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Pete Kalu, Storyteller
Primary Schools
Introduction:
My visit can involve me telling a range of stories to whole classes,
several classes at once and combined age groups. Each story lasts around
20 minutes. Follow-up activities and lessons include story writing, story
structure, 'setting the scene'. drama, thinking skills and children devising
in groups their own stories and telling them to the full group.
Trickster tales
These feature assorted loveable rogues from Anansi the Spider, to Monkey,
to Tortoise. The stories are a warm introduction to aspects of West African
and Caribbean culture, and promote the universal virtues of brains over
brawn, of inventiveness, quick-wittedness and resourcefulness under pressure.
Delivered in Pete Kalu's own inimitable style, the stories are funny,
engaging and always surprising.
Dilemma stories
Dilemma stories work with the upper range of Primary school ages. They
have proved popular with adult as well as child audiences. Dilemma stories
are modernisations of traditional African dilemma tales. They always feature
a knotty, moral dilemma at their core which the audience has to resolve.
They are good for provoking debate, developing argumentative essay skills
and stimulating thinking skills. Most dilemma stories are funny, some
are sombre.
Pete Kalu has told his stories to all age ranges from reception
class age to eleven year olds and in contexts including state schools,
supplementary schools and youth services. He automatically adapts the
material to the audience before him. He has worked with a classroom assistant/
interpreter when taking classes containing children whose first language
is Punjabi. He has collaborated with musicians and visual artists.
Pete Kalu has worked across the Greater Manchester, Merseyside and Huddersfield
areas, for schools, Summer schools, playschemes and libraries. He is the
author of five novels, and has won numerous writing awards including BBC
Young Playwright of the Year, First Prize, Liverpool Film Script Competition
and BBC North West Comedy Competition Winner. He has worked closely with
Local Authority Ethnic Minority Support Services.
Secondary Schools:
For secondary schools he tells dilemma stories as well as a diverse range
of thought-provoking tales from around the world. Below is a description
of a typical whole day programme for secondary schools.
Whole Day Programme:
Individual class session lasting approximately one hour to one hour thirty
minutes. Four sessions across a whole day. Each session breaks down into:
- 30 minutes 'dilemma story' storytelling by Pete Kalu followed by either:
(a) the pupils in groups debating the resolution of the dilemma Pete's
story poses then presenting their solutions to the whole class
The stories are good for building thinking skills, and developing
ways of presenting an argument. These skills feed directly into essay
writing skills.
or
(b) the students composing their own dilemma stories.
The stories are constructed on classic narrative lines (setting,
development, complication, crisis, resolution) and so also foster a
better understanding of story structure.
The above are adaptable for primary schools. Also available for primary
schools are a variety of West African and Caribbean trickster tales featuring
assorted loveable rogues from Anansi the Spider, to Monkey, to Tortoise.
The stories are a warm introduction to aspects of West African and Caribbean
culture, and promote the universal virtues of brains over brawn, of inventiveness,
quick-wittedness and resourcefulness under pressure. Delivered in Pete
Kalu's own inimitable style - using song, spoken word, music and action,
the stories are funny, engaging and always surprising.
Pete Kalu has told his trickster stories to all age ranges from
reception class age to eleven year olds and in settings including state
schools, supplementary schools, special schools and youth services. He
automatically adapts the material to the audience before him.
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