    Asking questions is an effective strategy for engaging children in the storytelling:
            who
            when
            where
            how
            why
            what.
    Here are some key question types we can ask during storytelling (Sipe, 2008):
    Invitations:
            invite children to reflect or interpret
          'What do you think is happening here?’, ‘How do you think the Lion is feeling?’, or ‘Oh no! What’s
    happening now?’
    Encouragements:
             use open questions to encourage children to share their ideas
             ‘What else could she do?’ or ‘What do we think about that?’
    Probes:
             check whether children are understanding the story
             e.g. ‘How do you know that?’, ‘But who was it this time?’
    Predicting questions:
             encourage children to consider what might happen next
             ‘What will the Lion do now?’ ‘What do you think is going to happen?’
    Factual questions:
             check which facts from the story the children remember
             ‘Where does the Lion live?’ or ‘Who ate the bears’ porridge?
    Creating stories with children
    When educators co-construct stories with children, it is a great opportunity for children to practice telling
    stories themselves.
    Educators can do this by starting a story, and asking children for their own ideas, as it is told:
             What do you think happens next?
             Did they find the treasure?
             What was inside the box?
    Creating stories with children is similar to shared sociodramatic play experiences, but is more educator-
    driven, as we work to guide the story to a logical conclusion.
    Some general strategies for creating stories with children include:
             Encouraging children to contribute one idea at a time
             Taking turns with ideas and contributions
             Working in a small group (2-5 children)
             For older children, you can also try one sentence at a time, which is a more difficult challenge
             Recapping story at the end (from start to finish)
    Ideas for embedding language in storytelling
    Educators can use storytelling with any of the ‘interacting with others’ learning foci. Here are some ideas
    to embed in storytelling experiences:
    Making meaning and expressing ideas:
            practising eye gaze, gesture and joint attention
            listening and observation
            remembering the main events of a story
           noticing links between information in one medium (experience, picture, song, storybook) to
    another (oral story)
    Speech sounds:
            modelling clear pronunciation of words
    Concept development and vocabulary:
            introducing new concepts
            using descriptive words
    Grammar:
             modelling examples of advanced language like ‘as fast as a rabbit’, ‘if she forgets her wand, then
    …’, ‘the little old lady who lives in a shoe’.
    Stories and narratives:
            ability to sequence events in a logical order
            familiarity with story structures—e.g. beginning, middle, end
            story language such as ‘Once upon a time’ or ‘Long, long ago’
    Higher order language:
            using language for humour
            using language for similes (e.g. quick like a fox) and metaphors (e.g. her smile was a shining
    star).
    Theory to practice
    Bruner observed that storytelling allows us to use language to “create possible and imaginary worlds
    through words” (Bruner, 1986, p. 156).
    When children engage with stories, in either written or spoken form, the ‘magic’ (or literary response)
    comes from the interaction between the spoken word (text), additional media (e.g. props, costumes,
    sound effects), the storyteller and the audience.
    The storyteller
    The storyteller and the additional media they use play a big role in bringing a story to life. Adapted from
    Adam’s (2014) review of the “literary response”.
    Magic = Literary response:
           Storyteller - interpretation, performance
           Audience - prior experience, knowledge, values
           Spoken word - genre content structure
           Additional media - visual, physical, auditory.
    We can think about how these four factors can affect children’s meaning making when listening to an oral
    storytelling. We can also change these elements to embed language strategically into the experience.
    Evidence base   
    Storytelling with children is an effective way to enhance the language of children, including vocabulary,
    grammar, and narrative skills (Isbell, Sobol, Lindauer, Lowrance, 2004; Nicolopoulou et al., 2015).
    It is helpful to expose children to language which is supported by additional visual/auditory cues.
    Storytelling provides an engaging and authentic way of embedding language in a learning experience.
    Links to VEYLDF
    Victorian early years learning and development framework (VEYLDF, 2016)   
    Outcome 1: IdentityOutcome 2: CommunityOutcome 3: WellbeingOutcome 5: Communication
    Links to experiences
     Language and Emergent Literacy Learners (30 - 60 months):
           A Story about Me
           Megawombat storytelling
           Three Little Pigs and beyond
    Links to learning foci and teaching foci
    Stories and narratives
    References
    Adams, H. (2014). Children’s literature, in J. Fellowes & G. Oakley (Eds.) Language, literacy and early
    childhood education, 2nd Edition. Melbourne, Australia: Oxford University Press.
    Bruner, J. S. (1986, 2009). Actual minds, possible worlds. Harvard University Press.
    Fellowes, J., & Oakley, G. (2014). Language, literacy and early childhood education, 2nd Edition.
    Melbourne, Australia: Oxford University Press.
Sipe, L. R. (2008). Storytime: Young children's literary understanding in the classroom. Teachers College
Press.
Isbell, R., Sobol, J., Lindauer, L., & Lowrance, A. (2004). The effects of storytelling and story reading on
the oral language complexity and story comprehension of young children. Early childhood education
journal, 32(3), 157-163.
Nicolopoulou, A., Cortina, K. S., Ilgaz, H., Cates, C. B., & de Sá, A. B. (2015). Using a narrative-and play-
based activity to promote low-income preschoolers’ oral language, emergent literacy, and social
competence. Early childhood research quarterly, 31, 147-162.