History, Wonder Tales, Fairy Tales, Myths and Legends How to Write A Good Fairy Tale | Page 31
STORY TELLING TECHNIQUES
for people who work with people in organisations
Marie Finlay, Professional Storyteller and Private Consultant
and Christine Hogan, School of Management and Marketing
Introduction
The purpose of this paper is to illustrate how stories may be used by facilitators/teachers and
how they can use them to elicit stories from participants. The purpose of this paper is to
explain why we use of story telling in our work. Its relevance to teaching and organisations;
illustrate various story telling techniques; tell favourite stories and why we use them; describe
exercises for facilitators to introduce participants to story telling and draw conclusions and
make recommendations.
Reasons why we use story telling in our teaching and work with organisations
Why tell stories? People like them. They like to tell their own stories and they like to listen to
them. But, we don't all have the same levels of skill to tell or listen to them. Story telling is not
only a combination of skills, but also an art form. Stories take us back to childhood. The
traditional children's stories are related to the world and help them understand life through the
adventures of archetypal figures, for example the hero, the martyr, the wanderer etc as
described by Pearson (1989).
In organisations and society stories play a dual role, they act as powerful directives for
member's behaviour, and they can also teach specific lessons. They are the "glue" that holds
the culture of an organisation together. The stories provide a blueprint for "the way we are in
this place", how we deal with things here, what is "ok" and "not ok". They articulate the way in
which the organisation is special, different from other organisations. These stories are for the
most part unconscious. At a conscious level, stories can embed values, articulate vision and
give meaning to events.
Affective Domain
Hogan teaches story telling techniques to her Graduate Diploma in Human Resource
Development students. Story telling and listening engage everyone in the affective domain.
Many learning situations involve participants in cold, analytical, left brain activities. Story
telling evokes a different response from participants in workshops when compared to more
analytical approaches. For example, in a workshop to facilitate the development of a policy
on the handling of violence in a hospital Hogan sought to bring the rationale within the policy
to life. She asked the group "Are there any stories you have got of ways in which violence
occurred and was dealt with well and not so well?" The results were stories told from the
heart with great feeling and emotion for the perpetrator ̰