Dyers, Charlyn25/04/201625/04/20162014Dyers, C. (2014). Texting literacies as social practices among older women. Per Linguam: A Journal for Language Learning, 30 (1): 2-172224-0012https://hdl.handle.net/10566/2150While many studies on mobile messaging have tended to focus on the communicative practices of the urban young, this paper considers the role of mobile messaging (also called texting) both as a social practice as well as a form of literacy enhancement among a group of older working class women between the ages of 50 and 80 in a Cape Town township. The paper examines how these women, with little or no formal education, acquire this form of literacy, as well as the purposes for which they use texting. It also explores how this form of late-modern communication is adding to four of their existing or developing literacies - text, numeracy, visual and personal. The paper therefore adopts a multiliteracies approach within the context of portable literacies.enThis journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge.TextingWomenMultiliteraciesCape TownCitizenshipSocial practiceTexting literacies as social practices among older womenArticle