• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

StoryToGo

Exploring storytelling in its many forms in this digital age

  • Our Story
    • Our Creatives
    • Join the StoryToGo Community
  • Community Resources
    • Web Monetization Guide
      • Web Monetization Resource Library
        • Web Monetization Tutorials
        • Web Monetization Research Papers
        • Interviews and Case Studies on Web Monetized Projects
      • Web Monetized Content Library
        • Web Monetized Courses
        • Web Monetized Podcasts
        • Web Monetized Social Networking Platforms
    • Podcasting with my Cat
      • Sustainable Funding Series Vlogcast
      • Encounters in EdTech Podcast
      • The Creative Farm Podcast
      • Boma Global Studios Podcast
    • Job Board
    • Storytelling Case Studies
  • Digital Magazine
    • Accessibility
    • Art Therapy
    • Blogging
    • Case Studies
      • Analyst Report
      • Extended Reality
      • Sustainable Funding
    • Community Building
    • EdTech
    • Gaming
    • Immersive and Interactive Media
      • XR
    • Performance Arts
      • Acting
    • Social Media
    • Storytellers
      • Alex Charters
      • Bjorn Yearwood
      • Erica Hargreave
      • Henry Hargreave
      • Jennifer Rose Garcia
      • Lori Yearwood
      • Mary McDonald
    • Tech Tips
    • Web Monetization
  • Professional Development
  • Calendar
  • Contact

Erica Hargreave

Game Log 1 : 80 Days – First Impressions Before Playing

August 10, 2020 by Erica Hargreave 3 Comments

As a part of my studies in Digital Games, Learning, and Pedagogy (ETEC 565S), we are to analyze a game that we have not played before, creating field notes around it. As this is an interesting exercise in dissecting game design, I thought I’d share my game logs here, along with the case study that I write up from my fieldnotes.

For those of you curious, this is the Game Log Assessment from Dr. Jen Jenson, that I will be working through.

Name of Game: 80 Days

Date Analyzed:

Monday August 10th, 2020

Session 1: Before Playing

Each of these question aims to get at a general notion, “what expectations (about this game) am I coming in with?” The goal in this reflection is not to test the accuracy of your predictions; rather, the goal is to identify and reflect upon the assumptions and biases you, as an observer, are bringing into the experience, as catalyzed by the games’ promotional material, introductory screen, any other descriptive or suggestive information.

Answer the Questions

With this in mind, respond to each of the following questions:

What will I like / dislike about it?

  • I am excited for some travel and adventure, even if it is just virtual travel and adventure.
  • Given that this game is set in 1872, and based around Jules Verne’s novel Around the World in Eighty Days, I suspect if the game plans to be historically accurate that I will need to prepare myself for some systemic racism and sexism.
Meg Jayanth at the 2016 Game Developers Conference.
  • I love that this game is written by a woman, Meg Jayanth.
  • I wish the purpose of the game was not to get around the world in 80 days, as I know I am going to want to take my time to explore the various places within the game.
  • I will definitely miss not being able to enjoy the local tastes in the virtual places I visit in the game.

What will I find interesting about it / boring or tedious about it?

  • I am really hoping to learn about the culture of the different places that I virtually visit in the game.
  • At present I have high hopes that there isn’t anything that I will find tedious. Although on a real life trip, that would be the constant packing for me, waiting in airports, and flights.

What will I need to do in it?

  • Attempt to travel around the world in 80 days.

What will I need to learn within it?

  • Trip preparedness.
  • Fastest modes of travel.
  • Strategic routes of travel.
  • Possibly local customs.

What will it be like / similar to (other games I have played)?

  • It will possibly have some similarities with Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego and The 39 Cues, in that a knowledge of culture and geography will help you to advance in the game at a faster rate.

Fieldnote Summary Session 1

At the end of your fieldnotes for session one, craft one or two sentences (no more) that, for you, summarize your expectations prior to playing, and what these expectations are based on. Include one image that catalyzed and/or supported your expectations.

