Tom Mackey, a Professor of Arts and Media at SUNY Empire State University and co-author of Teaching Digital Storytelling, discusses the transformative power of digital storytelling in education. He highlights how this approach enhances students' information literacy and critical thinking while promoting diversity and inclusion. The conversation also covers the challenges and benefits of virtual collaboration, the integration of AI and ethics in storytelling projects, and the creation of safe spaces for students to authentically express their unique narratives.
Digital storytelling empowers students to become creators of knowledge by expressing their lived experiences, enhancing critical thinking and information literacy skills.
Integrating diversity, equity, and inclusion in digital storytelling enables students to share personal narratives, fostering dialogue and understanding around their identities and cultural backgrounds.
Deep dives
Empowering Students Through Digital Storytelling
Digital storytelling offers students the chance to express their lived experiences, transforming them from knowledge consumers to creators. This practice fosters critical thinking and enhances information literacy as students learn to craft and share their narratives using accessible digital tools, such as smartphones and free editing software. By engaging in digital storytelling, students also cultivate important skills in reflecting on their identities and experiences, which increases their confidence and empowers them as learners. For example, students can create personal video introductions, allowing them to share their unique backgrounds and perspectives in a supportive community atmosphere.
The Role of Meta-Literacy in Digital Education
Meta-literacy serves as a comprehensive framework for understanding how students engage with information in our rapidly evolving digital landscape. It encourages students to view themselves as active producers of knowledge, rather than passive recipients, which creates a deeper understanding of the information they consume. This approach blends with digital storytelling by integrating reflective practices that help students assess their learning processes and socio-cultural environments, allowing them to grow as critical thinkers. By embedding meta-literacy into the course, students develop a mindset that prepares them not only for academic success but also for real-world information challenges.
Fostering Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
Digital storytelling is an effective tool for promoting diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) within educational settings, as it allows students to voice their individual narratives and experiences. Through the course, students learn the power of their stories while creating a space for dialogue around their identities and cultural backgrounds. This personalized approach to learning reflects how DEI initiatives can emerge from authentic student experiences rather than simply being a theoretical framework. Furthermore, the collaboration between students from different backgrounds enhances the conversations surrounding DEI, making the learning environment more inclusive and representative of diverse perspectives.
Addressing Ethical Considerations in Digital Storytelling
The integration of ethical considerations into digital storytelling practices ensures that students become responsible creators in a landscape filled with misinformation and ethical dilemmas. Students engage in discussions on the ethics of information production, especially in light of emerging technologies like AI, which opens new avenues for storytelling while requiring careful navigation of ethical issues. By emphasizing the importance of using openly licensed materials and the digital storytelling bill of rights, the course encourages ethical production practices among students. This focus ultimately helps them become conscientious information producers, aware of the implications their narratives may carry in the broader social context.
Digital storytelling provides students the opportunity to bring their lived experiences into the classroom as creators rather than consumers of knowledge. In this episode, Tom Mackey and Sheila Aird join us to discuss ways digital storytelling can be used to increase student information literacy, critical thinking skills, and to support diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.
Tom is a Professor of Arts and Media and Program Coordinator for the BA and BS degrees in Digital Media Arts at SUNY Empire State University. He is the recipient of a 2022 SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Scholarship and Creative Activities and the recipient of several other awards for his teaching and mentoring work. Tom is also the co-author of several books and two MOOCs that focus on metaliteracy. Sheila is an Associate Professor and European Director of International Programs at SUNY’s Empire State University in Prague, in the Czech Republic. Her work broadly focuses on cultural history and public scholarship with a particular focus on public history, pop culture, children of colonial enslavement, and issues of race in the African Diaspora community. Sheila has presented her work in many domestic and international venues and has co-authored two papers with Tom. Sheila and Tom are the co-editors of the new book, Teaching Digital Storytelling: Inspiring Voices through Online Narratives, published in 2024 by Rowman and Littlefield. They also co-authored the framing chapter for this volume based on their collaborative development and teaching of Digital Storytelling as a virtual exchange between SUNY Empire students studying in Prague and the United States.