ABSTRACT

This book brings together social semiotics, cultural studies, multiliteracies, and other approaches in order to theorize very different learning environments, giving visibility to the modal effect in a range of disciplines. It highlights the ideological nature of discursive practices, examines questions of access, and argues for transformation of these practices, with a constant eye on issues of social justice and equity. Contributors argue that we can harness learners’ representational resources through making these resources visible, and creating less regulated spaces in the curriculum in which they can be used. Examples from primary education through to adult continuing education are used throughout the text.

part I|111 pages

Recognising Resources

part I|111 pages

Multimodal Texts and Practices

chapter 2|22 pages

"The Pen Talks My Story"

South African Children's Multimodal Storytelling as Artistic Practice

chapter 3|16 pages

Resources, Representation, and Regulation in Civil Engineering Drawing

An Autoethnographic Perspective

chapter 4|14 pages

Arguing Art

chapter 7|20 pages

Mobile Literacies

Messaging, Txt, and Social Media in the m4Lit Project

part II|100 pages

Redesigning Resources

part II|100 pages

Multimodal Pedagogies and Access

chapter 8

Design

The Rhetorical Work of Shaping the Semiotic World

chapter 9|21 pages

Multimodality and Medicine

Designing for Social Futures

chapter 10|18 pages

An Aesthetic Language for Teaching and Learning

Multimodality and Contemporary Art Practice

chapter 11|15 pages

Jewellery Students as Designers of Meaning

A Multimodal Approach to Semiotic Resources