As I get set to embark on this adventure with 80 Days, I am filled with a sense of excitement and anticipation for discovery. The sort of excitement and anticipation that I’d normally have from real world travel, but I am pleased that a video game can offer me in a virtual adventure in our present pandemic. Like in my real world travels, I am hoping to learn about culture, be met with the unexpected, and enjoy a few thrills along the way.

An Inkle Studio game.

Filed Under: #StoryToGo, Erica Hargreave, Gaming, Storytellers Tagged With: game, video game

Exploring Game Design through a Playcentric Approach

August 8, 2020 by Erica Hargreave Leave a Comment

This summer I have been fortunate enough to study Digital Games, Learning, and Pedagogy (ETEC 565S) in a Summer Institute as a part of UBC’s Master of Educational Technology. As a part of this work, I have been reading Tracy Fullerton’s Game Design Workshop: A Playcentric Approach to Creating Innovative Games. A read that I highly recommend to anyone interested in game design.

Throughout Fullerton’s Game Design Workshop there are a number of exercises that get you reflecting on games, what appeals to you in games and what does not, and on the design and structure of various games. It’s an interesting read and one that I can see myself returning to. In working through Chapter’s 1 – 3 on The Role of the Game Designer, The Structure of Games, and Working with Formal Elements, I worked through a number of the exercises, which I’ve shared below.

Give these exercises a try yourself, and share your responses to them in comments below.

Exercise 1.2 : D.O.A .

Take one game that you’ve played that was D.O.A. By D.O.A., I mean “dead on arrival” (i.e., a game that’s no fun to play). Write down what you don’t like about it. What did the designers miss? How could the game be improved?

Recently I have been experimenting with an interactive animated storytelling platform, Elementari, which I have been utilizing to teach storytelling with a little bit of coding in an online kids camp that I created for BCIT. With the addition of variables to Elementari, kids and teachers have begun to build games there. I thought I’d show my camp kids what was possible in an existing game on the platform, but being a bit limited in time I picked a game to show the kids that the platform had sent as an example of games being designed there, thinking it looked fun at first, but without having had the time to go through it myself. This was a DOA gaming moment for both the kids and myself.

The Game

What the Kids and I Didn’t Like About It

  • it has an instruction heavy start with just a talking head
  • there is a chunk of time with empty space, which leaves you questioning if the game is broken or incomplete
  • the talking head’s lips move, but no sound comes out of the mouth
  • the repetitive music becomes annoying after the first page or two
  • the writing is riddled with mistakes
  • some of the background and text colour choices make the text difficult to read
  • some of the buttons in the game do not work until a period of time had passed, frustrating the player

What the Designer Missed

This could actually be a fun little Spy School Game, provided things are kept moving, and the game play is not stalled by copious instructions and lag time issues.

How the Game Could Be Improved

  • keep the initial welcome / mission brief and give the player the option to visit the ‘game play’ page for more involved instructions
  • fix lag time issues in the coding
  • limit ‘Spy Academy’ music to specific pages or mix it up with other music
  • edit the writing
  • add in read aloud voice over to the captioned text
  • make sure that text is easily readable on the background you choose

Exercise 1.5 : Your Childhood

List ten games you played as a child, for example, hide and seek, four square, and tag. Briefly describe what was compelling about each of those games.

The Predator / Prey Game

I loved the freedom of being in the woods during this game, and having the free range to run, hide, and spend time on my own in nature. I also liked the strategy that went into this game of survival.

Crocodile Crossing

This was always a bit of hilarity filled, absurd, team building strategy and camaraderie, that allowed for ingenuity and creativity.

Frogger

It was just fun to try to get across the road without getting splattered.

Team Sports (like Ice Hockey, Soccer … etc)

I liked the physical aspects of these games, and the strategy and camaraderie that comes with working together as a team. I was also a bit of a bruiser, so liked being able to slide tackle and check an opponent within the rules of fair game play.

Scrabble

While I enjoy playing with and constructing words, the part of Scrabble that I get the most fun out of is playing strategically to hit double and triple word and letter scores, to block my opponents from those, and create multiple words in a single turn.

Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?

I loved the spy and international mystery solving aspect to this game, that virtually took me traveling the globe to discover different parts of the world.

