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E-grāmata: Multiliteracies, Emerging Media, and College Writing Instruction [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(California State University, Northridge, USA)
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This book proposes a broad-based multiliteracies theory and praxis for college writing curriculum. Khadka expands on the work of the New London Groups theory of multiliteracies by integrating work from related disciplinary fields such as media studies, intercultural communication, World Englishes, writing studies, and literacy studies to show how they might be brought together to aid in designing curriculum for teaching multiple literacies, including visual, digital, intercultural, and multimodal, in writing and literacy classes. Building on insights developed from qualitative analysis of data from the authors own course, the book examines the ways in which diverse groups of students draw on existing literacy practices while also learning to cultivate the multiple literacies, including academic, rhetorical, visual, intercultural, and multimodal, needed in mediating the communication challenges of a globalized world. This approach allows for both an exploration of students negotiation of their cultural, linguistic, and modal differences and an examination of teaching practices in these classrooms, collectively demonstrating the challenges and opportunities afforded by a broad-based multiliteracies theory and praxis. This book will be of particular interest to scholars and researchers in writing studies, rhetoric and communication studies, multimodality, media studies, literacy studies, and language education.
Acknowledgments viii
1 Exigencies for a Broad-Based Multiliteracies Theory and Praxis for College Writing Instruction
1(45)
1.1 Situating the Study: Exigencies and Gaps
1(2)
1.2 Demographic Shift in Student Population
3(1)
1.3 Why Demographic Shift Matters
4(1)
1.4 The Study
5(2)
1.5 Limitations of the Study
7(1)
1.6 Globalized Workplace, Multiple Literacies, and Their Uptake in Writing Instruction
7(8)
1.7 Definition of Key Terms
15(21)
1.7.1 Multimodal and Digital Composition
16(1)
1.7.2 Emerging Digital/New Media
17(2)
1.7.3 Inter cultural Competence
19(2)
1.7.4 World Englishes
21(2)
1.7.5 Remediation and Media Convergence
23(2)
1.7.6 Negotiation
25(2)
1.7.7 Code-Switching and Code-Meshing
27(1)
1.7.8 New Workforce and Changing Workplace
28(2)
1.7.9 Essayist Literacy
30(3)
1.7.10 Broad-Based Multiliteracies
33(3)
1.8 Research Goals and Questions
36(1)
1.9 Research Methods
36(8)
1.9.1 Interview
37(1)
1.9.2 Observation
38(1)
1.9.3 Artifact Analysis
38(2)
1.9.4 Contextual, Interpretive, and Ethical Teacher Research
40(2)
1.9.5 Participants' Literacy Bios
42(2)
1.10
Chapter Division
44(2)
2 (Teaching) Essayist Literacy within Multimedia and Multiliteracy Contexts
46(31)
2.1 Essayist Literacy for a Linguistically and Culturally Diverse Classroom
46(3)
2.2 Curriculum Design
49(4)
2.3 Case Studies
53(20)
Sophia
53(4)
Andre
57(3)
Stephanie
60(2)
Eric
62(4)
Jasmine
66(4)
Jihun
70(3)
2.4 Conclusion and Implications
73(4)
3 Emerging Digital/New Media, and the Expanded Notion of Composition in a Diverse Writing Class
77(25)
3.1 Remediation and Media Convergence in a Composition Class
78(22)
3.1.1 Critical and Reflective Consumption of Media Artifacts
78(2)
3.1.1.1 Critical and Reflective Consumption Case Studies
80(4)
3.1.2 An Active Production of Media and Knowledge Artifacts
84(3)
3.1.2.1 Remediation Case Studies
87(6)
3.1.3 Media Convergence in Motion: Collaborative Documentary Making
93(2)
3.1.3.1 Documentary Production Case Studies
95(5)
3.2 Conclusion
100(2)
4 Implications of the Study and Future Research Directions
102(19)
4.1 Curriculum Redesign
102(6)
4.2 Faculty Development
108(7)
4.3 Material Conditions and Labor Issues
115(3)
4.4 Assessment
118(2)
4.5 Conclusion
120(1)
Appendices
121(40)
Appendix 1 Participants' Biographies
122(13)
Appendix 2 Unit-wise Interview Questions
135(3)
Appendix 3 Assignments
138(7)
Appendix 4 Course Materials
145(2)
Appendix 5 Course Calendar
147(14)
Works Cited 161(9)
Index 170
Santosh Khadka is Assistant Professor of English at California State University Northridge. He has co-edited three booksBridging the Multimodal Gap: From Theory to Practice, Designing and Implementing Multimodal Curricula and Programs (Routledge), and Narratives of Marginalized Identities in Higher Education: Inside and Outside the Academy (Routledge).