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Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.” If you are not already viewing this slide in full-screen mode, please click on Slide Show on the PowerPoint toolbar above and select View Show from the menu. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

If you are not already viewing this slide in full-screen mode, please click on Slide Show on the PowerPoint toolbar above and select View Show from the menu.

Then click to advance when you have finished reading all the text on each slide. It should take about five minutes to review this presentation.

Page 2: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

A new online course to help you tell better stories

Storytelling Schooli

Page 3: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

Golly, I have a lot on my plate. I’d better get some

input from the guys upstairs before I get too far with any

of these projects. First, of course, a story….

Carolyn was responsible for her organization’s communications. And she had a lot on her plate: a web site, an annual report, and a presentation that had to be ready by the end of the week.

Page 4: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

Blogs! Podcasts! And streaming video, too.

Four color! With lots and lots of pictures.

And don’t forget to thank all our

donors.

PowerPoint! With lots and lots of bullets.

And some chartsand graphs, too.

And they had plenty to offer…So she asked her colleagues how to put together a compelling presentation…

…an annual report that someone would really want to read…

…and a web site that would make visitors stick around…

Page 5: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

Carolyn listened intently, but she was confused. She remembered reading several books that recommended using stories to make presentations stronger.

She also recalled seeing an annual report and other publications from nonprofits that used stories instead of the usual data and charts.

And as she surfed the web, she kept finding public interest groups that had made stories an important part of their online content. So…

Page 6: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

Too soft.

Not enough room.

This isn’t some campfire we’re talking about.

Despite some misgivings, Carolyn followed their advice. She built the presentation, designed the annual report, and overhauled the website without telling a single story.

And her nonprofit was never heard from again.

The End.

She went back to her colleagues to ask about using stories, but every time the answers were the same…

Page 7: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

parable, n. a short, allegorical story, designed to convey some truth or moral lesson.

Okay, we made up the story. But Carolyn’s cautionary tale is still worth heeding. Stories are arguably the most powerful and versatile communications tool you can use. And yet, at public interest organizations from coast to coast, hard-working and well-meaning people simply aren’t using them.

So Andy Goodman has launched Storytelling iSchool to help communicators at nonprofits, foundations, government agencies and educational institutions tell the stories that will engage, inform, and motivate the people they need to reach.

Page 8: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

RWJ Executive Nurse Fellows Program

Andy is the author of Storytelling as Best Practice and has helped public interest groups all over the U.S. use stories more effectively. Groups such as…

Page 9: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

Andy has taken the curriculum he has used in working with these groups, added to it, and redesigned it for teaching in an online setting.

He will teach all classes in the upcoming four-week session.

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+ +

To attend Storytelling iSchool, all you need is a telephone, a computer, and 1 hour a week for 4 consecutive weeks.

Just dial our toll-free conference line at the designated time, join our network on your computer, and you will be participating in a live, interactive web-based seminar from your home or office.

Page 11: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

During the four classes you will learn:

• How to structure your stories to make them more engaging;

• How to build in qualities that make your stories memorable;

• The different kinds of stories you should be telling;

• How to use stories in advocacy, fundraising, board and staff recruitment, and other forms of internal and external communication.

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In between classes, you will have the opportunity to write and refine your own stories and have them critiqued by Andy.

Students will have the option to write and polish up to three stories over the four weeks of the session.

Page 13: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

iThe Spring 2008 session (March 4, 11, 18 and 25) will be open to a maximum of 25 students.

Tuition for the full 4-week course is $500 and includes all course materials.

Registration may be completed online at www.agoodmanonline.com. The final deadline is February 29, 2008.

I’m not sureI approve of

employees takingresponsibilityfor their own

learning.

Whatever. I’m signing up!

I don’t care ifI am a fictional

character!

Page 14: Thank you for opening this presentation about “Storytelling iSchool.”

For a full course outline, please call Lori Matsumoto, 323.464.3956, ext. 101, or send email to [email protected].

Storytelling Schooli

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