Clue

I’ve always loved a good whodunit, so it is only natural that a game that allowed me to either be the detective or the murderer would appeal. Tied to that the opportunity to either mislead or outwit my family and friends, what more could a gal want?

Pick Up Sticks

Love the careful precision of teasing out sticks and trying to set my opponents up for a difficult turn.

Murder in the Dark

I use to love this game at parties. There was the thrill of being in the dark, and the thrill of either dodging and guessing the killer, or subtly ‘killing’ those around you without being caught.

Balderdash

So many fun elements to this game. Concocting nonsensical words with ridiculous definitions, trying to mislead the other players, and guessing at where your competitors are trying to mislead you.

Exercise 2.1 : Think of a Game

  1. Think of a game, any game. Now write down a description of the game. Be detailed. Describe it as if to someone who has never played a game like it before.
  2. Now think of another game—a completely different type of game. The more different this game is from the first one, the better. Describe it.
  3. Compare your descriptions. Which elements were different and which were similar? Dig deep and really think about the underlying mechanics of each game.

I decided to choose two of my favourite childhood games to dissect in the form of a mind map below.

While clearly I am not an artist, I had fun experimenting with the Concepts iPad, while recollecting the structure and game play of these two games.

Differences Between the Predator / Prey Game and Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?

There are many differences between the Predator / Prey Game and Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego. The Predator / Prey Game is a real world, multi player game, in which the outcome is unpredictable and dependent on the strategy, cunning, and interactions between the players. There are many paths to success in this game, and many moving parts that could both act as obstacles and allies in reaching success in the game. In contrast, Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego is a single player video game that involves one path to success in correctly solving the pre-designed puzzles.

Similarities Between the Predator / Prey Game and Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?

The key similarity between both these games are that they are educational. I had fun learning, while I played them. They both also utilized the imagination, role play, and strategic thinking (although more so on the part of the Predator / Prey Game).

Exercise 2.8 : Story

Have any stories within a game ever gripped you, moved you emotionally, or sparked your imagination? If so, why? If not, why not?

Absolutely. Stories are a huge draw for me, and are often the games that I have to guard my time with, so that I don’t lose hours of my day to them. I have vivid memories of this with the first Quest Game (the name escapes me) that I played with my brother and next door neighbour. We’d play so long that we’d all emerge from the basement with headaches and a sort of gaming hangover.

Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego was also one such game for me, that for the past decade has inspired an ARG that’s been running through my head for an international mystery game with a transmedia storytelling character I created – Emme Rogers. Below is the most recent rendition of that ARG that I wrote up for an Immersive and Interactive Storytelling Fellowship that I was shortlisted for in Norway:

Where-in-the-World-ARG

Exercise 3.4 : Objectives

List ten of your favourite games and name the objective for each. Do you see any similarities in these games? Try to define the type or types of games that appeal to you.

Some of my favourite games over the years have included:

  • Ultimate Frisbee – Objective: To score the most points by getting the frisbee past the opponent’s end zone.
  • Scrabble – Objective: To score the most points by using your tiles to spell connecting words on the Scrabble board.
  • The Predator / Prey Game – Objective: To survive by finding food and water, and avoiding disease and predation.
  • Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego – Objective: To apprehend Carmen Sandiego and her allies by solving the clues.
  • Field Hockey / Soccer / Ice Hockey – Objective: To score the most points, by getting the ball or puck in the opponent’s net.
  • Cat Physics – Objective: To pass a ball as quickly as possible from one cat to another, past a number of obstacles.
  • Othello – Objective: To have the most tiles of your colour on the board by the time each player has used up their last tile.
  • Crocodile Crossing – Objective: To get your team across crocodile invested waters the fastest, with limited resources, and without anyone touching the water.
Team Building with Crocodile Crossing
  • High Jumping – Objective: To be the person to clear the highest bar without touching it.
  • Beach Volleyball – Objective: To serve the ball over the net into the opponent’s court, and when the ball is hit into your court to keep the ball from hitting the ground and knock it back into their court within three hits.
  • Balderdash – Objective: To concoct believable words and definitions to mislead your opponents, and to guess which word is real.

