065: Why storytelling is so important for our children

Published: June 4, 2018, 1 a.m.

b'\\u201cStorytelling? I\\u2019m already reading books to my child \\u2013 isn\\u2019t that enough?\\u201d\\nYour child DOES get a lot out of reading books (which is why we\\u2019ve done a several episodes on that already, including https://yourparentingmojo.com/readingbooks/ (What children learn from reading books), https://yourparentingmojo.com/reading/ (How to read with your child), and https://yourparentingmojo.com/003-your-toddler-isnt-reading-yet-neither-is-mine/ (Did you already miss the boat on teaching your toddler how to read?).\\nBut it turns out that storytelling benefits our relationship with our child in ways that reading books really can\\u2019t, because you\\u2019re looking at the book rather than at your child. If you ask your child what kind of story they\\u2019d like you to tell, you also get incredible insight into both their interests and concerns \\u2013 I can attest to this, as I\\u2019ve been singing story-songs about poop and various kinds of baby animals who can\\u2019t find their mamas on and off for several weeks now (we had an incident a few months back where she couldn\\u2019t find me in a store).\\nIn this episode we also discuss the ways that people from different cultures tell stories, and what implications this has for them as they interact with our education system.\\nOther episodes mentioned in this show:\\nhttps://yourparentingmojo.com/joy/ (035: Is your parenting All Joy and No Fun?)\\n\\nReferences\\nBengtsson, N. (2009). Sex and violence in fairy tales for children. Bookbird: A journal of international children\\u2019s literature 47(3), 15-21.\\nByers,L.A.(1997).Telling the stories of our lives: Relational maintenance as illustrated through family communication. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Ohio University.\\nBylund, C.L. (2003). Ethnic diversity and family stories. Journal of Family Communication 3(4), 215-236.\\nClark, A.N. (1969). Journey to the People. New York, NY: Viking.\\nDyson, A.H., and Genishi, C. (Eds) (1994). The need for story: Cultural diversity in classroom and community. Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.\\nEgan, K. (1987). Literacy and the oral foundations of education. Harvard Educational review 57, 445-472.\\nEgan, K. (1997). The educated mind: How cognitive tools shape our understanding. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.\\nFiese, B.H., Hooker, K.A., Kotary, L., Schwagler, J., and Rimmer, M. (1995). Family stories in the early stages of parenthood. Journal of Marriage and Family 57(3), 763-770.\\nGee, J.P. (1985). The narrativization of experience in the oral style. Journal of Education 167(1), 9-35. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/42742075\\nGordon, T.-J. (1991). Teachers telling stories: Seven-, eight-, and nine-year-old children\\u2019s written responses to oral narratives. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ.\\nGreene, E., and Del Negro, J.M. (2010). Storytelling: Art and technique (4th Ed.). Santa Barbara, CA: Libraries Unlimited.\\nHaven, K. (2007). Story proof: the science behind the startling power of story. Santa Barbara, CA: Libraries Unlimited.\\nIsaacs, D. (2013). Sex and violence in fairy tales. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health 49(12), 987-988.\\nJasper, M. (2017, February 19). Only 22% of children\\u2019s book characters were people of color in 2016. The Mary Sue. Retrieved from https://www.themarysue.com/poc-childrens-book-characters-2016/\\nKillick, S., and Frude, N. (2009). The teller, the tale, and the told. Psychologist 22(1), 850-853.\\nKoenig, J. (2002). Family ties: Identity, process, and relational qualities in joint family\\nstorytelling. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Washington, Seattle.\\nLarsen, N.E., Lee, K., and Ganea, P.A. (2017). Do storybooks with anthropomorphized characters promote prosocial ...'