College students spent six weeks listening to, watching, growing, writing and finally recording their very own tales. The unit was a hit; it sparked the younger readers’ and writers’ storytelling talents and provided classes in empathy, braveness and multi-modal literacy.
“We actually follow [responding to prompts about short readings] in different methods, however I additionally needed to simply deliver the enjoyment of storytelling again to children,” stated Lifshitz.
In an age the place writing at school is commonly targeted on fulfilling standardized take a look at necessities, private narrative writing items can provide a extra customized method to literacy.
Private Narrative Unit
Lifshitz begins the unit by introducing her college students to examples of non-public narratives from The Moth’s archives. The fifth graders then pattern extra of the pre-approved tales on their very own. As the scholars listened to the tales, watched the movies and skim the transcripts, they labored on annotating the textual content and answered questions like: What is that this story about? How can this story assist others?
Then college students brainstormed tales from their very own lives and shared these tales with their friends. Lifshitz stated the power from her college students in the course of the brainstorming was palpable and resulted in tales with titles like, “When Petsitting Goes Mistaken,” “The Hardest Math Drawback” and “Grandpa and Grandma Day.”
As soon as every pupil landed on a narrative they needed to develop additional, they mapped them out utilizing a graphic organizer and studied 4 storytelling methods. “Snapshots” describe intimately issues that might be seen; “Thought-shots” describe the ideas and feelings that the author was experiencing; “Exploding vital moments” magnified vital components of the story; And “Including in reflection” inspired college students to share a lesson that their story may educate.
Moreover, Lifshitz mirrored on her personal journey utilizing The Moth in our newest episode of the MindShift Podcast. She describes the neighborhood of lecturers she developed as she began sharing her personal instructing tales with the world, and the distinction it made in reigniting her pleasure with instructing.
“As my voice discovered an viewers, as our tales shaped the premise for a powerful neighborhood, my instructing started to alter and I started to develop, and writing was such an enormous a part of that for me,” Lifshitz stated within the podcast. “Possibly that’s the reason storytelling is so vital to me, as a result of it was this storytelling that allowed me to attach with audiences, to develop neighborhood, to be challenged, to be uncovered to others on the planet.”
The Moth Mannequin
Whereas Lifshitz developed her personal unit, The Moth has a curriculum for K-12 teachers who’re part of their Instructor’s Lounge program. The Moth additionally hosts in-person afterschool and summer time packages for teenagers, in addition to digital workshops.
It’s uncommon for teenagers to discover a area the place they’re free to inform their very own tales, uninterrupted, for 5 minutes “except you’re speaking to the web in a void,” stated Ana Stern, The Moth’s senior supervisor of schooling. On the finish of the eight-week periods, the teenagers share their tales for the entire group. The “slam,” as they name it, can also be recorded. The recordings are given to every pupil they usually get to resolve what they need to do with them.
Some teenagers carry out their story on the slam and by no means take a look at the recording once more, stated Stern, and that’s okay.
In accordance with Stern, constructing a neighborhood comes first as a result of storytelling is usually a susceptible expertise. “We actually spend a number of time concentrating on constructing as courageous and as secure an area as potential,” she stated. And this system encourages college students to guide with curiosity and withhold judgement when giving peer-to-peer suggestions, she continued. Usually, by the tip of the eight-week program Stern hears suggestions from college students like, “I by no means thought my story would matter” and “I by no means thought I had something to say.”
“By way of the workshop, they’re realizing not solely have they got one thing to say, however they’ve people who need to hear them as effectively,” stated Stern.
Episode Transcript
It is a computer-generated transcript. Whereas our crew has reviewed it, there could also be errors.
Ki Sung: Welcome to MindShift, the podcast about the way forward for studying and the way we increase our children. I’m Ki Sung, and with me at the moment is MindShift reporter Marlena Jackson-Retondo.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: Hello, Ki.
Ki Sung: Hello, Marlena. So you may have a narrative at the moment that’s about writing, nevertheless it’s actually about one thing else. Inform us extra.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: Yeah, I’m right here to let you know a couple of instructor named Jessica Lifshitz. Jessica has been instructing for 20 years, however over time, she started to note a shift within the writing stamina of her fifth graders. They have been tapering off and probably not taken with writing.
