“…To date, this study has primarily focused on literacy learning. Most studies have taken place in elementary classrooms and focus on students' linguistic resources (Daniel et al, 2019; Machado & Hartman, 2019; Ranker, 2009; L. W. Rowe, 2020; Zapata & Laman, 2016), although some studies have taken place in secondary classrooms and focus on students' multimodal resources for meaning‐making and expression (see Smith et al, 2020 for a review of research about multimodal composition in both dual‐language and English‐centric secondary classrooms). Together, these studies have identified several promising strategies for supporting multilingual and multimodal composing, including: Explicitly valuing students' language and cultures (García & Kleifgen, 2019; L. W. Rowe, 2018), modeling multilingual composing (Machado & Hartman, 2019), introducing multilingual mentor texts (Zapata & Laman, 2016), leveraging digital tools to mediate heritage‐language use (D. W> Rowe & Miller, 2016; L. W. Rowe, 2020; Vogel et al, 2018), and emphasizing disciplinary reasons for translanguaging (Canagarajah, 2013; García & Kleyn, 2016).…”