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Speak For Yourself!

Speak For Yourself!. Developing Narrative within a Multimedia, multimodal ICT Environment. Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk. Background to the Research. By literacy I mean … By narrativity I mean …

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Speak For Yourself!

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  1. Speak For Yourself! Developing Narrative within a Multimedia, multimodal ICT Environment Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  2. Background to the Research • By literacy I mean … • By narrativity I mean … • To investigate the ways in which SEN students use an ICT multimedia environment to produce stories • To analyse the role of the ZPD with respect to the literacy learning of SEN students, exploring whether ICT is able to bring about a multiplicity of newliteracies (New London Group, 1997). Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  3. About Kurt • Kurt was in Year 7 (11 years old) and working at literacy levels 1-2 of the English National Curriculum • He was deemed to have attention deficit and hyperactive disorder, dyslexia and dyspraxia. • He disliked writing and would avoid it when at all possible Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  4. Research Framed by: • Socio-cultural theory • SEN • Multiple literacies • ‘Person-plus’ (Kress, 1997; Salomon, Perkins & Globerson, 1991; Vygotsky,1978; Wertsch 1991) Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  5. The Intervention Kurt was withdrawn from classroom lessons, to undertake this work. The research was divided into two phases, with the format of each phase remaining the same. • Phase 1: Reproducing the Anglo-Saxon story of Beowulf • Phase 2: Story creation based on the theme of ‘finding things’.

  6. The Format Lesson 1 overview of software; developing resource banks Lesson 2 making collages to be used in the story Lesson 3 learning to use a scanner Lesson 4 video recording acting & importing video clips Lesson 5 adding components to the resource bank & starting the story Lesson 6 completing the story

  7. Multimedia Authoring Software • word processing • desktop publishing • multimedia authoring

  8. All multimedia can be loaded into the resource bank and dragged and dropped onto the main screen The program can ‘speak’ that which is put on screen and there are several different voice options

  9. Kurt’s Beowulf Story Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  10. Talking about Beowulf There he is! That is excellent! Hello Grendel! Hey! I think I’ve got the hang of this! That’s quite fun! Miss, I like that!

  11. Kurt’s ‘Finding Things’ Story Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  12. Talking about ‘Finding Things’ Oh, we got to put some noises in I’m gonna add bits to it though You can talk with your voice! Is that proper spellings? Cause you just do right click and it sorts it out I’m adding something else to this one

  13. Talking About Stories – Drawing Conclusions • Clear design decisions – interactive story • Personal resources • Characters speaking for themselves • Use of multimedia contributed to developing a narrative approach • ‘Cultural price tag’ to literacy (Tyner, 1998) • Increase in writing – refining techniques Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

  14. Discussion • Why is it that using multimedia seemed to encourage the use of narrativity? • Is there a relationship between visual design and the development of narrative? • How might this narrativity promote different ways of thinking and understanding? • Why is this important? Dr. Fern Faux. Email: fern.faux@bristol.ac.uk

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