Blog

  • An enlightening illustration of the power of narrative for memory

    Not long ago, I was listening to an interview with the renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. Before getting to the true subject of the podcast, Tyson and the host were engaged in a freewheeling discussion on a variety of subjects, including Van Gogh’s painting “Starry Night” and Longfellow’s poem about Paul Revere’s legendary ride through the streets of colonial Massachusetts.

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    John Sadowsky Leadership & Storytelling
  • The enhanced memory effect of learning through story

    In recent posts, we have seen that my business school students were far better at recalling stories and cases than they were at remembering facts, theory, or the rational discourse of lectures. At the same time that I was observing this enhanced memory effect in my classrooms, I was also finding research that explains why this might be so. In

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    John Sadowsky Leadership & Storytelling
  • Storytelling first, yes, but never to the exclusion of rationality

    This week, a reader comment showed me the need to clarify something I stated in a misleading manner. The observation came from a former client who has followed my work and writing for many years, and she certainly has a clear understanding of who I am and what I believe. Her remark concerned the title of the recent post “Science

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    John Sadowsky Leadership & Storytelling
  • Why stories form our native language

    At the end of the last blog entry, I promised to discuss some of the evidence I found that thinking in narrative form is a natural tendency of the human mind. Once again, my curiosity around this theme—narrative thinking versus scientific thinking—stemmed largely from my ongoing observations as a lecturer. As I leaned more and more in the direction of

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    John Sadowsky Leadership & Storytelling
  • Science vs. story: which approach is the most useful for learning?

    In the past weeks, I have written about my students’ capacity to recall, with high levels of precision and detail, many of the stories and lessons from the cases we studied. Moreover, over a period of some twenty-five years, I have been continuously surprised by the frequency and the insightful nature of the communication I have received from former students.

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    John Sadowsky Leadership & Storytelling
  • Business students and narrative recall

    The previous post provided some detail about a phenomenon that began to fascinate me more and more, at the time when real-world cases and anecdotes were taking center stage in my teaching. As I wrote previously, I had observed rather quickly that students were retaining information better and longer when we presented it in these narrative forms. Once I had clear evidence

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    John Sadowsky Leadership & Storytelling