Talking About Your Generation – an intergenerational storytelling program

Partner: Northern Grampians Shire Council, Gariwerd – Victoria 

What makes this project special 

What happens when you bring together 20 teenagers and a group of respected senior residents from across Northern Grampians to create films together?

In Talking About Your Generation, the answer was joy-filled workshops, unlikely friendships, and deeply moving films that captured the heart of the community. Designed as an intergenerational storytelling and filmmaking program, the project brought together young people and seniors to share stories, learn new skills, and see one another beyond stereotypes.

From the very first workshop,  it was clear this would be something special. After some initial awkwardness and hesitation, connections began to form through shared interests, curiosity, and growing mutual respect. While the young people often took the lead with technology, it was the older participants who arrived with a wealth of lived experience, insight, and stories shaped by decades in the community.

The program culminated in a community screening night filled with laughter, tears, and celebration. Storytellers of all ages saw their voices valued, their stories honoured, and their connections strengthened.

“The sharing we did through the filming has been a wonderful journey. It took me back to my childhood and made me realise I’ve contributed more to this community than I thought.”

– Gaye, Older Storyteller 

At a glance

  • WHAT: bespoke intergenerational storytelling and filmmaking program.
  • WHY: To build meaningful connections between generations, strengthen digital storytelling skills, and amplify local stories that are rarely heard.
  • WHO: Developed and delivered by Jayde Harding and Natasha Akib from Digital Storytellers and commissioned by Northern Grampians Shire Council for Year 10–11 students and senior community members.
  • OUTCOMES: 
    • Strong, ongoing connections between younger and older participants
    • Local stories captured, shared and celebrated
    • Stereotypes broken down and mutual respect built across generations
    • Increased confidence and capability in digital storytelling and filmmaking

“If you actually sit down and get past the awkward stage, older storytellers are a lot easier to get along with.”

– Henry, Younger Storyteller

The background – for those who want to dive a little deeper

Talking About Your Generation was developed to support Council’s commitment to building healthy, connected communities for people of all ages. For many older residents, ageing can bring reduced mobility, fewer social opportunities, and withdrawal from hobbies and community life, factors that contribute to social isolation and poorer health outcomes. At the same time, young people in the region were still navigating the social impacts of COVID-19, with face-to-face connection becoming less common and confidence taking time to rebuild.

This program intentionally brought these two groups together to create space for connection, skill-sharing, and collaboration while also building digital literacy and shining a light on powerful local stories.

“This was a new experience for me, completely different to anything I’ve done before—and it was great. Those young people have got a lot going for them, and I’ve learned to appreciate them much more.”

– Maurie, Older Storyteller

The journey 

Digital Storytellers delivered a series of five workshops across Stawell and St Arnaud, guiding participants through the full storytelling process, from idea generation to filming and editing.

Older and younger participants formed small teams to co-create short films about the people, places and issues that shape life in Northern Grampians. Young storytellers often led the technical aspects of filming and editing, while working closely with older participants as collaborators, interviewees and creative partners. The stories spanned personal histories, community issues, local landmarks and environmental themes, focusing on topics where both generations found common ground and shared purpose.

Along the way, participants forged unexpected connections, exchanged skills and perspectives, and created films that reflect the resilience, character and pride of Northern Grampians Shire.

Workshop pathway

  • Workshop 1 – FIND your story: Building trust and connection, exploring community stories, planning using the Story Canvas
  • Workshop 2 – MAKE your story: Filming quality interviews, active listening, and capturing dynamic b-roll
  • Workshop 3 – Filming day: On-location filming with facilitation and technical support
  • Workshops 4 & 5 – EDIT your story: Shaping footage into compelling short films

What was created

  • 20 short documentary films co-created by younger and older storytellers
  • One program documentary capturing the journey, featuring participant-shot footage and professionally filmed scenes
  • Five hands-on workshops building storytelling skills, confidence and intergenerational connection

“It’s made me think about how many skills and talents young people have that aren’t often tapped into. I’d love to see more programs like this—ones that remove fear of difference.”

– Gilda, Older Storyteller, Stawell

Why this matters for councils and community organisations

Talking About Your Generation demonstrates what’s possible when councils invest in programs that centre connection, creativity and lived experience.

Intergenerational storytelling programs like this deliver multiple community outcomes at once. They reduce social isolation, build digital confidence, strengthen local pride, and create meaningful opportunities for people of different ages to connect as equals. Rather than positioning one generation as the “learner” and the other as the “teacher”, these programs see skills, stories and perspectives flow both ways.

For councils and community organisations, this approach offers a scalable and adaptable way to:

  • Strengthen social cohesion and belonging across generations
  • Activate community members as storytellers and cultural contributors
  • Surface local stories that can inform planning, engagement and advocacy
  • Build digital capability using accessible, low-barrier tools
  • Create tangible creative outputs alongside lasting social impact

Could this work for your organisation or sector?

If you are interested in bringing a similar digital storytelling program to your local community, please get in touch to see what’s possible.

 

NEXT: We Know Your Name, But Not Your Story – Indigo Shire Council

 

Category

FEATURED, STORIES, STORIES FOR IMPACT

Tags

community storytelling, council storytelling, digital storytelling, filmmaking workshops, intergenerational connection, intergenerational storytelling, programs for seniors, social cohesion, youth program