Register for Digital Storytelling Panel Discussion on Nov 18!

Register today for an engaging conversation with a panel of experts on Monday, November 18, 2024, at 10 AM ET, celebrating the publication of Teaching Digital Storytelling: Inspiring Voices Through Online Narratives by Drs. Sheila Marie Aird and Tom Mackey.

This event, co-hosted by North-West University, South Africa, and Empire State University, USA, will spotlight several authors who contributed to the book recently published by Rowman & Littlefield. They will share their insights and discuss the impact of digital storytelling in global education.

As part of International Education Week (November 18-22), this event will bring together thought leaders from South Africa and the United States to explore how digital storytelling empowers learners and fosters intercultural connections. With a focus on metaliteracy, each author will introduce their chapter, followed by an interactive conversation about the transformative role of digital storytelling in education.

SUNY Empire State University President Lisa Vollendorf, Ph.D. will share a welcome and Prof Dorothy Laubscher, UNESCO Chair on Multimodal Learning and OER, Associate Professor: Self-Directed Learning, Research Unit Self-Directed Learning, Potchefstroom Campus will provide opening remarks. 

Panel Participants:

  • Sheila Marie Aird, Ph.D. and Tom Mackey, Ph.D., from Empire State University will introduce their chapter Metaliteracy and Global Digital Storytelling: Building Shared Learning Communities.
  • Dr. Brenda van Wyk, Ph.D., from the University of Pretoria, South Africa will discuss her chapter Digital Storytelling and Cognitive Justice in Academic Information Services in Southern Africa – A Story Waiting to be Discovered.
  • Beth Carpenter, MLIS, from the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo will explore her chapter The Metaliteracy of Memes: Having Students Track the Flow of Information.
  • Muchativugwa Liberty Hove, Ph.D., from North-West University, South Africa will discuss his chapter Voicing and Agency Through Autoethnography.
  • Logan Rath, Ph.D. and Kathleen Olmstead, Ed.D., from SUNY Brockport will introduce their chapter “It Was Awesome. No One was Telling Us What We Had to Write!”: Empowering Young Writers Through Digital Book Making.
  • Thandiwe Matyobeni, MA, from Rhodes University, South Africa will discuss his chapter Reflections on Digital Storytelling as a Learner-centred Approach to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education Classrooms.

Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to join the conversation and discover how digital storytelling can inspire and connect voices around the world! 
Register here

Teaching with Digital Storytelling: Inspiring Voices Through Online Narratives

Dr. Sheila Marie Aird and Dr. Thomas P. Mackey just published a new book Teaching Digital Storytelling: Inspiring Voices Through Online Narratives for Rowman & Littlefield. This book is featured as part of Trudi Jacobson’s Innovations in Information Literacy Series. Drs. Aird and Mackey worked with an outstanding team of authors from other SUNY schools, Temple University, and universities in South Africa. All of the chapters present innovative case studies about teaching with digital storytelling by applying information literacy, metaliteracy, and visual literacy. The new book features a Foreword written by futurist and digital storytelling pioneer Dr. Bryan Alexander.

This book project emerged from the collaboration initiated by Drs. Aird and Mackey to design and teach a fully online course in Digital Storytelling that brings together Empire State University students studying in Prague, Czech Republic and the United States. This course embeds key aspects of the metaliteracy framework and integrates resources and learning objects published at the metaliteracy.org blog. The editors wrote the framing chapter about this case study Metaliteracy and Global Digital Storytelling: Building Shared Learning Communities. This new chapter builds on their previous publication for Open Praxis Integrating Metaliteracy into the Design of a Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) Course in Digital Storytelling.

According to the book description:

This book presents the stories of educators who through digital storytelling inspire students from diverse communities to construct their empowering digital narratives. Educators from a wide range of disciplines present innovative case studies of teaching digital storytelling through the lens of personal narratives, metaliteracy, and information literacy. They describe how teaching students to tell their personal digital stories prepares them as learners who are reflective while playing active learner roles such as producer, publisher, and collaborator. 

https://rowman.com/ISBN/9781538172919/Teaching-Digital-Storytelling-Inspiring-Voices-through-Online-Narratives

We congratulate all of our chapter authors and welcome you to read the book and let us know about your own digital storytelling journey!

Sheila and Tom

Manuscript for Digital Storytelling Book Submitted to Rowman & Littlefield!

We are excited to announce a major milestone in our book project Teaching with Digital Storytelling: Inspiring Voices Through Online Narratives edited by Drs. Sheila Aird and Tom Mackey. Today we submitted the manuscript for this volume to Rowman & Littlefield. Over the next few months we will be working closely with the publisher to finalize the book for an early 2024 publication date. The book will be included in the Innovations in Information Literacy series edited by Trudi E. Jacobson. We are honored that the Foreword for this new book will be written by the digital storytelling pioneer and futurist Bryan Alexander.

