The Power of Images in Storytelling (2024)

1.Activate background knowledge about the purpose of storytelling.

Ask: What is storytelling and why do people tell stories? Have students turn and talk to a neighbor about the questions you posed. After a couple minutes, invite students to share their ideas with the class. During the discussion, ask:

  • How do people tell stories? (Storytellers use not only written and spoken words but also visuals, like drawings and photographs.)

Have students turn and talk again after you ask:

  • What method of storytelling might a storyteller use if he or she wants the audience to do or feel something? (Answers will vary. Possible answers: Storytellers might use visuals, real-life examples, personal anecdotes, or ask listeners to put themselves in the story.)

2.Introduce the use of photographs in storytelling.

Do an informal poll by asking students to raise their hands if they think telling stories requires words. Ask students for examples of storytelling that do not include words. (Student responses might include video without words/narration, photo collections that tell a story, storytelling through dance or music, etc.)

Explain that some storytellers use photographs to tell a story or as part of a storytelling method.

Click through this photo essay by Ami Vitale. Ask and discuss the following questions.

  • What story does this series of photographs tell?
  • Does it tell one story or more than one?
  • What does using only photographs to tell a story add to the story itself?
  • How would this story be different if the storyteller only used words and no photographs? Would it add to the story if the storyteller used both words AND photographs?

3.View video clips of Joel Sartore speaking about photographing animals.

Introduce the video clip “Grizzlies, Wolves, and Koalas: Conservation Photography” by explaining that Joel Sartore is a storyteller and photographer for National Geographic. Ask students to think about the following focus questions as they watch the video:

  • How do good photographs help conservation efforts? (Photographs are engaging, make people ask questions, and lead people to care. They also help people make a personal connection with the animals.)
  • Why does Joel Sartore use photographs to tell stories? (He believes that photographs motivate people to care and hopefully make positive changes, like the Australian government passing legislation to protect koalas.)

After viewing the video clip, have students talk to a neighbor about their ideas on the focus questions.

Introduce the second video clip, “Saving Animals Through Photography,” by telling students that Joel Sartore is working on a project called the Photo Ark. He is taking photographs of animals in captivity. Ask students to consider the following focus questions while watching the clip:

  • What is Joel Sartore’s goal in creating the Photo Ark? (He is taking photos of all animal species in captivity as a way to document them, especially endangered ones, for future generations and to encourage people to care about them and take action now, before it’s too late.)
  • What techniques does he use to get people to care about the animals, and why does he want them to care? (He photographs the animals on black or white backgrounds so they are viewed equally and without any distractions, such as natural backgrounds. He wants to bring people’s attention to the animal extinction crisis.)

After viewing the clip, facilitate a short class discussion about the focus questions. Have students discuss the role of Sartore’s photographs in the stories he tells.

4.Invite students to interact with Sartore’s photos during a gallery walk.

Tell students they will walk around the room and observe several of Sartore’s photographs from the Photo Ark. Give each student several sticky notes. Ask students to pause at each photo and write or draw how the photo makes them feel. Encourage them to document their reactions, emotions, and questions and leave the sticky note next to the photo. After they have looked at all the photos, invite students to share what they felt and what themes they noticed in the sticky notes left by their classmates.

5.Ask students to write essays in response to a Photo Ark photo.

Tell students to choose a photo with which they feel a strong connection. Ask students to write a short personal essay in response to the following questions.

  • Why does this photo interest you?
  • What story does this photo express to you? Why? How?
  • The goal of Photo Ark is to get people to care about species and want to protect them. In what ways does this photo inspire those feelings in you?

6.Assign a final “exit ticket” question.

As students finish their personal essays, give them little slips of paper and ask them to respond, with a sentence or two, to the question: How do storytellers use images to help people care?

Alternative Assessment

Use the exit ticket responses to assess student learning.

Extending the Learning

Extend the writing portion of this activity over the course of a few days by including draft, self-edit, peer-edit, and final draft stages to the essay.

