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2011 Highlights: Digital Storytelling at Mercy College - from Adoption to Integration
2010-11 was an exciting year at Mercy College with the introduction of a digital storytelling pilot as a reflective tool for capturing student learning and transformation. A collaborative partnership betwen the Mercy Library and the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning has been the source and driving force behind the continuing growth of this model for learning and reflection. Its success is evident in the increasing numbers of faculty and students using the tool. By leveraging digital storytelling (DST) workshops given to the Faculty Learning Community cohort focused on the Freshman Seminar Program, we were able to generate a core of "first adopters" willing to integrate DST into their curriculum and expand its usage. The following represents a brief timeline of DST's diffusion into curriculum:
Faculty Timeline: Digital Storytelling Growth at Mercy College
| Spring 2010 | Presentation of DST to Freshman Seminar (FS) Cohort |
| Summer 2010 | Two DST workshops presented to FS Cohort |
| Fall 2010 | Four faculty integrate DST into curriculum |
| October 2010 -Faculty Seminar Day | DST mini workshop and presentation to all faculty |
| Spring 2011 | Four faculty integrate DST into curriculum |
| March 2011 - Faculty Seminar Day | DST mini workshop and presentation to all faculty |
| Summer 2011 | Two DST workshops given to all faculty |
| Fall 2011 | 12 faculty integrate DST into curriculum |
| Total number faculty teaching DST 2010 | 4 |
| Total number faculty teaching DST 2011 | 12 |
| Total number faculty attended workshops and/or teaching DST | 52 |
Student Growth: Digital Storytelling
Student reaction has been overwhelmingly positive, encouraging a deepening penetration of DST through word of mouth, exposure of faculty to digital stories at Faculty Seminar Days and other presentations, and through dissemination of information via the Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning and the newly formed DST faculty learning community. As a result, the numbers of students creating digital stories has also increased:
| Semester | Numbers of students creating digital stories |
| September 2010 | 104 |
| September 2011 | 286 |
Rubrics and Digital Storytelling Assessment:
Perhaps the most positive and critical development in DST in 2010-11 at Mercy has been in the development of tailored rubrics, designed to clearly communicate learning outcomes to students so that they are fully aware of what is expected of them. In addition, rubrics have been essential in enabling faculty to understand how to assess and grade digital stories, which are often difficult to assess because of the subjective nature of evaluating personal stories. A subteam of librarians and faculty in the DST learning community worked togethor to create a three tiered approach to evaluating digital stories based on the pre-develepment and planning stage, the story itself and a final post-reflection. Togethor, the three componenet create a powerful and robust method of applying DST to almost any discipline that chooses to utilize the tool. Examples of the rubric are attached below.
Faculty Survey
To gauge the success of the digital storytelling initiative, we created an online survey for instructors integrating DST into their curriculum in the fall, 2011 semester. The findings demonstrated that the tool was highly engaging for both faculty and students. Approximately half of the faculty utilizing DST responded to the survey. The findings are available as attachment below.
2010 - 11 Highlights: Digital Storytelling Pilot at Mercy College
The digital storytelling initiative at Mercy began in the spring of 2010 resulting from an informal environmental scan of Mercy's academic offerings and programming for students, especially in the first year. Several needs were identifed:
As a result of this scan it was determined that digital storytelling might provide an effective means of engaging students in their coursework and as an instrument for assessment. Several assumptions informed the development plan for digital storytelling at Mercy:
Advantages of Digital Storytelling
The openness of the digital storytelling form as a pedagogical practice would enable it to work within a variety of Freshman Seminar instructional approaches, styles and content. In addition, user-friendly software and resources would be selected to make digital storytelling inviting and accessible to students and instructors. Other advantages include:
A partnership between the Library and the Faculty Center for Teaching in Learning enabled the development of workshops, informal training, resources and tech support. This continuing and growing synergy represents the beginning foundation of a DS practice at Mercy, summarized as follows:
Two summer workshops were developed as follow-ups to the spring introduction:
Continuing Development
Both an instructional designer and librarian participated in a formal training session in Toronto sponsored by the highly regarded Center for Digital Storytelling (CDS) in September, 2010. Armed with new ideas and approaches to storytelling instruction, instructional designers worked with selected faculty to develop stories for the fall, 2010 Faculty Seminar Day. Highlights included:
As a result of the DS initiative, five faculty member integrated digital storytelling assignments into their fall 2010 curriculum, including three Freshman Seminar instructors, one Honors English and one graduate education instructor. To facilitate the success of these early adopters, the FCTL/Library partnership encouraged the following:
Conclusion
The first semester of full-form digital storytelling at Mercy has proven to be stimulating, informative, fulfilling and highly engaging for students and faculty. The goal of the library and Faculty Center for Teaching and Learning partnership will be to find ways to broaden the use of DS across the curriculum, to explore the development of individualized assessment rubrics and to promote media scholarship as a powerful and rigorous mode of learning that addresses critical, multiple literacies.