The idea for this book emerged from our collaborative work together on designing and teaching an international version of our Digital Storytelling course in the Digital Media Arts at Empire State University. In the same spirit of international partnership, this new volume brings together authors from around the world, and spans universities from South Africa, to the Czech Republic, to the United States. Each of the chapters examines literacy frameworks such as information literacy, metaliteracy, visual literacy, and multiliteracies while also discussing how Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) inspires agency and voice in the production of digital narratives.

Here’s a complete listing of all chapter authors for this book:

  • Sheila Marie Aird, PhD, MA, MA – European Director of International Programs for Empire State University and oversees the American delivered programs at the university’s four international locations
  • Beth Carpenter – Student Support and Engagement Librarian at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo
  • Muchativugwa Liberty Hove – Full Professor in English Language & Literature in English at North-West University, South Africa
  • Thomas P. Mackey, Ph.D. – Professor of Arts and Media and Program Coordinator for the BA and BS Programs in Digital Media Arts at Empire State University.
  • Keith C. Mages – Curator of the Robert L. Brown History of Medicine Collection, a division of the University Libraries at the University at Buffalo, SUNY
  • Michelle Nöthling – Postgraduate Diploma in Gender Studies Master’s Student at University of the Free State, South Africa
  • Kathleen Olmstead EdD – Associate Professor of Literacy at SUNY Brockport
  • Kimberly A. Plassche – Senior Regulatory Consultant at Compliance & Risks, Ltd.,
  • Logan Rath – Instruction and Reference Librarian at SUNY Brockport and a Lecturer at SUNY Albany
  • Deidré van Rooyen – Associate Professor (and Programme Director: Development Studies Programme) for the Centre for Development Support, within Economic and Management Sciences, at the University of the Free State, South Africa
  • Claire S. Schen – Associate Professor of History at the University at Buffalo, SUNY
  • Thandiwe Matyobeni – Programme Coordinator in the Community Engagement division of Rhodes University, South Africa.
  • Kimmika Williams-Witherspoon, PhD (Cultural Anthropology), M.A. (Anthropology), MFA (Theater), Graduate Certificate) Women’s Studies, B.A. (Journalism)- Senior Associate Dean of Strategic Initiatives and Innovation in the Center for the Performing and Cinematic Arts at Temple University and a Full Professor specializing in Urban Theater and Community Engagement in the Theater Department in the School of Theater, Film and Media Arts.
  • Brenda van Wyk – Research Fellow and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Information Science at the University of Pretoria, South Africa.

For a sneak preview of the manuscript, take a look at the attached Table of Contents.

Digital Storytelling Presentation at ICIL 2022 in South Africa

The 2nd Annual International Conference on Information Literacy (ICIL 2022) at North West University (NWU) in South Africa featured a virtual presentation by Dr. Sheila Aird and Dr. Tom Mackey entitled Virtual Exchange: Developing Global Digital Narratives and Metaliteracy in a Shared Learning Community. This presentation explores the fully online Digital Storytelling course that Drs. Aird and Mackey teach at SUNY Empire State College as a virtual exchange primarily between Prague, Czech Republic and the United States. Here’s a video of the presentation recorded in advance of the conference (we will share the version that was recorded live with questions from participants if it becomes available).

To learn more about this international collaboration explore the article published by Drs. Aird and Mackey in Open Praxis: 

Mackey, T. P., & Aird, S. M. (2022). Integrating Metaliteracy into the Design of a Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) Course in Digital Storytelling. Open Praxis13(4), 397–403. DOI: http://doi.org/10.55982/openpraxis.13.4.442

Digital Storytelling Collaboration Expands to SUNY COIL Initiative

Dr. Sheila Marie Aird and Dr. Tom Mackey will continue their successful Digital Storytelling collaboration as part of a Virtual Exchange supported by SUNY Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL).

In fall 2020, Tom and Sheila combined their sections of Digital Storytelling into one fully online class at SUNY Empire State College. This collaborative course experience connects students from the United States, Canada, Czech Republic (Prague), and Albania (Tirana). In spring 2021, this collaboration will expand with additional course enhancements and OER, including metaliteracy resources developed by the Metaliteracy Learning Collaborative. They will also develop new dynamic resources specific to digital storytelling in preparation for the fall 2021 COIL collaboration course.

As part of this SUNY COIL Virtual Exchange, Sheila and Tom join a cohort of colleagues from SUNY Empire State College to share knowledge about fostering online partnerships to unite international students in collaborative learning.

Look to this blog for updates about this expanded digital storytelling partnership!