Ki Sung: Fighting pupil engagement, that appears like a extremely acquainted downside lecturers have, particularly submit pandemic.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: Yeah, college students weren’t connecting to conventional writing prompts for private narratives in the way in which that they used to. Like how did the scholar spend their summer time? What was their favourite reminiscence? One thing was lacking, each from the textual content prompts and the scholar assignments, so she out an thought from the moth. Within the moth, adults carry out their tales in entrance of a stay viewers, often about three tales per episode, and these tales are grouped by themes like timeless love, soccer, and grocery journeys.
Jess’s college students learn their moth-style tales about fifth grade stuff, with titles like When Pet Sitting Goes Mistaken.
Speaker: Once I bought into the yard, I couldn’t discover the pit bull. I used to be identical to, oh my god, oh god, oh my God, oh God, Oh my God.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: Grandpa and grandma day.
Speaker: Grandma all the time makes one of the best lunches. Cucumbers, mango, watermelon, tuna, croissants, grapes. I might put all of it on my plate and begin making meals monsters.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: And the toughest math downside.
Speaker: As soon as, once I was doing math, my instructor launched me to an indescribably arduous math downside. If my head had a fuse, like the place a bomb could be, it will blow.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: We’ll let you know why Jessica needed to do that after the break.
Announcer: Assist for MindShift comes from Landmark School. Landmark faculty’s totally on-line certificates in studying variations and neurodiversity offers educators with research-based expertise and techniques that enhance studying outcomes for neurodivergent college students. Earn as much as 15 graduate degree credit and focus on one of many following areas, post-secondary incapacity providers, govt perform, or autism on campus or on-line. Study extra at landmark.edu slash certificates.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: Instructor Jessica Lifshitz does one thing particular in her classroom. As an alternative of getting her college students reply to boring writing prompts on paper, she has them inform tales about their lives to one another.
Ki Sung: Okay Marlena, that sounds nice. So what’s the true cause Jess has her college students do that?
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: Effectively, I believed we’d get a bit meta, so I requested Jess Lifshitz to do one thing a bit totally different for you, our listeners. I requested simply to inform the story of why she got here to show her college students about narrative storytelling all the month. She carried out her piece in entrance of a tiny viewers stay close to Chicago. Please welcome Jess Lifshitz.
Jess Lifshitz: My college students are storytellers.
Their tales fill the areas by which we be taught. And once I consider my storytellers, I consider one pupil specifically. She is a grasp storyteller and her title is Lucy. Each morning we start our days with a check-in query, a fast method to ease into our morning, a means for everybody to have their voice heard earlier than we dig into the tougher work of the day.
The questions are easy. What’s the factor you might be most pleased with or what’s your greatest worry?
And Lucy, she turns each reply into an journey. Just like the time when the query requested about your scariest second. And Lucy launched into the ordeal that ensued when her canine ran away and he or she searched her complete neighborhood to seek out her solely to return house and discover her canine ready for her within the yard. Or the time she was answering a query in regards to the worst damage you’ve ever had and it became a 5 minute retelling. Or the time she was wrapped in a mermaid blanket and turned over in her mattress and fell immediately onto her humidifier, smacking her face and leaving her with a everlasting scar on her cheek.
There’s not often a day that goes by the place she doesn’t give us all a great story.
Now I’ve been a instructor for greater than 20 years. In these 20 years, I’ve heard my share of childhood adventures advised by means of the dramatic voices of my college students. However in these 20 years, I’ve additionally needed to learn the usually dry phrases of those self same college students as they write in response to the boring prompts that we’re required to assign on occasion. You understand the type. Prompts like, ‘What’s one thing you probably did this summer time?’ Or ‘What is a vital second you spent with somebody you like?’
I don’t know what it’s, however one thing about these prompts simply sucks the soul out of a narrative. All that coronary heart, all that voice that college students like Lucy naturally pour into their tales appears to vanish when they’re requested to write down those self same tales out for an task.
And after 20 years of watching the enjoyment slip out of a narrative, I made a decision that I wanted to do one thing to attempt to recapture the power that crammed my college students’ tales after they weren’t writing for an an task, I needed their classroom writing to be full of the identical type of power that crammed each one among Lucy’s tales.
