ABSTRACT

Multimodal Signs of Learning proposes a methodology to uncover evidence of learning in students’ multimodal compositions. Informed by social semiotic theory, the book tracks representation of subject content from physical and embodied teaching resources to students’ handmade artefacts and physical presentations.

Using materials from secondary school history and science classrooms, multimodal realizations of specific representational processes are tracked from the input of resources through to the students’ multimodal compositions – their posters, models and physical presentations. Through tracking semiosis, the book exposes the epistemologies inherent in the representational choices articulated in the students’ multimodal designs. These, it is argued, are to be valued as signs of learning. Learning is thus characterized as ‘design’ and the transformation of subject content through representation in different modes shown not only to promote learning, but also to contain evidence for its recognition.

The book raises important questions about what constitutes multimodal learning and how it can be applied. It contributes to the growing body of research into the changing dynamics of classrooms and assessment practices and will be of great interest to researchers, and academics in the fields of education research, multimodality, semiotics and communication.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|18 pages

Theoretical principles and perspectives

chapter 3|13 pages

Multimodal classroom data

Theoretical positioning

chapter 4|24 pages

Tracking semiosis

Framing the representational structures

chapter 5|12 pages

Macro semiosis

Classroom contexts

chapter 6|7 pages

Micro semiosis

Students' designs

chapter 7|13 pages

Tracking semiosis

Science lessons case study

chapter 8|20 pages

Tracking semiosis

History lessons case study

chapter 9|17 pages

Signs of learning

Process charting

chapter 10|25 pages

Signs of learning

Mode mapping

chapter 11|3 pages

Signs of learning

Conformity or divergence?