http://www.science-story-telling.eu/en/stories/by-nos-feature/empirical-evidence/
and his losing game to prove the existence of the vacuum. Guericke and vacuum What would be a suitable model to describe the likeness of an atom? Rutherford's experimental findings [...] lot of her drawings. You'll find ideas on how Sibylla's idea make drawings of caterpillars and butterflies may have emerged in Sibylla and the cocoons
http://www.science-story-telling.eu/en/stories/by-nos-feature/step-by-step/
, was able to find the cause of the scurvy by employing a highly systematic approach: a comparative, experimentally-based study on his patients. More details can be found in the narration Lind and scurvy [...] cannons. Rumford and calorics What would be a suitable model to describe the likeness of an atom? Rutherford's experimental findings were in contradiction to the theories represented
http://www.science-story-telling.eu/en/stories/by-topic/metamorphosis/
Metamorphosis Listen Maria Sibylla Merian started to observe caterpillar cocoons and make drawings of those at the age of 13. Nineteen years later, she published her first book in which she layed out the principle of metamorphosis and illustrated it with a lot of her drawings. You'll find ideas on how Sibylla's idea make drawings of caterpillars and butterflies may have emerged in Sibylla and the cocoons
http://www.science-story-telling.eu/en/storytelling-howto/
Useful tips for narrating a story (adapted from M. Clough, 2010) Listen Have an interesting story to tell. The key of storytelling is to provide listeners with a good story. If you don't have a story worth listening to, no one will listen. Focus on your audience. You are definitely not going to tell a horror story to little kids! Just like you shouldn't tell an overly childish story to older ones. Find a good story for the listeners. Memorize the basic story. If your story has dialogue, you don't need to memorize the exact dialogue, just