This volume takes a broad view of multimodality as it applies to a wide range of subject areas, curriculum design, and classroom processes to examine the ways in which multiple modes combine in contemporary classrooms and its subsequent impact on student learning.
1. A history of the multimodal classroom from antiquity to the nineteenth century John Gaudin 2. Multimodality in the Montessori classroom Susan Feez 3. Pedagogy, curriculum and assessment: Multimodal practices that engage students with and in learning Katina Zammit 4. Multimodal pedagogies for teaching language and grammar in the early years Imogene Cochrane Bond 5. The multimodal classroom in the digital age: The use of 360 degree videos for online teaching and learning Kay L. O'Halloran et al. 6. Writing, talking and drawing about music: Transformations of musical knowledge in the multimodal music classroom Trish Weekes 7. Teaching multimodal literacy: A focus on the comprehension and representation of gesture in oral interactions Thu Ngo 8. The multimodal blog: Co-Authored texts in the primary and middle years classroom Rachael Adlington 9. Multimodal metalanguage Lucy Macnaught 10. Applying multimodal research to the tertiary foreign language classroom: Looking at gaze Thomas Amundrud 11. Cohesion and tension in tertiary students' digital compositions: Implications for teaching and assessment of multimodal compositions Margarita Felipe Fajardo 12. Beyond the classroom: Museum visits and resources Jennifer Blunden and Pauline Fitzgerald
Helen de Silva Joyce is a freelance researcher and educator, with expertise in language research and curriculum development, affiliated with the University of New England and Charles Sturt University, Australia.
Susan Feez is Senior Lecturer in the School of Education at the University of New England, Australia.