In reflecting on the games I enjoy, they include games that involve:

  • outdoor exercise
  • physically challenging activities
  • strategy
  • team work
  • imaginative play
  • problem solving
  • elements of learning
  • time spent outside
Quidditch Training at our Hogwart’s Travelling School of Magic

I also do enjoy games that involve storytelling. However, I tend to avoid those due to their addictive nature for me.


Gaming Reflections of a Couple of Young Friends

I was curious about what the responses to these exercises would be for a few of the young people in my life, so I did a wee video interview with them.


Now, it’s your turn!

I’d love to hear about what sort of games appeal to you in the comments below, and if you were to design your own game, what sort of game that might be?

Filed Under: #StoryToGo, Erica Hargreave, Gaming, Storytellers Tagged With: game design

E² – Entertainment & Education : At Home Entertainment Magazine ~ Edition 2

July 15, 2020 by Erica Hargreave Leave a Comment

We invited you to join us as we launch into new opportunities and connect with creatives, educators, and natural and cultural history interpreters from around the world!

Photographed by Manyu Varma, via UnSplash.

3,2,1 … Blast Off! The StoryToGo Classroom Soft Launches

Phew!  It’s been a busy Spring and Summer for us, as we’ve been building the new StoryToGo Classroom and developing and teaching some initial courses there.

We’d love to invite you to come check it out. Just click on the button below.

Visit the New StoryToGo Classroom Site

As those of you that are regular readers here are aware, StoryToGo is a community site developed by Lori Yearwood, Kevin Ribble, and myself (Erica Hargreave) to explore contemporary storytelling, education, and culture with colleagues from across Canada and around the World.

While we are just getting started, stay tuned on the site for:

  • Contemporary Storytelling Courses (spanning the arts)
  • Marketing and Branding Courses
  • Technology Courses
  • Youth Camps, Classes, and Virtual Field Trips
  • A Culture Hub (with courses that allow you to virtually travel and learn about different cultures around the world)
  • A Health and Wellness Centre (with classes and courses in yoga, mindfulness, office exercises, and nature escapes)
  • A Teacher Hub (with resources for educators)

If you are interested in creating and building courses with us, please reach out. We’d love to chat.  Aside from creatives in a variety of disciplines, we’d also love to involve some of the tourism, parks, and arts organizations that we’ve worked with over the years in developing classes and courses for the Culture Hub and Health and Wellness Centre.

The Courses on the site are a mix of Open, Free, Paid, and Private Group Courses. Below we share a few of the initial courses that are available there now.


Some of the Initial Camps and Courses in the StoryToGo Classroom

As we soft launch the new StoryToGo Classroom site, we invite you to checkout our initial classes, camps and courses!

Open Courses:

  • Two Truths and a Lie Online: Media Literacy for Young Adults (this course is a good resource for teachers)

Free Classes:

  • Relaxing Yoga with Lori
  • Elementari Tutorial – Learn to Write & Code Interactive Stories (this course is a good resource for teachers, parents, and children’s book authors)

Online Summer Camps:

  • Story Quest (July Camp)
  • Story Quest (August Camp)

Online Music Lessons:

Photo by Fitsum Admasu, via UnSplash.
  • Private Piano Lessons
  • Beginner Piano – 5-7 yr olds
  • Beginner Piano – 8-10 yr olds
  • Beginner Piano – 11-13 yr olds
  • Beginner Piano – 14-16 yr olds

Upcoming Online Camps and Courses at BCIT

We are rather delighted to be developing and delivering BCIT’s first ever online summer camp! 

The camp, Animated Stories, will be offered twice this summer:

  • July 27 – 31 for 8 – 13 year olds
  • August 10 – 14 for 13 – 17 year olds

Also this coming Autumn, we will be offering both of our post-secondary accredited, online courses through BCIT’s Broadcast Media and Communications Part Time Studies Program.

  • Social Media Storytelling
  • Building Your Digital Media Presence

We hope to see you in class!


In other exciting news, we have just signed a contract with Tom Skerritt’s new channel, EVRGRN, to stream and distribute the full documentary version of Naturally Ours : Salt Spring Island.  This means new channels and air dates to catch the documentary, starting with STIRR for those of you in the United States!

