Publication | Closed Access
Rethinking Composing in a Digital Age: Authoring Literate Identities Through Multimodal Storytelling
262
Citations
34
References
2010
Year
Second Language WritingPoetry WritingEducationNew LiteraciesWriting AssessmentComposing ProcessTheoretical LensMultilingual WritingDigital AgeLiteracy PracticeMultimodal WritingWriting InstructionDigital StorytellingCreative WritingWriting StudiesInteractive StorytellingDigital LiteracyMultimodal PragmaticArtsMultimodal CommunicationPrint Modalities Students
In this article, the authors engage the theoretical lens of multimodality in rethinking the practices and processes of composing in classrooms. Specifically, they focus on how learning new composing practices led some fifth-grade students to author new literate identities—what they call authorial stances—in their classroom community. Their analysis adds to the current research on the production and analysis of multimodal texts through an analysis of the interrelationships between multimodal composing processes and the development of literate identities. They found that by extending the composing process beyond print modalities students’ composing shifted in significant ways to reflect the circulating nature of literacies and texts and increased the modes of participation and engagement within the classroom curriculum.These findings are based on an ethnographic study of a multimodal storytelling project in a fifth-grade urban classroom.
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