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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Irish storyteller Bartholomew “Batt”
Burns will present the 2003 James P. Curtis Distinguished Lecture
at The University of Alabama on Tuesday, March 25, at 7 p.m. in
the ballroom of the Sheraton Four Points Hotel ballroom. His topic
will be “Ireland’s Oral Tradition as a Dynamic Teaching
Tool.”
A reception, immediately following the lecture, will feature Henri’s
Notions, the South’s premier Celtic band.
Burns, an award-winning storyteller, author, and teacher from Ireland,
will speak to the importance of storytelling to children. As an
elementary school teacher and then a principal, Burns’ experiments
with teaching through stories convinced him that storytelling can
be a powerful pedagogical tool.
In a dramatic presentation that will be part lecture and part performance,
Burns will give his audience a rich insight into the great Irish
tradition of storytelling and verse. His performance, laced with
Irish wit and humor, draws upon the works of famous Irish writers
such as W.B. Yeats, Brendan Kenneally, Frank O’Connor and
Bryan McMahon.
This presentation is sponsored by the UA College
of Education in conjunction with its alumni association, the
Capstone College of Education Society. Admission is free and the
general public is invited to attend.
For more information, contact at Alexia M. Kartis, Capstone College
of Education Society Director, at 205/348-6881.
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