Welcome to Echo the Story

image

Shiny New Website!

by Michael Novelli   |  September 11 2008    12:30 AM

I am so thrilled to launch the new Echo website! We are still tweaking, testing and adding features, but I couldn't wait to post it. Imago Media did a terrific job with the design work, and Floodlight Web Design did the coding. Great job guys!

It is not just a great looking site, but has many added features and videos. The most notable are the IDEAS section, containing a growing list of exercises to help your group experience storying in new and creative ways, and the RESOURCES section, filled with helpful articles and recommendations to help you with storying. Let me know what you think!!

The Bible is a wikistory – a mashup of stories

by Michael Novelli   |  August 18 2008    11:15 PM

It’d be nice if the Bible read like a novel from cover to cover. But it’s not a novel. It’s a series of books that have been grouped together—and many of them are out of chronological order.


In technological terminology, a mashup is a Web application that combines data from more than one source into a single integrated tool. The Bible is like this—a mashup of different writings from different authors inspired to tell the unified Story of God and his love for people.


In a recent talk, author Scot McKnight suggested we look at the Bible as a “Wikistory,” in which there is “ongoing reworking of the biblical story by new authors who each tell the story in their own way.” McKnight continued, “None [of the books of the Bible] is exhaustive, comprehensive or absolute...they are different stories of THE Story. We don’t have to harmonize them or try to reconcile them. They’re just doing their own versions of the Story, and each has a place in the larger picture.”


Let’s face it—the Bible is often difficult to read and to teach. We’ve got our work cut out for us if we wish to give our students a sense of its overarching story. That’s why storying is the best way I’ve found to give people, young and old alike, a Bible overview with context to all future Bible learning.


(Excerpted from my forthcoming book, Shaped by the Story)

Become an Experience Architect

by Michael Novelli   |  June 18 2008    11:51 PM

One of the defining words for this digital era is interactive. We’re becoming accustomed to being able to access and create our own media at a moment’s notice. We desire to contribute to our own learning and entertainment like we would any conversation. We now yearn to be a part of shared experience.

This shift in values has significant implications for the way we approach education. Places where we’ve traditionally accessed information—schools, libraries, and museums—have identified this shift and moved to making their learning opportunities more interactive. There is a new set of standards for how we teach others. We are moving away from one-dimensional education with the teachers being the experts who hold the key to information.

Students already have instant access to most information. They’re becoming accustomed to being able to change, interact, and create while they learn.

We teachers and leaders then become guides to help students explore information and use it in the right context. This requires a new vision for our roles as educators. We become “experience architects,” creating environments that help participants dive deeper and explore further into the things of God. This new role requires a significant investment of energy into creativity.

Bible Storying helps us to explore our new roles as experience architects. The storying process encourages us to experiment with all kinds of creative exercises that will foster learning and formation in our students.
(Excepted from my forthcoming book, Shaped by the Story)
Page 1 of 1 pages


 

NEW USER SIGNUP

CURRENT USERS SIGN IN


EMAIL ADDRESS

 


PASSWORD

 

Forgot Your Password?

[X]CLOSE