And don’t forget, you can still watch the full documentary on Fearless, and the web series on Seeka TV and Stareable!


Stories That Matter to Us

The last few months have held many things that impact our team of storytellers deeply and personally.  We’ve done a little writing on that.

Black Lives Matter

  • In Regards to Police Brutality, I Found these Statistics – an Open Letter
  • A Brief History of Systemic Racism – an Open Letter
  • The Power of the Protest – Positive Changes Coming from the June 2020 Black Lives Matter Protests
  • Protesting Perspective – June 2020 Black Lives Matter Protests

Mindfulness

  • An Interactive Yoga Travel Story for Kids
  • The Apple – A Lesson in Finding Your Undiscovered Potential
  • The Lemon – A Lesson in Overcoming Fear and Anxiety in Our Travels
  • On the Go Mindfulness Activities
  • Heart Opening Yoga Poses
Meditating

Healthy & Fun

  • How to Tie Dye Face Masks

Eating Well

  • Bircher Muesli – a Swiss Recipe for a Healthy Body
  • Soupe de Chalet – Swiss Recipe and History
  • Natural Anti-Inflammatories: Concocting a Turmeric Ginger Tea

Connecting from Afar

Torre Unconf 

Recently Lori and I had fun participating in an Unconference that Torre hosted.  This was a great way to connect with new colleagues around the world and discuss ideas. 

Future StoryToGo Unconf

As such we are exploring the idea of hosting a StoryToGo Unconference this coming winter as a way of bringing people together around the world in the creative arts, tourism, education, technology, and health and wellness.  If this is something that you’d enjoy developing with us, please drop us a line.

Stress Free Summer Festival

Speaking of connecting from afar, our friends at Master Peace are hosting a week of interesting and free talks until Friday July 17th, with their Stress Free Summer Festival for those of you interested in partaking.


Stay safe and well, and find things to keep you laughing and dreaming.

With healthy wishes from Erica, Lori, Kevin, Anne, Alex and the rest of our Ahimsa Media, StoryToGo and Roamancing team.

Filed Under: #StoryToGo, Courses, E² - Entertainment & Education, Erica Hargreave, Our Community, Storytellers Tagged With: home education

A Children’s Yoga Adventure Story Created in Elementari

May 1, 2020 by Erica Hargreave Leave a Comment

Lori Yearwood's 1st Children's Story on Elementari

Lori Yearwood created the most beautiful, calming, and relaxing animated adventure story today using Elementari – a platform designed to allow children, youth, teachers, schools, and adults to create interactive, animated stories. Lori’s story is crafted to give kids at home a relaxing yoga experience that takes them on a virtual adventure to a day at the seashore.

A Children’s Yoga Adventure Story to the Seashore

Watch, read, listen, and enjoy!

As you watch, read, listen, and enjoy the story above, wait for the flashing white arrow. Click on it to turn the pages. If it does not appear, then click the left arrow on your keyboard to flip the page. Also, be sure to keep your eyes peeled for things to click on within the story iteself.

Elementari

We were fortunate enough to ‘virtually meet’ and learn about Elementari from one of the founders, Nicole Kang. Nicole kindly participated in our new vlogcasting series on Sustainable Funding Solutions for Media, Educators, and Technologists. You can watch the premiere episode of the vlogcast featuring Nicole and Elementari, below.

Elementari is currently helping teachers and parents, who are looking for ways to keep kids learning during the COVID-19 school closures, by giving them free premium access to their interactive storytelling platform to help kids learn how to read, write, and code.

Request Free Premium Access

Lori Yearwood as Phoenix Rising

Aside from being one of the Founders of StoryToGo, Lori Yearwood is a children’s book author and has a newer not-so-secret identity as a yoga and exercise instructor. You can follow along with her yogi adventure at PhoenixMoments on Instagram.

Filed Under: #StoryToGo, Erica Hargreave, Instructor News, Lori Yearwood, Our Community, Storytellers, Tech Tips Tagged With: Elementari, storytelling platform

E² – Entertainment & Education : At Home Entertainment Magazine ~ Edition 1

April 1, 2020 by Erica Hargreave 1 Comment

Meditating

Escape into a world of stories, calming moments, and cultural adventures, all from comfort of your living rooms and kitchens.

