Day one of DLCA was a lot of fun. During the day, in between rehearsals, I got to walk around a bit in downtown LA. The weather was great-high sixties with low humidity. Lots of good restaurants, too!
The first Big Room session focused on the Old Testament stories of Creation through Joshua and Rahab. A variety of communicators, storytellers and media weaver together these stories. All that were a part of this session are excellent communicators, but I especially through Marquis and Mandee brought the story into out imaginations.
At certain points the program drifted from feeling like a story to a sermon. I could sense the group get a little restless during the 2.5 hour presentation. But I think the variety of elements and mediums kept things moving pretty well. We could have made the program much more interactive and visual, but that is a difficult task in a big group!
I am grateful that it some way and my work with storying and input into this event has helped shape it. I will try to post again tonight.
I am thrilled to be in Los Angeles this week for DCLA. Youth Specialties is hosting this national student event to help students "live into the mission of God." The main sessions (Big Room) will focus on telling God's Story from beginning to end, following a missional (Kingdom) thread. I've been privileged to be a part of the planning and designing of this event for the last year. I also wrote scripts for videos that IMAGO put together that tell three of the Old Testament stories.
I will be posting updates from the event all weekend.
In an article written for Best Health, Ellen Michaud and Julie Bain gives you more than enough reasons to kick off your shoes and rest your head on your keyboard. Here is an excerpt from that article:
Studies show that not only will you feel better almost immediately, says Sara Mednick, PhD, a sleep medicine researcher at the University of California at San Diego and author of Take a Nap! Change Your Life, but a daily nap of between 20 and 90 minutes before 4:00 pm will...
All told, a nap, according to Dr. Mednick, will:
Increase your on-the-job alertness by 100 percent
Sharpen your thinking so you make more accurate judgments and better decisions
Ramp up your productivity
Regenerate skin cells so you look younger
Increase your sex drive
Help you lose weight by altering metabolism and shifting chemicals that affect appetite
Reduce your risk of heart attack, stroke, irregular heartbeat, high blood pressure, and other cardiovascular problems
Lift your mood by bathing your brain in the neurotransmitter serotonin
Speed up your ability to perform motor tasks, like typing, operating machinery, even swimming
Improve your accuracy—in everything
Improve the way your body processes carbs, which reduces your risk of diabetes
Sharpen your senses so you take in what's important in your environment—and screen out the 24-hour culture chatter that surrounds us
Put your brain into its creative gear so you can come up with fresh ideas
Trigger a naturally occurring hormone that blocks the destructive chemicals produced by stress
Boost your ability to learn something new—and, better yet, remember it
Zap the need for drugs like caffeine and alcohol to manipulate your mood and energy level
Relieve migraines
Improve your nighttime sleep by eliminating that wired feeling and thus shutting off the brain chatter
On Monday, June 1 my daughter was born: Abrielle Emma Novelli, 7 pounds, 1 ounce, 20 inches long. She is healthy and beautiful.
I am blessed to have two wonderful children and a great wife. Here is a picture of my son, Angelo and his new baby sister.
My friends over at Imago posted this a few days ago:
What does it mean to be literate? Most of us would define it as the ability to read and write. But what if literacy means much more? And when we talk about helping people become literate in things like the Bible, what does that mean? The Grown Up Digital blog reports on the Ontario Public School Board’s recent discussion paper suggesting literacy is about a full range of abilities to listen, understand and communicate in the most common media of a particular culture:
If literacy is the ability of the individual to articulate ideas in the main medium of society, how relevant are our current approaches? Paper and pen still have their place but there are other powerful tools for literacy that are more relevant to the world in which students live and learn.
I can only imagine the ways this kind of thinking is messing with educators’ heads. Is the textbook a think the past? Is it most important that student articulate themselves through writing? What if they can best express what their learning through creation of other media?
And what about the church? If the definition of literacy is changing, does the emphasis we put on the printed Bible need to change as well? Should we be encouraging students to read their Bibles, or engage it in other ways?
I just updated my listing of upcoming workshops for the Summer and Fall. I am looking for more opportunities to serve local ministries that are wanting to implement Bible Storying. Though it may seem easy at first, Bible Storying is hard to lead! To be effect you must guide people toward a new way of learning. Storying has a unique rhythm that takes skill and a new perspective. I LOVE helping local church volunteers and staff explore how to lead this process effectivity. I led twenty workshops just this past year! Please consider having me come for a visit and lead a workshop for your team of 6 or more.
A few years ago I stumbled upon a great little book called, Asking Great Questions by Karen Lee Thorpe. I have included a portion from that book that I adapted for Shaped by the Story. You can also download this as a PDF by clicking HERE.
Here is the excerpt from my book:
Keep the Conversation Going
Questions and curiosity drive learning. Once learners believe they have all the answers, they stop asking questions, and then they soon stop learning. Become an expert at redirecting questions back to the group…sparking further conversation and wondering. This will create an environment where deep learning can more readily take place. Don’t be content with just one answer; ask what others in the group are thinking until several people have had the opportunity to answer.
