Explore the Projects


Stories for All brings together over forty community and University of Kansas partner projects. This page enables you to identify partner projects that interest you and takes you to their websites.

You can search and filter projects by topic, partner, or digital genre. Please contact storiesforall@ku.edu if you have any difficulties.
painting of a woman

Coming to the Heartland

Elizabeth MacGonagle


Elizabeth MacGonagle

Associate Professor of History and of African and African American Studies, University of Kansas University of Kansas
Focusing on the diversity, adversity, and struggles of Latin American and African immigrants in the Heartland, this initiative asks how the new digital age affects the stories that immigrants tell, as well as the possibilities for their visibility in the wider community.

Community-based Approaches to Sigital Storytelling: Marginalized Women’s Technology Access and Use

Hyunjin Seo


Hyunjin Seo

Professor, Oscar Stauffer Chair in Journalism, and Associate Dean for Research and Development, William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Kansas University of Kansas
This project offers education in digital storytelling technology to women transitioning from incarceration. Based on a co-design approach, the program participants will learn and use digital storytelling techniques to tell their own stories of challenges and opportunities related to online privacy and security.
few people and text

Pa k’u’x / Desde el centro / From the Center

Ignacio Carvajal


Ignacio Carvajal

Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, University of Kansas, and Co-Principal Investigator, Stories for All University of Kansas

Nela Tahay


Nela Tahay

K’iche’ instructor, Nahualá, Sololá, Guatemala

Willy Barreno


Willy Barreno

Founder, Ki’kotemal Tijob’al, Guatemala
This project serves two main purposes, both of them anchored around Guatemala specifically and Central America in general. The first aim of the project is to create a digital repository dedicated to Maya K’iche’ language learning. K’iche’ is the most widely spoken Mayan language in Guatemala.