Phew!  What a couple of weeks it has been as we all settle into self-isolation.  To give those who wish it an escape to the land of the nerdy, Lori and I are focusing on sharing fun, calming, and educational distractions.  Some of these are things we are creating, and some are things that we find that other creative individuals and educators have crafted. 

E² – Entertainment & Education Newsletter : An At Home Entertainment Magazine

Over the coming weeks, we will regularly share a new E² – Entertainment & Education Newsletter with fun, calming, and educational things we find or create.

Sign Up for the Newsletter

You can also tune in throughout the week, as we share positive, calming, and uplifting content to the following Facebook pages and groups:

  • StoryToGo – live virtual concerts, poetry, bedtime stories, storytelling tools, music, and anything that is arts and storytelling related
  • Watch and Learn – educational videos
  • Roamancing and Women Who Love to Travel – anything related to learning about a culture or that take people on virtual adventures
  • Ahimsa Media – a mix of educational tools, remote work tools, and just plain light-hearted moments in Lori’s and my workday

We invite you to join us in these spaces and to share posts of your own. 


A Virtual Children’s Yoga Adventure Story to the Seashore

On the note of calming, Lori created a beautiful and relaxing children’s story using Elementari this past week. The story takes children on a virtual yoga adventure to the seashore.  While this is the perfect activity read to enjoy with your kids, my Mom and I enjoy it too and have read it several times.

To begin the story below, hit the play button on the image that follows. As you watch, read, listen, and enjoy the story, wait for the flashing white arrow. Click on it to turn the pages. If it does not appear, then click the left arrow on your keyboard to flip the page. Also, be sure to keep your eyes peeled for things to click on within the story itself.

As I mentioned in last week’s email, Elementari is at present offering teachers and parents free premium access to their interactive storytelling platform.  It is a great tool for teaching reading, writing and coding to kids and is an awesome creative outlet for people of any age.  Have you always wanted to create a children’s book?  Now is your chance!

Teachers and parents that wish to request premium access, can do so via this link.  There is also an open educational teacher’s guide to Elementari, that is a work-in-progress.


Finding Your Undiscovered Potential

Lori also wrote this great article on The Apple: A Lesson in Finding Your Undiscovered Potential, this past week.

This article very much echoes our approach to this time of at-home-adventures, by taking on new challenges and trying new things.  In my neck of the woods, I am finally teaching myself to play the Nuu-Chah-Nulth drum that I was given by the Tseshaht First Nation. I am proud to have thus far attracted an audience of Ella (my cat), Linus (my Mom’s dog), and Hugo (the cat that lives next door). Ella and Linus have also both expressed interest in being part of the band.

Meanwhile, not having any human yoga students to teach at present, Lori has taken to teaching yoga to her dog, Mango.


Naturally Salt Spring on Seeka TV

Finally we are thrilled to share that Season 1 of Naturally Ours, Naturally Salt Spring just launched for free on Seeka TV!  If you are like us, escapes into nature are what you need at the moment, so we hope this virtual one to visit the people and parks of Salt Spring Island helps.

Tune in on Seeka TV

LIVE From Your Living Room

We have been so impressed by all the live concerts and sharing of storytelling resources for free that has been going on this past week or so, as we all work to #FlattenTheCurve.

Below is just a tease of what’s online, waiting for you to discover:

  • Seeka.TV – this is a great source of indie web series, that you can watch and enjoy for free.
  • Vancouver Singer-Songwriter Jody Quine has been doing random live jam sessions on Facebook throughout the week, and recently did a live concert on Fresh Magazine’s Facebook. You can watch a recorded version of the concert here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfJprCU4glE
  • Isabella Mori tuned us into the #vss365 storytelling hashtag on Twitter. From Isabella, “#vss365 stands for ‘very short stories, 365x a year.’ Each month, a person is responsible for giving prompts, and off you go!” This month the theme for the stories is #cosy.
  • Patrick Stewart is reading Shakespearean Sonnets on Twitter.
  • Visit the NFB’s Indigenous Cinema to watch Indigenous-made films for free.
  • Figment is free from EPIC Games until April 2nd.
  • Need help staying creative? Here’s a google doc of artistic resources.
  • A bit of the beauty that we could all use right now from Stjepan Hauser: https://www.instagram.com/p/B9Zogb2HCco/

School at Home

It has been heartwarming to see all the resources that people and organizations are providing for parents and teachers, as students move to schooling from home for the time being. 