Here are some ways you can keep the conversation going, adapted from Karen Lee-Thorp’s How to Ask Great Questions*:
• Clarifying—Can you tell me a • Clarifying—Can you tell me a little bit more?
• Question—Where have we seen this happen before?
• Follow-Up—Why do you think that is?
• Bouncing—That’s a great question. Does anyone in the group have any thoughts on that?
• Brainstorming—Let’s see how many ideas our group can come up with…
• Sharing—I also noticed the connection between…
• Answering—In the story the character said…
• Bringing New Observations—One thing no one mentioned was…
• Identifying Themes—What did we see in this story that we also saw in previous ones?
• Summarizing—So what was one thing that stood out to you from the story?
• Prompting—Who would like to share what they journaled about?
• Restating—So what you’re saying is…
• Connecting—What you’re saying is connected to what Tom said…
• Feedback—How are you feeling about this process so far? What’s helpful? What’s challenging?
• Refocusing—That’s a really interesting thought, but let’s get back to the question I asked…
• Identifying—How do you think we’re like the people in the story? Unlike them?
• Applying—How does this story challenge you personally?
Thanks to Mauri for reminding me of this great little book!
* Karen Lee-Thorp, How to Ask Great Questions: Guide Your Group to Discovery With These Proven Techniques (Colorado Springs, Col.: NavPress, 1998).
I posted this video before, but I though it was really fitting for Earth Day today. We have been given the great responsibility and privilege to care for this wonderful planet. This is part of God's design for our lives and this great place. I love the whole world!
Here is an updated listing of my upcoming workshops. My fall fills up quickly, so if you would like me to come and lead a workshop with your volunteer or staff team, please contact me right away.
This was a small addition to my Shaped by the Story book that didn't make the cut. It seems helpful to those of you who work with larger groups and don't have time or leaders to break into smaller groups.
Participant Lead Buzz Groups
The term buzz groups has been used in educational training for decades, and comes from the idea that students within a classroom turn to each other and form smaller groups. The “buzz” is the sound of the discussion from around the room as groups interact with each other. When Storying with a large group and you are the ONLY teacher familiar with the process, buzz groups are the best solution I have found for dialogue. The storytelling is lead by the teacher from the front with the entire group together. Then, retelling and dialogue is done in buzz groups of 4 to 6 people. If necessary for supervision, all of the buzz groups can remain in the same room.
Buzz groups do not require a facilitator, as all instructions and questions are provided by the teacher from the front of the room (slides or visuals help this). Each buzz group selects a spokesperson to share some of their groups’ responses. A time limit is set for the dialogue – and possibly for each question – depending on how much structure the teacher feels is needed.
Thought must be given as to who will be in each buzz group... teachers may want to assign adults or key students to each group to help keep the discussion focused. The teacher should “float” from group to group to motivate better involvement, clarify questions, and spread enthusiasm around the room. After the assigned time is up for the buzz groups, the teacher should facilitate a time for the spokespersons to share responses from their group.
I've excerpted some quotes from one of my favorite books for you to enjoy. I hope they connect with you and inspire you to explore how story can be transformative in shaping our lives. You can purchase the book at my Amazon store by clicking on the name at the bottom of this post.
“Redemption of humanity and earth hang on our discovering how to be a listening community formed by the story it hears.”
“The purpose of scripture is to unite us with our Maker and to invite us into God’s world of justice, grace, peace, order, hope, mercy, where God is making us and all the world whole. It is the story itself that moves us into sacred sphere.”
“Our lives must find their place in some greater story or they will find their place in a lesser story. Our contemporary postmodern world is a world of a thousand stories and a thousand gods. And these stories often become splintered images, brilliant, excitable, beautiful perhaps, but separated from any larger narrative to give them meaning and truth.”
My friends at Imago have a new website and blog–cleverly called iblogo. This blog has great posts about culture, learning and faith. Check out the current post about how the internet is changing the way we learn.
I came across this inspiring video about teaching storytelling in the classroom. It is a promo for the book Children Tell Stories by by Martha Hamilton and Mitch Weiss. I do not have this book yet, but the video sold me!
I love that they have children do storymaps right away to “get away from the words” and put themselves in the story through pictures. I have used this story boarding method a lot, and it works well for telling and retelling any story. While I do incorporate creative retelling as a key part in my Storying process, I have been exploring how can I help students to become the storytellers. If the most effective method of learning is teaching something yourself, then involving students more in telling the stories seems to be a vital goal to have.
I would love to hear how you have tried this... I am always in “improvement” mode when it comes to teaching and learning!
This Thursday, March 19, I will be leading a workshop at the WCA's CONSPIRE Children's Ministry Conference. I love their website! The workshop will focus on Bible Storying with those in "late childhood" – i.e. approximately ages 9-13. I am excited and a bit nervous! I am doing more workshops these days with groups interested in implementing Storying across all ages. It is a fun an unique challenge to explore how different elements of the Storying learning process need to be adjusted to meet different ages/stages.
My friend, Amy Dolan, is heading up this conference with a wonderful team of people. Amy heads up LemonLime Kids, a ministry that inspires creative and effective learning for children. Amy and I have collaborated on a few workshops and I hope to continue that in the future!