Storytelling: The Benefits of Storytelling
Storytelling: The Benefits of 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.
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.
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.
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:
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:
who
when
where
how
why
what.
Here are some key question types we can ask during storytelling (Sipe, 2008):
Invitations:
Educators can do this by starting a story, and asking children for their own ideas, as it is told:
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:
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:
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).
Links to VEYLDF
Victorian early years learning and development framework (VEYLDF, 2016)
Links to experiences
Language and Emergent Literacy Learners (30 - 60 months):
A Story about Me
Megawombat storytelling
Three Little Pigs and beyond
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.