Multimodality, creativity and children's meaning making: drawings, writings, imaginings
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Date
2016
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
SUN Journals
Abstract
This paper uses a case study of two children's drawings, early writings and imaginative role play to illustrate how children use a variety of modes to make meaning in ways which are creative and beyond the design and expectation of adults. It aims to valorise the kinds of practice which children routinely engage in but which are often overlooked and de-valued by adults, both parents and teachers. Framed by social semiotic theories of communication, multimodal pedagogies and cognitive accounts of children's drawings, it illustrates how the children in this study work easily and seamlessly across a variety of materials and modes, using the semiotic resources available in their environments, to create imaginary worlds and express meanings according to their interest. In profiling these children, this paper lends support to the claim of multimodal pedagogies that it is the shifting across modes, as well as the freedom to choose the mode of expression, that engages the children's affect and creativity and builds agency and voice.
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Keywords
Children, Multimodal pedagogies, Drawings
Citation
Bock, Z. (2016). Multimodality, creativity and children's meaning making: drawings, writings, imaginings. Stellenbosch Papers in Linguistics Plus, 49: 1-21