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Social Media 101: How To Use Storytelling - Section 5 Media
Storytelling and behaviour change - The Social Deck
Create an Online Storytelling Campaign in 9 Easy Steps
Create Compelling eLearning with Immersive Storytelling | Learning Solutions Magazine
Augmented and Virtual Reality for Behavior Change : Research Library | The eLearning Guild
Augmented and virtual reality can be an incredible tool when it comes to practicing certain skills that may not be safe or realistic in real life. AR and VR technologies are radically changing L&D as an industry. This research report, Augmented and Virtual Reality for Behavior Change, by Julie Dirksen, Dustin DiTommaso, and Cindy Plunkett explores how AR and VR can be a great resource for behavior change. The report examines key research on this, centered on the following themes: Enabling the Behavior Empathy Building Experiencing Consequences Future Projection Feedback Emotional Self-Regulation Download this report to discover how AR and VR solutions are a useful investment for behavior change.
The eLearning Guild: Community & Resources for eLearning Professionals
Human Risk on Twitter: “A very good point about who we are encouraged to get our advice from vs who we should get our advice from. Reinforces that point by touching his face a lot at the start which is what the experts in the subject he’s being asked abou
Immersive Theater | Season 1 Episode 1 | IMMERSIVE.WORLD | PBS
In its first episode, the series presents the universe of New York's immersive theater from the standpoint of actors, dancers, and other performers who have become the biggest names in the genre. Focusing on the mega hit “Sleep No More” and the groundbreaking “Here”, the episode explores the artists' relationship with the audience and the mystery behind the immersive productions.
14 Tips for Building Character - Nieman Storyboard
Building Character: A Checklist - Nieman Storyboard
What is Storytelling? Why Does Storytelling Work? What are Good Examples? [UML] - Sword and the Script
Tell it like it is | Nature Human Behaviour
Every research paper tells a story, but the pressure to provide ‘clean’ narratives is harmful for the scientific endeavour.
The Science of What Makes People Care
5 key principles
Fear or Hope: Which Motivates More?
And as to the central question of using both fear and hope: “I think we're in a moment where fear is a stronger motivator than hope,“ Parfrey began. “I'm looking at the evidence. I'm looking at Greta Thunberg. There is a tinge of the apocalypse in her framing.“ But Parfrey was quick to add that fear, by itself, isn't the only button to press. “The data is clear on this,“ he said. “The more dire the messages sound, the more individuals will tuneout. And I say this with full-knowledge that the climate picture is dire. You have to be honest, you have to present the sobering information, yet we still have the choice before us to dramatically improve the situation or make it worse. The choice is still ours.“
Delivering effective messages: Lessons for advocates - Public Health Institute
LESSON 1: SHIFT THE FRAME FROM PORTRAIT TO LANDSCAPE. (this is part of a 3-post blog series on message framing)
An Interactive Dating Drama for Smart Speaker and Mobile: 5 Days, 5 Dates - BBC R&D
Plus list of resources for designing interactive voice interfaces
DESIGN THINKING FOR COMMUNICATIONS PROFESSIONALS How Design Thinking processes can help you shape organizational stories that connect
21 Series Bibles That Every TV Screenwriter Should Read - ScreenCraft
The Power of Story in a Fractured Society: Entertainment Media & Social Change | The Opportunity Agenda
Entertainment-Education and Health and Risk Messaging - Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication
2019 list of 50 Immersive Things that mix storytelling, performance, play, design & code
Satire in the Digital Age - YouTube
5 Lessons on Crafting New Voices for Innovation - UNHCR Innovation Service - Medium
Want to Know a Secret? Your Customers Do. | CXL
Heidi Boisvert: How I'm using biological data to tell better stories -- and spark social change | TED Talk
A step by step guide to writing a good Twitter thread – Tallie Proud
10 data storytelling mistakes to avoid - Techerati
Arthritis Society 'turns away' would-be donors in new campaign -
focus on single person
Communicating Complexity in the Humanitarian Sector
We realized we were using insider language to describe innovation (as exemplified by internal blog post titles like “Using GIS Technology to Map Shelter Allocation in Azraq Refugee Camp”), rather than communicating what innovation looks like and the benefits it would bring to UNHCR staff (for example, “How UNHCR Used Creativity to Improve Journalistic Accuracy and Collaboration, One Step at a Time”). So, we hit the reset button and asked ourselves these four questions before crafting our internal communications strategy: What do we want to change? What do we want to be true that isn’t true right now? Whose behavior change is necessary to making that happen? Who has to do something (or stop doing something) they’re not doing now for us to achieve that goal? (This is about targeting a narrowly defined audience whose action or behavioral change is fundamental to your goal.) What would that individual or group believe if they took that action? In other words, what does that narrowly defined audience care about most, and how can we include that in our messages? How will we get that message in front of them? Where are their eyes?
Field Guide: Narrative Research Methodologies - Narrative Initiative
Explanation and the “How“ of a Narrative - Narrative Initiative
Released in March as part of FrameWorks Institute’s 20th anniversary, the Explanation Declaration asks communicators to help people understand the “how” behind issues and see that how as a critical part of engaging and empowering people to take action.
Soap opera could be unlikely form of birth control in Uganda | Global development | The Guardian
Stories Can Be Powerful Persuasive Tools. But It’s Important to Understand When They Can Backfire.
Aligning the stars in East Los High: How authentic characters and storylines can translate into real-life changes through transmedia edutainment
The Science of Belief: Move Beyond “Us” and “Them” to “We”
News media often frame refugees as a burden or threat to a community, where humanitarian stories often frame refugees as helpless people in a far-off land in need of help. Both narratives — while sympathetic — consistently situate refugees as outsiders. Our job as communicators is to shift the narrative from “us” and “them” to “we.”
How to Name Your Characters : Candlepower : Thinkmap Visual Thesaurus
How storytelling increased the value of an eBay item by 6395%
Digital Storytelling — a look at the last 12 months
some of the best examples of digital storytelling that came out in 2016
ARTSEDGE: ARTSEDGE Games
The ARTSEDGE Role-Playing System is designed to teach students the process of creating a game, rather than focusing on game play. In this approach to the literary arts, students begin with an existing book or short story from the curriculum to create and present their own role-playing game (R.P.G.) using rules adapted from the Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition Players Handbook. Educators use The ARTSEDGE Role-Playing System to guide students in groups of 3-6 through game ideation, world building, rule making, and game running, all based on the selected source material. Students are also encouraged to incorporate visual arts, music, and theatre into their presentations.
30+ Immersive Storytelling platforms, apps, resources & tools
Most of the Mind Can’t Tell Fact from Fiction
A Cheat Sheet for Nonprofit Storytelling - Maria Bryan Creative
Unsticking Stuck Mental Models: Adventures in Systems Change
New CMSI Study Reveals How Major TV Programs and Newspapers (Mis)Represented Homelessness and Housing Security Issues in 2018 - Center for Media and Social Impact
Back to School Special: Transmedia Entertainment — Henry Jenkins
transmedia course syllabus