Table of Contents
1 Introduction 3
2 Intention of storytelling 4
3 Concept of this method 4
4 The didactic functions of storytelling in the primary school
classroom 6
4. 1 Motivation 6
4. 2 Holistic learning 7
4. 3 Multiple intelligences and suitable practice 8
4. 4 Social abilities 9
4. 5 Intercultural aims 9
4.6 Listening comprehension 10
5 Choosing and preparing a story for the lesson 10
6 How to be a good storyteller 11
8 Conclusion 12
9 References 13
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1 Introduction
All over the world stories are told to people and children. This phenomenon is very old. Just think of cave-painting which told stories to others only with the usage of pictures. By and by, following generations shared the same principle. That is the same how it went on with stories and fairy-tales. They bring culture along having a great value according to their contents, texts and language which are authentic. And so they are worth to use them in the classroom to teach a foreign language in connection with cultural features.
The offer of children’s literature covers old-known and new published books all the time that pupils could not be bored of. The teacher can prepare them in a way that the stories suit the children in conformity with their age, mental stage and interests. So stories are still up to date and being loved by the children, providing a familiar context. There are so many that it is easy to find some for the English speaking classroom. The problem of detecting good stories is more likely. By courtesy of knowledge about the children’s interests and the exercise to look over a new book and to know if it is a good one or not, it will be easy to compile a personal bibliography of children’s literature. They are proved to pick up previous knowledge of children in the classroom.
So storytelling has been established by many English teachers as a worthwhile method. That is the reason for lots of material according to storytelling, which can be found in the internet and in educational literature.
In this term paper, I am going to demonstrate the didactic functions of storytelling starting with the concept of this method. Main points will be cognitive aims while learning a foreign language by means of stories. After all, a further point will be the usage of it, beginning with the choice of the story and ending with the telling of it. Another chapter will be about the features that make a good storyteller
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2 Intention of storytelling
There are people who say storytelling is “an art … recreating literature - taking the printed words in a book and giving them life.” Asking a folklorist he would say, the principle of storytelling is learning stories orally. A compromise of both could be that: storytelling is a performance by a person before a live audience. The stories are learnt from oral, printed or mechanically recorded sources. One of its purposes is entertainment – “it was included in religious rituals, historical recitations and educational functions”. (Ramsey 2005) There are storytellers who also collected stories, like the Brothers Grimm. They combined collected stories with their storytelling activities. Stories come from the spoken arts, from real experiences, from watching, listening, reading and cataloguing experiences for future use. Children have an innate love of stories. They can experience a world of wonder and magic, learn about life and try to develop another culture and its language. In the classroom would be another intention of storytelling, too. The teacher tries to develop a positive attitude for reading and can introduce them to the world of books.
3 Concept of this method
Storytelling is based on the method of “Total Physical Response”, developed by Blaine Ray, which is used to teach foreign languages to children. The English primary classroom follows the orally principle: listening and speaking have priority before reading and writing. While other methods are directed to get an output from the pupils (the language which is produced), storytelling follows the aim giving them lots of input, before they start to speak. The input is the part of the language which is directed towards the learner. These are stimuli around him, for example sounds, texts, rhymes and so on presented in the English language. The pupils try to understand by decoding the language. This is the intake – the part of the language that they actually understand. They
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Heidi Henniger, 2005, The didactic functions of storytelling in the primary school classroom, Munich, GRIN Publishing GmbH
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