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This book broadens the scope and impact of digital storytelling in higher education. It outlines how to teach, research and build communities in tertiary institutions through the particular form of audio-visual communication known as digital storytelling by developing relationships across professions, workplaces and civil society. The book is framed within the context of 'The Four Scholarships' developed by the Carnegie Foundation for the advancement and redefining of teaching, including the scholarships of discovery, integration, application, and teaching and learning. Across four sections, this volume considers the potential of digital storytelling to improve, enhance and expand teaching, learning, research, and interactions with society. Written by an international range of academics, researchers and practitioners, from disciplines spanning medicine, anthropology, education, social work, film and media studies, rhetoric and the humanities, the book demonstrates the variety of ways in which digital storytelling offers solutions to key challenges within higher education for students, academics and citizens. It will be compelling reading for students and researchers working in education and sociology.
Explores the role of digital storytelling within higher education today Highlights how digital storytelling can be used to develop relations with the professions, workplaces and the civil society Examines digital story telling in relation to four main themes: teaching and learning, engaged collaboration, integration and discovery
Auteur
Grete Jamissen is Professor of Education at Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Norway. She has led the institutional implementation of digital storytelling for learning, communication and collaboration.
Pip Hardy is Director of Pilgrim Projects, UK, an education consultancy, and Co-founder of the Patient Voices Programme, a project intended to promote the creation and use of digital stories to transform healthcare and healthcare education.
Yngve Nordkvelle is Professor of Education at Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway, and has published on issues including global and international education, distance education, on-line dating as well as e-publishing. Heather Pleasants is Associate Director of Institutional Effectiveness at The University of Alabama, USA. Her research focuses on issues of voice, identity, literacy/storytelling, and civic engagement.
Contenu
Chapter 1. 'The Long March': Digital Storytelling in Higher Education Overview and Introduction to the Book; Yngve Nordkvelle.- PART I. The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning.- Chapter 2. Introduction to the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning; Pip Hardy.- Chapter 3. Threshold Concepts in Digital Storytelling: Naming What we Know about Storywork; Brooke Hessler & Joe Lambert.- Chapter 4. Physician, Know Thyself: Using Digital Storytelling to Promote Reflection in Medical Education; Pip Hardy.- Chapter 5. From Dewey to the Digital: Designing Digital Storytelling to Deepen Reflection; Bonnie Thompson Long and Tony Hall.- Chapter 6. Let's get Personnel: Digital Storytelling for Transformational Learning in Social Students; Kim Anderson.- Chapter 7. Navigating Ethical Boundaries when Adopting Digital Storytelling in Higher Education; Daniela Gachago & Pam Sykes.- PART II: The Scholarship of Discovery.- Chapter 8. Introduction to the Scholarship of Discovery; Grete Jamissen.- Chapter 9. The Times They are a'Changin': Digital Storytelling as a Catalyst for an Ideological Revolution in Healthcare Research; Carol Haigh.- Chapter 10. Building Bridges: Digital Storytelling as a Participatory Research Approach; Inger Kjersti Lindvig.- Chapter 11. Learning to Work through Narratives: Identity and Meaning Making during Digital Storytelling; Satu Hakanurmi.- Chapter 12. My Story or Your Story? Producing Professional Digital Stories on Behalf of Researchers; Ragnhild Larsson.- Chapter 13. The Power of the Eye and the Ear: Experiences from Communicating Research with Digital Storytelling; Ida Hydle.- PART III: The Scholarship of Integration.- Chapter 14. Introduction to the Scholarship of Integration; Yngve Nordkvelle.- Chapter 15. Digital Storytelling: Learning to be in Higher Education; Sandra Ribeiro.- Chapter 16. Reflective Information Seeking: Unpacking Research Skills through Digital Storytelling; Karen Diaz & Brian Leaf.- Chapter 17. 'Now I See': Digital Storytelling for Mediating Interprofessional Collaboration; Grete Jamissen & Mike Moulton.- Chapter 18. Aging Narratives: Embedding Digital Storytelling Within the Higher Education Curriculum of Health and Social Care with Older People; Tricia Jenkins.- Chapter 19. The Scholarship of Integration and Digital Storytelling as 'Bildung' in Higher Education; Yvonne Fritze, Geir Haugsbakk & Yngve Nordkvelle.- Chapter 20. Critical Story Sharing: A Dialectic Approach to Identity Regulation; Mari Ann Moss.- PART IV. The Scholarship of Engaged Collaboration.- Chapter 21. Introduction to Digital Storytelling in Higher Education as an Engaged Scholarship Practice; Heather Pleasants.- Chapter 22. Engaged Scholarship and Engaging Communities: Navigating Emotion, Affect and Disability through Digital Storytelling; Elaine Bliss.- Chapter 23. In the Time it Takes: Engages Scholarships through Co-Creative Media; Darcy Alexandra.- Chapter 24. Intergenerational Digital Storytelling; Michael Meimaris.- Chapter 25. Faculty at the Intersection of Digital Storytelling and Community Engagement; Beverley Bickel, William Shewbridge, Romy Hübler & Ana Askoz.
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