Subjects & Disciplines

  • Arts and Music
  • English Language Arts
  • Experiential Learning
  • Storytelling
    • Photography

Learning Objectives

Students will:

  • reflect on the power of photography—how it can evoke emotions and inspire us to care
  • articulate the role images play in storytellers’ work
  • interpret information from photographic and video sources

Teaching Approach

  • Learning-for-use

Teaching Methods

  • Discussions
  • Visual instruction
  • Writing

Skills Summary

This activity targets the following skills:

Connections to National Standards, Principles, and Practices

IRA/NCTE Standards for the English Language Arts

  • Standard 11: Students participate as knowledgeable, reflective, creative, and critical members of a variety of literacy communities.
  • Standard 3: Students apply a wide range of strategies to comprehend, interpret, evaluate, and appreciate texts. They draw on their prior experience, their interactions with other readers and writers, their knowledge of word meaning and of other texts, their word identification strategies, and their understanding of textual features (e.g., sound-letter correspondence, sentence structure, context, graphics).
  • Standard 4: Students adjust their use of spoken, written, and visual language (e.g., conventions, style, vocabulary) to communicate effectively with a variety of audiences and for different purposes.

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy

  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.SL.7.1: Engage effectively in a range of collaborative discussions (one-on-one, in groups, and teacher-led) with diverse partners on Grade 7 topics, texts, and issues, building on others' ideas and expressing their own clearly.
  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.SL.7.2: Analyze the main ideas and supporting details presented in diverse media and formats (e.g., visually, quantitatively, orally) and explain how the ideas clarify a topic, text, or issue under study.
  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.7.10: Write routinely over extended time frames (time for research, reflection, and revision) and shorter time frames (a single sitting or a day or two) for a range of discipline-specific tasks, purposes, and audiences.
  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.7.4: Produce clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience.
  • CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.7.9: Draw evidence from literary or informational texts to support analysis, reflection, and research.

What You’ll Need

Materials You Provide

  • Pens
  • Sticky notes
  • Writing paper

Required Technology

  • Internet Access: Optional
  • Tech Setup: 1 computer per classroom, Projector, Speakers

Physical Space

  • Classroom

Setup

Ensure there is enough space for students to move around the room to engage with the images during the gallery walk.

Grouping

  • Large-group instruction

Background Information

The interaction of animals with their environments is the engine that keeps the planet healthy for all of us. But for many species, time is running out. National Geographic, along with photographer Joel Sartore, is dedicated to finding solutions to save them.

The Photo Ark project is documenting every species in captivity with the goal of inspiring people to care and help protect these animals. National Geographic photographer Joel Sartore started the Photo Ark in his hometown of Lincoln, Nebraska. Since then, he has visited 40 countries in his quest to create this photo archive of global biodiversity. To date, Joel has completed portraits of more than 6,000 species, most photographed on either a plain black or white background. No matter its size, each animal is treated with the same amount of affection and respect. The results are portraits that are not just stunningly beautiful, but also intimate and moving. “It’s the eye contact that moves people,” Sartore says of the animals’ expressions. “It engages … feelings of compassion and a desire to help.”

This multiyear effort will create intimate portraits of an estimated 12,000 species of birds, fish, mammals, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates. Once completed, Photo Ark will serve as an important record of each animal’s existence, and a powerful testament to the importance of saving them.

For more information about Photo Ark and Joel Sartore—plus links to many photographs in the Photo Ark collection, visit the Photo Ark website.

Prior Knowledge

  • None

Recommended Prior Activities

  • None

Vocabulary

captivity

Noun

confinement or imprisonment.

conservation

Noun

management of a natural resource to prevent exploitation, destruction, or neglect.

endangered species

Noun

organism threatened with extinction.

extinct

Adjective

no longer existing.

mammal

Noun

animal with hair that gives birth to live offspring. Female mammals produce milk to feed their offspring.

photography

Noun

art and science of producing still or moving images using the chemical reaction of light on a sensitive surface, such as film or an electronic sensor.

species

Noun

group of similar organisms that can reproduce with each other.

Articles & Profiles

Images

Tips & Modifications

Modification English Language Learners (ELL)

To support ELLs, pre-teach vocabulary from the videos, such as conservation, species, captivity, and extinct.

Modification Teacher Tip

If printing the Sartore photographs in color for the gallery walk is not possible, project the images, one at a time, giving students enough time to write down their feelings before moving to the next photo. Prepare a handout with the animals’ names in the order of presentation and have students write their responses next to the name as you project them.

Tip Teacher Tip

If you have access to several laptops or tablets, display the Photo Ark images digitally and create stations around the room so students can leave their sticky notes on the table next to the device.

  • Credits

    Media Credits

    The audio, illustrations, photos, and videos are credited beneath the media asset, except for promotional images, which generally link to another page that contains the media credit. The Rights Holder for media is the person or group credited.

