Engaging the Community: An Applied Approach to Digital Storytelling in Dietetics

Category
Assessing student learning
Engaging students
Instructor
Kelly Quinn, Lecturer of Nutritional Sciences
College
College of Human Ecology
Courses
NS 4250: Nutrition Communications and Counseling
NS 6250: Community Nutrition in Action
Discipline
Nutrition & Dietetics
Course-level
Upper-level Undergraduate & Graduate
Course size
6-30 students
Implemented
Spring 2025

Learning Outcomes

Digital Storytelling
Writing Processes
Collaboration
Information Literacy

Context

"Two of my courses have community engaged learning components, and I work with a variety of community partners. Several partners (Cornell Dining, Cornell Sports, Southern Tier Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics) mainly engage with their participants via social media and requested digital storytelling/social media as deliverables. Also, as a former community registered dietitian, I was often called upon to contribute to my organization's social media platform, and I knew this was a skill set my students needed to develop.

Both courses focus on creating evidence-based, client-facing nutrition education. In the past, this would have been delivered as a handout, poster or in-person presentation, but sadly, all of these formats are becoming obsolete. I realized that students are great consumers but inexperienced as producers of quality social media content. Working with CTI has enhanced my ability to give dietetic and nutrition students cutting-edge skills they will need as they enter the workforce."

Kelly Quinn, Lecturer of Nutritional Sciences

Implementation

In the early stages of developing this assignment, Quinn requested a consultation with CTI’s Storylab, part of the Creative Technology Lab. Together, Quinn and CTI instructional designers developed a rubric and assignment activities for the students to follow. Once the semester started, a member of Storylab’s staff visited Quinn’s class twice. During the first visit, instructional designers discussed best practices of creating videos when working with community partners. They also discussed best practices for developing videos including planning, script creation, collecting media and editing. The second involved a technology demonstration of video editing tools.

Challenges

  • Skills building: Despite being digital natives, students do not necessarily have the technical skills necessary to create a well developed and edited video/podcast, and may need structured activities to help them develop their projects.
  • Time management: Digital storytelling assignments typically take longer than a traditional paper or presentation to create, and at the same time, students often do not believe a video/podcast will be time-intensive project.
  • Time management: Will you devote class time to workshop scripts and/or story ideas?.
  • Design & evaluation: Will this assignment be a group project or will each individual have to create a video/podcast/storymap? How will you evaluate this assignment accordingly?

Reflection and Future Directions

Quinn plans to continue partnering with CTI instructional designers and using these assignments as community partners typically desire digital content to assist with their communications and messaging priorities.