Toronto Star

When putting your audience to sleep is a win

Experts weigh in on how parents can master bedtime storytelli­ng

- PAUL L. UNDERWOOD

Once upon a time, there was a father. This father — known throughout the land as “dad” — was, by trade, a teller of stories. One night, while perched upon the edge of his elder child’s bed, he was called upon to tell a story. He struggled. He stumbled and mumbled. He murmured words about a girl trying to go to school, her path blocked by some nefarious cows.

As the father spoke, his daughter seemed bored, like a movie producer screening a disappoint­ing rough cut. She offered some notes. The girl should be a princess, she suggested. She should have a unicorn, too, one that could fly would be ideal. The father made those changes and the story became an immediate critical success.

That was me more than three years ago. It marked the first of roughly 600 bedtime stories told, and counting. In telling those stories, I’ve gained a sense of what works for my daughter (princesses, witches, magic) and what doesn’t (stories with an obvious moral). I’m by no means a master — more than once, I’ve dozed off mid-sentence. And yet, I’ve learned some useful lessons along the way.

In crafting this guide, I also spoke with several experts, including a Grammy-nominated storytelle­r with 35 years of experience. Here’s what you need to know.

You still need to read to your kids

Let’s be clear: Reading is still an indispensa­ble tool in your parenting tool kit. Storytelli­ng should be a complement to reading, not a replacemen­t. You can also use storytelli­ng anytime — to make a long car trip shorter or just to pass the time. Whenever you do, you are engaging with your child in a unique way.

“Listening to the story without the benefits of the illustrati­ons requires the child to picture the characters and the events in their own mind,” said Rebecca Isbell, an early childhood education consultant and professor emeritus at East Tennessee State University. “They are creating the story for themselves. They are listening to it, and as they do they’re turning on that movie in their head.”

These mental movies are powerful — in her research, Isbell has found children understood (and retained) more of a story they were told out loud than having the same story read to them.

Ultimately, Isbell concluded that storytelli­ng and reading work best in tandem to help children develop language and story comprehens­ion, just as you want your child eating a balanced meal.

Remember the basics of storytelli­ng

If you’re making up a story, remember every story should have a beginning, a middle and an end. Every story should have a conflict and a resolution. Need help? Consider the folk tale.

On “Circle Round,” the children’s storytelli­ng podcast from WBUR public radio in Boston, host Rebecca Sheir draws from folklore as source material for entertaini­ng, audio-only stories for kids. I’ve drawn from my admittedly limited knowledge of Homer’s “Odyssey” (which was originally passed down orally) and the Bible (David and

Goliath works pretty well). This saves you the mental effort of coming up with an original story every night.

Several experts recommende­d stories from “Aesop’s Fables,” which has been delighting children for millennia and includes “The Tortoise and the Hare.” Why? Because for kids, the protagonis­ts “aren’t really animals, they’re people,” Isbell said. They visualize the characters and identify with them, and the nuanced morals — slow and steady wins the race, for example — are things any kid can understand.

If you’re really stumped, consider your own story. In particular, stories from your childhood have a special resonance because, as Sheir puts it, “kids have a hard time believing you ever were a child.”

Take the story in an unexpected direction

Diane Ferlatte has participat­ed in storytelli­ng festivals on five continents and in much of the U.S., and her 2006 album of Brer Rabbit stories earned a Grammy nomination for Best

Spoken Word Album for Children. She is, in short, a storytelle­r’s storytelle­r. Her advice? Use pitch, pacing and pausing to keep your child on the edge of their seat (or pillow).

“Pauses are very important,” she said. “It lets that curiosity and suspense in.” You can use strategic pauses to let your child ponder what happens next, and then take the story in an unexpected direction.”

Sheir seconds Ferlatte’s advice. “When you’re making up a story, the voice is so important,” she said. “You can vary your rhythm, pitch, intonation, your pacing. …You can move your voice up if someone is climbing a mountain, or move your voice down if they’re climbing down.”

One word of warning: Sometimes, kids don’t want you to go full Jim Carrey. Or, as my daughter said the other night, “Please don’t use funny voices.” Her loss. My wicked witch voice is both terrifying and hilarious.

Use your whole body

One advantage of telling, rather than reading, a story is that you don’t have to look at and hold a physical book, which frees your face and hands to gesture and make eye contact. It’s the difference between some guy reading a joke book and Chris Rock or Ali Wong doing standup. As Ferlatte puts it, “If books could give us sound and movement and voices and facial expression, that’d be wonderful. But they can’t.”

Use your hands to show whether something is huge or tiny, tap on nearby objects to imitate knocking on a door or whoosh your hands when something happens quickly. This physicalit­y involves your children in the story.

Encourage audience participat­ion

“One of the things with a story told is you can change it around,” Isbell said. If your daughter wants the protagonis­t to be a mermaid instead of a snail, you can change that. A voyage through the high seas can become a journey to Mars. “You can change the sequence, you can change the characters, you can change the phrases. This nurtures that fluency of ideas that we want our children to develop.”

As with singing a song, you can encourage call and response, or use rhymes to keep the child actively engaged. Ferlatte recommends leaving out the end of a sentence and letting your child fill in the blank. “When you’re telling stories, you want them to be involved in the telling,” Isbell said. “We want them to be co-creators of the story, so they’re not just listening, they’re actively participat­ing.”

This also helps if you’re hard up for material. “If you’re winging it, and running out of ideas, you can use audience participat­ion to give yourself a break,” Sheir said. “You can even steal your kids’ ideas.”

 ?? MIN HEO THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? If you’re making up a bedtime story for that little one in your life, remember that storytelli­ng and reading work well in tandem.
MIN HEO THE NEW YORK TIMES If you’re making up a bedtime story for that little one in your life, remember that storytelli­ng and reading work well in tandem.

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