Abstract

Students’ reading comprehension on disciplinary texts commonly involves the interaction between the cognitive aspect and the text itself, but little is known how it is carried out through multimodal reading. To fill this practical void, this article reports the findings of classroom action research of the pre-service teachers learning disciplinary vocabularies through different modes of meaning, the socially and culturally shaped resources or semiotic structure for making meaning: video viewing and graphic organizers. This study proposes that multimodal reading has the potential to promote the role of student teachers as designers and navigators in reading English disciplinary texts. Pedagogically, this multimodal engagement not only creates interactive content learning but also it encourages the students to become autonomous language learners. In addition to multimodal reading activities, the students were motivated not only to learn about language but also to learn through language. Moreover, multimodality reading tasks can scaffold comprehension and production of the academic language of the students. Finally, students who are engaged in cognitive work in content areas (e.g., statistics for second language research) have the motivation to learn a language that supports their learning. Multimodality reading tasks can support students ‘communication, increasing students’ academic writing and students’ academic vocabulary development as well.

Highlights

  • Multimodal literacy is a widely established concept that refers to the ability to construct meanings by interconnecting texts with different sign systems or semiotic resources

  • Students who are engaged in cognitive work in content areas have the motivation to learn a language that supports their learning

  • The Seventy students ( 50 females and 20males) who enrolled in the course of Statistics for second language research participated in this project. 70 participants agreed to engage in two main activities: (1) Reading print-based texts and reading digital-based texts and completing the text to the reading logs, and (2) creating graphic organizers used to deconstruct complex concepts and clarify the content meaning

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Summary

Introduction

Multimodal literacy is a widely established concept that refers to the ability to construct meanings by interconnecting texts with different sign systems or semiotic resources. Today's disciplinary texts require readers to comprehend information from an extensive range of images integrated with printed materials. The term literacy no longer solely signifies linear reading and writing (i.e., print literacy); instead, literacy has become pluralized, with definitions opening up to recognize the diverse and interconnected ways through which humans can and do make meaning (Jewitt & Kress, 2003). It is within this context that the concept of multimodal literacy has arisen

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