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Document no.
Title
Multiliteracies: rethinking what we mean by literacy and what we teach as literacy [in] the context of global cultural diversity and new communications technologies / Mary Kalantzis & Bill Cope.
Author
Kalantzis, Mary; Cope, Bill
Corporate Author
Centre for Workplace Communication and Culture (Australia) (CWCC)
Imprint
Haymarket, N.S.W.: Centre for Workplace Communication and Culture, 1997. 23 p.
Series
CWCC occasional paper no.21
Abstract
This paper examines the pedagogy of literacy in light of the radical changes taking place in the areas of citizenship, working life and community life. These changes will require what the authors term as 'multiliteracies', which will influence the way in which English literacy is taught. The concept of multiliteracies highlights two, related changes. The first is the increasing significance of cultural and linguistic diversity and the emergence of multiple Englishes. This change is intensified by immigration, multiculturalism and global economic integration. The second change is the influence of new communications technologies. Meaning is made in ways that are increasingly 'multimodal', i.e. integration of written-linguistic modes of meaning with visual, audio, gestural and spatial patterns of meaning. These two developments necessitate the transformation of both the substance and the pedagogy of subject English. The need for multiliteracies requires a functional grammar to help language learners to describe language differences (cultural, subcultural, regional/national, technical, context specific, etc.) and the multimodal channels of meaning needed for communication, particularly in light of the prominence of multimedia, desktop publishing, email and the Internet. The paper introduces the Multiliteracies Project, which aims to work collaboratively with teachers in the development of innovative ways to teach literacy and to supplement existing strategies, and discusses how the multiliteracies ideas are being implemented and adapted in places of learning, ranging from South Africa to Australia.
Subject
ISBN
1875940480
Availability 1
National Centre for Vocational Education Research, PO Box 8288 Station Arcade, Adelaide SA 5000, Australia. Ph: +61 8 8230 8400; Fax: +61 8 8212 3436; <Email: voced@ncver.edu.au> Document delivery service in accordance with Australian copyright laws.
Availability 2
May be available for purchase from the Centre for Workplace Communication and Culture, PO Box K481, Haymarket NSW 2000, Australia. Ph: +61 2 9281 6575; Fax: +61 2 9281 6587; <Email: cwcc@tmx.com.au>
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Search results: 1 - 1
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