12

A narrated slideshow is usually shared as a video including audio recordings synchronized to images. While some content creators may want to start shooting and creating full-motion video on a smartphone or tablet, it is generally easier to create higher quality and thoughtful videos by using applications which create narrated slideshows. Narrated slideshows can be created during Sunday School or Wednesday night classes, on mission trips, or at any other time using still images and audio recordings which give an explanation and more details about each picture.

Ingredients

The three basic “digital ingredients” for a narrated slideshow are:

  1. a story
  2. a script
  3. photos

Creators can start with any of these ingredients, but if documenting an event, often photos seem like the logical place to start. Our smartphone digital cameras today can take an almost unlimited number of pictures, and it can be overwhelming to face tens or even hundreds of photos following a trip or event. I often recommend that people start with a SPECIFIC STORY from a trip or event which they want to share with others, and then select ONLY five to ten photos which can be used to share that story.

To make the creation process easier from a technical standpoint, I recommend either:

  1. Creating a new photo album on your smartphone with JUST the selected photos for the narrated slideshow
  2. Copying selected photos into a new FOLDER on the computer which will be used to create the narrated slideshow

Think carefully about the STORY you want to tell with your photos when making selections. Sometimes, the order of photos will naturally follow a sequence of events from a story. At other times, however, the way in which you choose to tell (or ‘unwrap’) your story can dictate both the photos which are selected and their sequence.

One storytelling model, or framework, which I frequently use with students and participants in digital storytelling / media creation workshops, is the “five photo story.”

On the “5 Photo Story” page of ShowWithMedia.com I define these projects.

A five photo story is a collection of five images which tell a story of some kind without using supplementary text, audio or video. The five photos should “stand alone” as a story.[1]

5 Photo Story by Wesley Fryer, on Flickr
5 Photo Story” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

Consider starting with this “5 Photo Story model” when you begin working on a narrated slideshow project.

Examples

This 4 minute video is a very basic narrated slideshow I helped a class of 4th grade students in Sunday School create in March 2014. This was shared on the “BLASTcast Podcast” website I started back around 2007 using WordPress.com. We used the free iOS app ShadowPuppet (also available as ShadowPuppetEDU) to create this narrated slideshow. [2]

Symbols of Lent (Video) by Wesley Fryer, on Flickr
Symbols of Lent (Video)” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

Back in 2011, after our middle daughter attended a Christian summer event called “SuperStart” designed for pre-teens, she created a 3 minute narrated slideshow with a friend on the car ride home. It was created using the app SonicPics on an iPhone. This was also posted to the BLASTcast website.

SuperStart Weekend - Grapevine, Texas (V by Wesley Fryer, on Flickr
SuperStart Weekend – Grapevine, Texas (V” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

The 2.5 minute video, “Kids Touched by God in Kenya by Kelly Ewing,” is an example of a narrated slideshow created after a church mission trip to Africa. This was created on an iPad using the app, “Explain Everything.”

Kids Touched by God in Kenya by Wesley Fryer, on Flickr
Kids Touched by God in Kenya” (CC BY 2.0) by Wesley Fryer

More resources about creating narrated slideshows are available on ShowWithMedia.com.

(This is just a start to this chapter, more will be added soon!)


  1. “5 Photo Story.” Show What You Know with Media, 3 Feb. 2012, https://showwithmedia.com/5-photo-story/.
  2. Seesaw. “Shadow Puppet Edu.” Seesaw, https://web.seesaw.me/shadow-puppet-edu. Accessed 5 Apr. 2021.

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