    Writer

    Jessica Shea

    Editor

    Elaine Larson, National Geographic Society

    Copyeditor

    Corinne Rucker, National Geographic Society

    Factchecker

    Bob Connelly

    Producer

    Jordan Lim, National Geographic Society

  • User Permissions

    For information on user permissions, please read our Terms of Service. If you have questions about how to cite anything on our website in your project or classroom presentation, please contact your teacher. They will best know the preferred format. When you reach out to them, you will need the page title, URL, and the date you accessed the resource.

    Media

    If a media asset is downloadable, a download button appears in the corner of the media viewer. If no button appears, you cannot download or save the media.

    Text

    Text on this page is printable and can be used according to our Terms of Service.

    Interactives

    Any interactives on this page can only be played while you are visiting our website. You cannot download interactives.

The Power of Images in Storytelling (2024)

FAQs

The Power of Images in Storytelling? ›

Ninety-nine times out of 100, photos can create a sense of place, personality, or emotion more clearly and quickly than the written word. That's why we're so drawn to stories that include photography—the images powerfully confirm and expand upon what we discover in the text.

Why are images important in storytelling? ›

Photos can help to create a sense of atmosphere and emotion. They capture a moment in time, show the emotions of the people involved in the story, and illustrate what is happening in the story of their own lives.

What is the power of imagery in storytelling? ›

Images have the power to subconsciously trigger or lock in a narrative in a fraction of a second, long before the more rational parts of our brain have a chance to interpret text.

What do pictures do in a story? ›

Don't skip the pictures in a book! Good readers use illustrations to fill in details about stories. Illustrations in stories are important because they help set the mood, describe events, and show details.

Why are images so important and powerful? ›

A large part of the brain is focused on visual processing, allowing humans to process images at an incredible speed. The human brain can recognize a familiar object in only 100 milliseconds, making images the perfect way to communicate in today's short-attention world.

Why do images help readers? ›

Books rich with illustrations and photos offer many benefits to help enhance reading comprehension. Here are just a few of those benefits. Pictures provide visual clues to help us discover more about the narrative. Pictures show expressions, unwritten details, setting, and context that help us compare and contrast.

Why is image so important? ›

Everything we say and do communicates something about us. Everything contributes to our external image. Image is so important because the way you present yourself has a profound impact on your career. And it's not just your body language, hair and makeup, or how you dress, image is also your social media presence.

How does imagery convey mood? ›

Writers use sensory language – specific words and phrases that appeal to the senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch – to help you visualize a scene. By using imagery and setting details, a writer creates the mood – or the atmosphere – of the story.

How does imagery convey emotion? ›

Images will often provide us with mental snapshots that appeal to our senses of sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell. In essence, images show us meaning; when we compare the snapshots in our mind to our own memories or experiences, we connect emotionally to the poem.

What makes an image powerful? ›

A powerful image is one that looks real. Remember, you are trying to evoke an emotion — a genuine feeling in the viewer that connects them to the photograph. You want your viewer to mentally put themselves in the photograph, or at least, feel like they are in the same space as they view it.

What is image storytelling? ›

Storytelling photography is where you use still photographs to tell a story. You can use a series of photos to tell your story. Or you can use a single image. You can use photos to tell a whole story, from start to end. Or you can give your audience story fragments.

What are images that tell a story called? ›

Narrative photography is the idea that photographs can be used to tell a story. Allen Feldman stated that "the event is not what happens. The event is that which can be narrated".

What is the importance of images? ›

People rely on imagery to share information, learn about new ideas and educate themselves on things that interest them. Using images in a business works much the same way, helping people get a feel for your product or service without solely relying on written messages.

Why are images important in literature? ›

Imagery is used to evoke the senses of sight, taste, smell, touch, and sound. Imagery is important because it adds an element of artistry to writing and allows the audience to connect more fully with characters by helping readers feel as if they are really there.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Manual Maggio

Last Updated:

Views: 6134

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (69 voted)

Reviews: 92% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Manual Maggio

Birthday: 1998-01-20

Address: 359 Kelvin Stream, Lake Eldonview, MT 33517-1242

Phone: +577037762465

Job: Product Hospitality Supervisor

Hobby: Gardening, Web surfing, Video gaming, Amateur radio, Flag Football, Reading, Table tennis

Introduction: My name is Manual Maggio, I am a thankful, tender, adventurous, delightful, fantastic, proud, graceful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.