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Dive into the power of storytelling with an interactive activity where participants collaboratively build a story, exploring the significance of storytelling in leadership roles. Discover how stories entertain, educate, and inspire, shaping values and beliefs. Through group activities, examine how framing, angle, color, and light influence storytelling impact, emphasizing the importance of context and values in leadership narratives. Equip yourself with valuable storytelling skills to enhance leadership communication and engage your audience effectively.
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Activity: Build A Story • One person begins the story with 1 sentence. • Once upon a time there was a leader who ________ • The next person adds 1 more sentence to the story, and so on. • Continue until the story ends!
Whydo we tell stories? • To entertain • To reach people • To better explain a personal perspective
“Storytelling is fundamental to the human search for meaning.” –Mary Catherine Bateson
Storytelling • Communicating events using words, images and sounds • Used for entertainment, education, cultural preservation, etc. • Earliest forms were mostly oral • With start of ‘writing’, use of symbols and words used to record stories • Stories have been told, carved, painted, printed and ‘saved’ on rock, bones, pottery, plants, skin, paper, computers, film, etc.
Storytelling at Work Do stories reallyhave a role to play? • Communicate who you are • Transmit values • Inspire faith and belief • Lead people into the future • Less boring!
Group Activity • Choose a leader or value that inspires you. • Work on constructing a story (under 2 minutes) about this leader/value with your group. • Nominate a group member to present the story.
Photo and text by Swazi youth, 2005 “It might happen in one weekend that most of these are full….The empty graves are waiting for us….Nowadays there’s not enough time to prepare a proper grave. This is a commercial cemetery where the poorest of the poor are buried and it saves time”
Frame What do you leave in the frame? What remains outside?
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If you do not create contextyour audience will create if for you
Group Activity In groups of 3 look at the following slides and discuss the following questions.
What VALUES framed the story?
The first step in telling a story is having a story to tell.
Questions to ask • Who is the audience for your story? • What is the frame for your story? • What images are important to tell your story?
Summary • Discussed why humans tell stories • Introduced the power of storytelling in the workplace • Illustrated frame, angle, color, and light • Demonstrated the importance of context • Discussed using values to frame stories • Linked storytelling to leadership