Publication | Closed Access
Multimodal Pedagogies for Teacher Education in<scp>TESOL</scp>
90
Citations
20
References
2016
Year
Instructional ChallengesEducationLanguage EducationLiteracy DevelopmentMultimodal CommunicationTeaching MethodLanguage TeachingTeacher EducationMultimodal Literacy PracticesLanguage StudiesLiteracy PracticeMultimodal WritingLiteracy LearningMultimodal PedagogiesMultiliteracyDigital LiteracyClassroom LanguageDigital Language TeachingProfessional DevelopmentTeacher PreparationMultimodal PragmaticLiteracy Teaching
English language learners increasingly use digital and multimodal literacy, yet teachers often feel unprepared to integrate such practices into curricula, confronting epistemological and instructional challenges. The authors examine how multimodal literacy practices can be integrated into teacher education for TESOL. The first author designed and implemented two multimodal practices for preservice and in‑service teacher education programs in the United States. The authors suggest ways to overcome these challenges and propose future directions for TESOL teacher education and professional development.
As a growing number of English language learners ( ELL s) engage in digital and multimodal literacy practices in their daily lives, teachers are starting to incorporate multimodal approaches into their instruction. However, anecdotal and empirical evidence shows that teachers often feel unprepared for integrating such practices into their curricula (Coyle, Yañez, & Verdú, 2010; Sadik, 2008). This particular concern has led the authors of this essay to examine ways in which multimodal literacy practices can be integrated into teacher education for teaching English to speakers of other languages ( TESOL ). This Teaching Issues article describes how the first author designed and implemented two multimodal practices for preservice and in‐service teacher education programs in the United States. The essay highlights the challenges of incorporating multimodal practices into teacher education (e.g., epistemological issues, instructional challenges, and teachers’ resistance to multimodal practices). The authors offer suggestions for overcoming those challenges and propose future directions for TESOL teacher education and professional development.
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