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Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University [email protected]

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Page 1: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Multimodal Learning

Environments

Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005

Dr Maureen WalshAustralian Catholic [email protected]

Page 2: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au
Page 3: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au
Page 4: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au
Page 5: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au
Page 6: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

“The young person who watches digital TV, downloads MP3 music onto a personal player, checks e-mail on a personal organiser and sends symbolised messages to a mobile phone of a friend will not be satisfied with a 500-word revision guide for [HSC] physics.”

Abbot, 2003

Page 7: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Researchers contend…[e.g.Kress (2003); Bearne (2003); Unsworth (2001); Callow & Zammitt

(2002)]

• Language-based pedagogy is no longer sufficient for literacy practices needed.

• Students need ‘multiple literacy practices’ or ‘multiliteracies’.

• Theories of reading have been drawn from the reading of monomodal or print-based texts.

Page 8: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

• Heath (2000) Neurobiological changes are occurring as a result of new modes of communication.

• “Better theories of learning are embedded in video games than many children in primary and secondary schools ever experience in the classroom.” (Gee, 2003) “ … encourage children to be more critical, constructive & reflective.”

• “Computer games require concentration, forward planning, lateral thinking & sustained problem solving” (Johnson)

•.

Page 9: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Theory of Multimodality …(Kress & Van Leeuwen, 2001; Kress et al, 2001; Kress,

2003)

• emerged from attempts to conceptualise changed learning & literacy practices [visual literacy, technoliteracy, e-literacy, digital/silicon literacy, multiliteracies.]

• communication occurs through different but synchronous modes: language, print, images, graphics, movement, gesture, texture, music, sound.

Page 10: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Multimodal texts -2 or more modes READING• Picture books and

information texts• Talking books• CDRom narratives and

factual texts• E-books• Web-sites, web search,

web quests, book raps• Games, DVDs• Emails, discussion

boards.

PRODUCING• Emails, discussion

boards• Slide shows [KidPix/

power point]• Digital photos• Digital videos, i-movies• Video editing• E-books• Web sites / home page• SMS messaging

Page 11: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Multimodal Learning Environments

Incorporate a range of tasks that require a constant interchange with others and with texts using the modes of speech, print, image, movement, gesture and sound.

Page 12: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

‘Multimodal Learning and Literacy Project’ 2004 – ACU, CEO Sydney

& CEO Parramatta

Purpose: • to examine how students read and interact

with visual and multimodal texts in different curriculum areas, and

• to examine what types of learning and or literacy are apparent in students' interactions with such texts.

Page 13: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

14 Teachers developed a range of tasks with multimodal texts, K-8

• Students [majority ESL] worked in small groups

• Used one or more multimodal text [web site, CD Rom, picture book, information text, DVD]

• Tasks integrated different curriculum areas

• Sequence of tasks were developed over several lessons. These frequently resulted in a …

Page 14: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Multimodal

Learning

Environment

Page 15: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

1) Year 2 – Picture Book and CD Rom

• Chn listened to the ‘words’ /print of the story ‘Grandma and Me’

• Drew their own illustrations of the story.

• Read the CD Rom version.

• Played the CD Rom game.

• Discussed with teacher the differences between the print / CDRom story.

Video clip

Page 16: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

2) What were these children learning?

• Prediction, visualisation, decoding, making meaning - shared talk with teacher – produced own visual text

• Read & responded to CD Rom – shared together – auditory/ visual/ gestural / kinaesthetic responses

• Compared features of book with CD Rom – metatextual awareness/metacognition

Page 17: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

3) Yr 3 – Web Quest & Power Point

• Pairs of Ss completed web quest on Gallipoli & Anzac Day – questions from T as guide.

• Collated findings into an information report then into Power Point.

• Presented to whole class.• Answered questions/comments from class

members about their learning/process. Video clip

Page 18: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

What were these children learning?• Understanding the historical and

geographical events of Gallipoli.• Insights into the culture of Anzac Day.• Search skills, reading & interpreting

questions, following links, locating & synthesising information.

