Digital Storytelling: Presentation Skills that Engage
Learning skills to build impactful stories: text, photography, video, audio, graphic illustrations, and/or social media

Digital Storytelling: Presentation Skills that Engage free download
Learning skills to build impactful stories: text, photography, video, audio, graphic illustrations, and/or social media
Storytelling is more than simply words spilling out onto a page or into our liminal space. Often, people think they are sharing a story when actually it is simply a topic. We need a plot, a journey or arc, and typically somebody or something is changed or reimagined. In this course, you will learn how to master the difference between simply being knowledgable about a topic and skills for conveying a meaningful story.
Quantitative storytelling addresses a variety of worldviews and perspectives. Think about the different narratives around sustainability and climate science. It is tempting to tease them apart and forget about the uncertainty in the role each aspect plays. Creating narrative and ideas around physical-cultural-ecological facilities required for sustainable operation of infrastructure at interface between production and consumption.
Geospatial analysts and scientists evaluate demographic shifts, social and cultural shifts, economic shifts, and environmental dynamics--what we need now is a powerful intersection of our insights. Understanding the role of location intelligence and spatial awareness just might be the missing link. Using open source tools and data we will examine how powerful data questions elevate our discussion and re-focus potential solutions to address community level discord and marginalization.
Climate change is a good case in point – there is genuine disagreement on the maps of the territory, such that nobody seems sure if the situation is challenging, grim or apocalyptic – and the point is that the range of maps that make the cases for those claims are part of the reality that confounds our capacity to address it.
For several decades now, there have been reductions in absolute poverty, improvements in literacy and life expectancy, and significant technological and medical progress. And yet there is also cascading ecological collapse, socially corrosive inequality and widespread governance failures, many of which relate to apparent technological successes. The simultaneous presence of progress on some metrics and collapse on others is a feature of the crisis, not a bug, because it drives concurrent narratives that obscure our sense of what’s happening and confounds consensus on how radically we should seek to change our ways.