As I started to wrestle with the way to deliver this pleasure again to my college students and to their tales, I began to consider my very own historical past with writing. Once I was a child, I by no means noticed myself as a author. I noticed writing as one thing I needed to do, a activity that I had full. However at a sure level in my life, that modified. Sooner or later, writing grew to become a means for me to course of the world.
Writing introduced me peace. Writing grew to become a lot greater than a activity. It grew to become a method to join with myself and with others. Writing grow to be a means for me to type neighborhood.
So when did that occur? For me, that transformation occurred once I began to write down about my life as a fifth grade literacy instructor. This was within the days when the web was a kinder place, when running a blog wasn’t a profession, once we weren’t apprehensive about being influencers.
And this superb factor occurred by means of my writing. In a time once I felt remoted as a instructor, stagnant and tired of the instructing I used to be doing, I discovered others who opened up an entire new world for me by means of the sharing of their tales. I learn the tales of others they usually impressed me to consider instructing in an entire means.
As my voice discovered an viewers, as our tales shaped the premise for a powerful neighborhood, my instructing started to alter and I started to develop. And writing was such an enormous a part of that for me. Possibly that’s the reason storytelling is so vital to me, as a result of it was this storytelling that allowed me to attach with audiences, to develop neighborhood, to be challenged, to be uncovered to others on the planet.
I used to be high-quality till I realized what else was on the market. After which I grew to become higher due to it.
That’s what I needed for my college students. I needed my college students to see storytelling as a method to join with others. As a method to really feel much less alone on this world.
So I began to consider the way to domesticate the identical type of expertise for my college students. And I saved excited about the position that an viewers performs in our storytelling. When our tales have a spot to land, a spot the place they matter and might trigger others to see the world in a brand new or totally different means, that’s when our tales really feel essentially the most worthwhile.
And in all these boring writing prompts, the one viewers my college students noticed for his or her tales was me, their instructor.
I wanted to discover a method to give them an viewers past simply me and to make their tales matter. And as I began to consider telling tales for an viewers, my thoughts started to wander to one among my favourite public radio podcasts, the Moth Radio Hour.
What number of instances did I sat in my automobile on the finish of a protracted day needing to listen to the tip of a Moth radio hour story? Typically these driveway moments have been full of laughter and generally with tears, however each a type of moments had one factor in frequent, a compelling story advised in entrance of an viewers that induced me to really feel one thing in reference to the individual telling the story.
It was these ideas of the aim of storytelling and of the Moth radio hour that led me to the conclusion that this yr, my fifth graders and I might begin our writing yr with our very personal Moth story hour. We might discover a method to inform our tales, to make use of our tales to attach us, to be taught from each other’s tales and to construct our classroom neighborhood on the inspiration of the tales that we’d share.
I’ve a number of hopes for my college students and I had quite a bit hopes of what a Moth Story Hour may be capable to do for my pupil and for me.
Let me share a number of of these hopes with you.
Hope primary. In a world the place far an excessive amount of of the writing we ask our college students to do at school is related to the checks that they may take, it’s my hope that my college students can discover a means to make use of writing to attach us to one another as a substitute.
Hope quantity two, it’s hope that if my college students are in a position to really feel the methods by which writing can serve a real goal, that it will probably make them higher, they may see the opposite advantages of writing on their very own.
And at last, hope quantity three is mostly a hope for myself and my fellow educators. To ensure that our college students to have the ability to really feel the methods by which writing can serve these real functions, we as educators will need to have the liberty to craft for our pupil the sorts of writing experiences that domesticate these prospects.
And for me and for my fifth grade college students, the Moth story hour was simply that type of expertise.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: That was Jess Lifshitz, a fifth grade instructor close to Chicago. Once I talked together with her earlier this yr, she stated that this revamped writing unit not solely allowed her college students to attach with their very own tales, but additionally assist them develop empathy for each other. And who doesn’t love that?
Ki Sung: Seems like a cheerful ending. Thanks Marlena for sharing that story with us.
Marlena Jackson-Retondo: You’re welcome.