Toronto Zoo

Aside from Elementari, we have listed other free resources that we’ve found for parents and teachers to aid in students learning from home:

  • Yashy Murphy and her kids are hosting two Facebook Lives a day to share their knowledge about countries they’ve been to. They chat with other kids about geography, culture and cuisine. If you have kids, they’d love to have you join them virtually at 11 am and 4 pm EST every week day on Parenting to Go’s Facebook.
  • Free Children’s and Youth Audiobooks on Audible.
  • Adobe is offering the free use of a number of their tools to teachers and students.
  • We Are Teachers has put together a list of ‘Children’s Authors Doing Online Read-Alouds and Activities‘.
  • The Kennedy Centre is hosting virtual Lunchtime Doodle Sessions for kids with their artist in residence, Mo Willems. You can see all the past doodle sessions in their YouTube Playlist and engage online with your doodles with the hashtag #MoLunchDoodles.

Courses for Teachers

Below are a few free courses for teachers and other adult learners that colleagues at BCIT and UBC have sent us this week:

  • ‘Learning to Learn Online‘ from Athabasca University
  • Foundations to Open Education and OERs Repositories
  • Presentation Science: Helping Your Audience to Engage, Learn, Remember, and Act
  • ‘The Science of Well Being‘ from Yale University

If you know of an artist, artistic community, educator, or educational community that are sharing things to help entertain and educate us as we self-isolate, please let us know about it, and we will share what they are up to in one of our upcoming E² Newsletters.


Online Exercise Classes

As parks, gyms, and exercise studios close for the present, we have to thank organizations that are offering free at-home exercise solutions.

Two such organizations that we’ve found this past week, include:

  • Down Dog Yoga App – which is free for everyone until May 1st, and to school and health care communities until July 1st with your school or health care email. I initiated BCITs free access this past weekend, so those of you in the BCIT Community can sign up with your my.bcit.ca email.
  • YMCA 360 – The YMCA are offering their On-Demand Exercise Videos for all ages for a limited time.

Virtual Travels

While sadly, we are not able to travel and explore distant lands at present, there are ways for the time being that we can learn about cultures around the world from our own living rooms, while we #FlattenTheCurve by staying at home. Below are just a few virtual travels that we’ve recently enjoyed:

  • Indulging our Swiss food cravings by making a recipe from the cooking gallery on the Tourism Switzerland site.
  • Learning a bit of Swiss Italian while making one of the tasty concoctions on the Osteria La Guana blog.
  • Tantalizing the taste buds with Italian cooking classes from Chef Massimo Bottura on Instagram.
  • Taking music lessons from Hamilton, Ontario band, the Arkells on Instagram.
  • Exploring Newfoundland with The Tale Blazers.
  • Discovering the National Cowboy Museum through the eyes, prose, and tweets of the museum security guard.
  • Escaping into nature with the Google Arts and Culture exhibit and interactive documentary, The Hidden Worlds of the National Parks.

Stay safe and well, and reach out if you need help.

With healthy wishes from Erica, Lori, Ella, Mango, and the rest of our Ahimsa Media, StoryToGo and Roamancing team.

Filed Under: #StoryToGo, E² - Entertainment & Education, Erica Hargreave, Our Community, Storytellers Tagged With: home education, home entertainment

Ringing in 2020 with Storytelling and Digital Media Courses at BCIT

January 1, 2020 by Erica Hargreave Leave a Comment

As we ring in a new year, it had me reflecting on what is important to me, and this old proverb …

Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish, and you feed him for a lifetime.

Photographed by Cristian Palmer, care of Unsplash.