• Developing power point – organising information in own words, technical & production skills

• Oral presentation skills & responses, peer support

Page 19: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

4) Yrs 3-4 – Visual literacy• Ts used Gorilla, to develop Ss background

knowledge of visual codes,

• Groups applied to range of picture books [e.g. An Ordinary Day], Advertisements from local paper, 1st Harry Potter film.

• Ss used digital cameras to compose photos applying visual codes.

• Ss participated in Book Raps with other schools – activities e.g. dramatisation, photos, p/point, survey, journal responses

Page 20: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

What were these children learning?• Visual codes [angles, framing, colour,

demands/offers/salience etc] – how they construct meaning. + metalanguage.

• Application & articulation of this knowledge to other texts/products.

• Peer collaboration, reflective learning, creative engagement, critical awareness, critical literacy – deep learning evident.

• Online communication & learning.

Page 21: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

5) Yr 4 – Scaffolded Web Quest

• Ss in mixed ability groups research 2 Aust animals using websites/information books

• Whole class retrieval chart provided as scaffold – Ss recorded information.

• Ts provided continual scaffolding of knowledge, skills & language.

• Ss compared & contrasted 2 animals from chart. Synthesised into concept map.

• Produced information report on powerpoint. Video clip

Page 22: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

What were these children learning?

• Science content re animals, content vocabulary & language.

• Technology skills of searching/navigating – locating, comprehending, synthesising & recording main facts.

• S talking was to process learning – peer support.

• Oral – written knowledge: from websites to retrieval chart to powerpoint - developed through T. scaffolding

Page 23: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Other examples

• Year 8 Secondary students evaluated web quests and developed home pages. [For further Secondary egs see Beavis 2002]

• Year 6 class – digital videoing, i-movies and video editing with Secondary boys.

• Year 6 – developed animation in advertisements

• Year 6 – developed products using Inspiration software.

Page 24: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Findings – Literacy• Decoding not an apparent problem – in some

cases Ss read aloud to help each other. [Coding practice]

• Comprehension developed as Ss were motivated to find information – collaborated. [Semantic practice] – Many found recording information ‘in own words’ the most difficult.

• Only some instances of critical practice.• Metalanguage of visual grammar / digital codes

assisted Ss literacy & learning.• Literacy embedded within integrated, purposeful

tasks.

Page 25: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Findings - Learning• Talking enhanced Ss learning as they

talked through the process of the tasks and their understanding of the texts and curriculum content.

• Peer support and collaborative learning occurred.

• Evidence of problem solving, reflective thinking, metacognition, deep learning, creative thinking.

• Ss’ articulation of their learning- revealing.

Page 26: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Implications

Multimodal learning environments can provide stimulating engagement in learning and literacy when…

• tasks are carefully planned in a logical, coherent sequence,

• integrated with curriculum content and skills, and

• Ss are able to respond to and use different modes of communication.

Page 27: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

“What’s our children’s working environment going to be like in the future?

Will it look like their gaming life, where they’re checking 5 emails while having a conversation, while moving through these virtual worlds, or is it going to look like reading a book?

If we’re going to train kids for that future, we probably need environments that are going to reflect what it’s really going to be like”. (Johnson, in SMH 3 June 2005)

Page 28: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au

Survey of 350 students• Majority read books, particularly novels – did not find reading

difficult or boring.

• Larger nos of students either watched TV, played digital games than read ‘in their spare time’.

• Majority enjoyed using the internet in their spare time and ‘never’ found it boring - commented that they did not have trouble navigating it and did not need help from older people.

• Larger no of students said they found it easier to read on a screen than printed page.

• Internet use was dependent on access at home.• Older students used emails more frequently than younger students.

Page 29: Multimodal Learning Environments Presentation for Think About It Conference 17 June 2005 Dr Maureen Walsh Australian Catholic University m.walsh@mary.acu.edu.au