2011
DOI: 10.1007/s11256-011-0175-0
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Video “Reading” and Multimodality: A Study of ESL/Literacy Pupils’ Interpretation of Cinderella from Their Socio-historical Perspective

Abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate how Hispanic ESL/literacy learners used their socio-historical experiences and multimodal resources to mediate interpretation and representation of Cinderella. Eighteen third-grade pupils ''read'' the video and re-created their understandings in pictures and sentences. The findings suggest that (a) Cinderella should be studied in ESL/literacy curricula as an object of social knowledge and critical analysis, (b) ESL/literacy teachers can use the selfreflective approa… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Following the trend in multimodality in science, a small number of studies on multimodal teaching, learning, and assessment for ELLs has also been conducted in different content areas (Ajayi, , , ; Early & Marshall, ; Pandya, ; Terrazas‐Arellanes, Knox, & Rivas, ). For example, Ajayi (2009) studied how 18 junior high school ELLs interpreted a cellular phone advertisement through visual and written representations.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following the trend in multimodality in science, a small number of studies on multimodal teaching, learning, and assessment for ELLs has also been conducted in different content areas (Ajayi, , , ; Early & Marshall, ; Pandya, ; Terrazas‐Arellanes, Knox, & Rivas, ). For example, Ajayi (2009) studied how 18 junior high school ELLs interpreted a cellular phone advertisement through visual and written representations.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kim, 2016;Kim & Cho, 2017;Labadie et al, 2013;Maher, 2018;Wee et al, 2017) to primary school (e.g. Ajayi, 2012;Bourke, 2008;Karagiannaki & Stamou, 2018), early secondary (e.g. Gustine & Insani, 2019;Hayik, 2015Hayik, , 2016, upper secondary (e.g.…”
Section: Fairy Tales and Critical Literacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Teachers and practitioners have cited the popularity and appeals of fairy tales to learners across ages and genders as one of the main reasons to use them as the core text in their critical literacy practice (Ajayi, 2012;Hayik, 2015Hayik, , 2016Karagiannaki & Stamou, 2018;Stasz & Bennett, 1997;Wee et al, 2017). This view is supported by scholars of fairy tales who highlight the universal popularity and appeal of fairy tales to people of all ages (Ashliman, 2004;Kole, 2018;Lüthi, 1970;Zipes, 1979Zipes, /1992Zipes, , 1983Zipes, , 2013.…”
Section: Fairy Tales and Critical Literacymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The research suggests that literacy teachers in Nigeria need to pay close attention to how critical literacy informs teaching regarding "how power relations are subverted or questioned, how males and females are represented as gendered subjects, how they are empowered, how relations are revisioned, and how feminist ideology is embedded in the text" (Parsons, 2004, p. 140). Critical literacy opens up possibilities for female students to integrate their self-identities in creating texts that are socially and culturally relevant to their lives (Ajayi, 2015(Ajayi, , 2012Rogers, Mosley & Kramer, 2009).The research objective of this study is to show how the participants and I (the teacher/researcher) co-construct the possibility of using critical multimodal literacy to critique texts and reconstruct unequal social structures. One research question guided the study: How do the students in the case studies employ critical multimodal literacy to contest the messages of the textbook they read after they are taught to critically read their world by questioning social inequality?…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The research suggests that literacy teachers in Nigeria need to pay close attention to how critical literacy informs teaching regarding “how power relations are subverted or questioned, how males and females are represented as gendered subjects, how they are empowered, how relations are revisioned, and how feminist ideology is embedded in the text” (Parsons, 2004, p. 140). Critical literacy opens up possibilities for female students to integrate their self-identities in creating texts that are socially and culturally relevant to their lives (Ajayi, 2015, 2012; Rogers, Mosley & Kramer, 2009).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%