There is no greater gift that you can give yourself or another than learning a skill that helps pursue one’s passions. This is the reason why sharing knowledge is an important part of what we aim to do here with StoryToGo.

The Importance of Sharing Knowledge For Us

When I started speaking in 2008 about bridging the worlds of media, interactive and cross-platform storytelling, and digital media, it occurred to me that while inspiring people through my talks was great and all, to truly help people to take action, they needed a course giving them guidance and support while they build and craft their storyworlds.

Interactive Storytelling
Erica Hargreave and Caitlin Burns on a Panel on Convergent Storytelling.
Photographer: Liz Kearsley

A year later, after pitching the local post secondary schools, my first post-secondary school courses launched at BCIT and Capilano University. Since then my team and I have also built courses and workshops and taught community, undergraduate and graduate courses at Ryerson University, Humber College, and NVIT. In addition, we’ve helped build new programs and revise old programs. It has both been an honour to teach and share with others, and fulfills a passion of ours. We love teaching.

Creating Our Courses Online

In 2011, after speaking in Egypt, we recognized that to truly make a difference to people that could most benefit from our courses, we needed them to be available online.

Erica Hargreave speaking on ‘Real Time’ Storytelling at the UNWTO Conference on Working with Media in Challenging Times in Marsa Alam, Egypt.

Thanks to BCIT and our colleague Kevin Ribble, they were by 2013. This has also allowed Lori Yearwood to help build and teach those courses with me.

2020 Courses at BCIT

I am happy to share that as we move into 2020, we now have 2 online post-secondary credited courses and 2 intensive community courses offered through BCIT’s Broadcast Media and Communications Part Time Studies. All of our courses are project based, in which our students come out of them having built or built upon projects of their own that they are crafting for their future endeavours.

For those of you who are looking to give yourself and someone in your life the gift of learning this year, these are a few of the courses that we will be teaching in 2020:

  • BCST 1073 – Building Your Digital Media Presence (an online, work on your own schedule each week, course starting in January)
  • BCST 1193 – Social Media Storytelling (an online, work on your own schedule each week, course scheduled to be offered in April)
  • BCST 0107 – Travel Writing: Your Journey from Branding to Monetizing your Travel Stories (stay tuned for a Summer intensive course offering)
  • BCST 0108 – Creating and Marketing your Own Web Series (stay tuned for a Summer intensive course offering)
Photographed by Ian Schneider, care of Unsplash.

More Coming on StoryToGo

Also keep your eyes peeled here as we will be launching the StoryToGo Classroom site later this year with mini online courses, and tailored online and blended courses for organizations from us and our rich group of storytelling friends and colleagues.

If you have a course that you would love to see offered through StoryToGo, please let us know in the comments, and if you wish us to tailor create a course for your organization, please send us an email.

Photographed by by Danielle Macinnes, care of Unsplash.

Raising a glass of whatever your preferred beverage to a happy and rewarding new year and new decade, rich in learning!

Filed Under: #StoryToGo, Courses, Erica Hargreave, Events, Instructor News, Our Community, Storytellers Tagged With: BCIT, storytelling, storyworlds

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

#StoryToGo is a community designed to reflect storytelling today – shared both through traditional means of oral storytelling, radio, film and TV, and print; in addition to newer forms of media storytelling through the digital arts, including gaming, blogging, online video, and social media.

Explore Past Posts




Tags

accessibility AI for filmmaking AI for videography AR art art therapy art therapy activities augmented reality BCIT clown crowdfunding crowdsourced Elementari elevator pitch Extended Reality FilmFreeway filmmaking game game based learning game design game development health and wellness home education improv inclusive design literacy NFT non-fungible tokens online learning open education phishing scam photography pitching poetry social media storytelling storyworlds sustainable funding universal design video game virtual conference virtual reality Web Monetization XR XR Development

On the Beat with StoryToGo

Follow along on StoryToGo’s digital magazine for our latest case studies, upcoming free courses and webinars, technology tips and tricks, story musings,  and our latest job boards!

  • Case Studies
  • Tech Tips
  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Our Community
  • Courses

Copyright 2012 © 2026 · Ahimsa Media · Log in