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Multi‐sensory storytelling: a tool for teaching or an intervention technique?
19
Citations
13
References
2015
Year
East MidlandsSensory ExperiencesEducationLanguage EducationNarrative And IdentityEducational CommunicationAdapted CurriculumCommunicationLanguage TeachingTeacher EducationExceptional ChildrenInclusive EducationStorytelling (Game Design)Multi‐sensory StorytellingDigital StorytellingSpecial Educational NeedsAccessible EducationInteractive StorytellingEducational PracticePerformance StudiesStorytelling (Indigenous Studies)Special EducationArtsEducational Theory
This article reports on research undertaken to investigate how multi‐sensory storytelling (MSST) was being used within schools for students with profound and multiple learning difficulties and other special educational needs. Semi‐structured interviews (n = 27) and observations (n = 18) were undertaken in five schools in the East Midlands and south‐east of England. The study identified that MSST was considered to contribute to the curriculum access, assessment, learning and socialisation of students across a wide range of special educational needs. Key opportunities, applications and barriers to use were identified. Findings from this study indicated that the way these teachers used MSST differed from extant research in this area with regard to both design and delivery. It is suggested that the desire to develop a quantitative evidence base may present unnecessary restrictions which inhibit the recognition of pedagogic issues; and that a more fluid conceptualisation of MSST would be reflective of real‐world practice.
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