Implications of paper textbook multimodality for eight-year old students’ language learning: A case-study content analysis
Abstract
Purpose. The purpose of this study is to examine how SABIS® as a publishing house and an
owner of its own school curriculum system materially represents its educational beliefs based
on the curricular demands of the Common Core State Standards within the school textbooks
it produces for one of its private schools in the United States.
Theory. The theory used for this study is Hodge and Kress (1988) social semiotic theory in
combination with an educational focus on the qualities of resources produced which are
aimed at supporting first language learning.
Method. A qualitative content analysis (QCA) approach was used as the research design in
order to analyze the images within the Anthology Level E textbook. QCA was further studied
based on a taxonomy created by Marsh and White (2003).
Results. The findings and data for this study suggested that the SABIS® Anthology Level E
textbook, is designed primarily based on the US Common Core State Standards requirements
however, they proved to have more than what is mentioned in the standards alone. Visuals
provided within the informative and non-fictional pieces proved to have a close relation to
text where they provided the means for students to learn new concepts. Many images proved
to be beneficial for students’ understanding of the text, others showed very little connection
to the text and hence ineffective in the social semiotic process of teaching and learning.
Degree
Student Essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2017-03-07Author
Hage-Obeid, Sarah
Keywords
Images
multimodality
social semiotics
learning
textbooks
Series/Report no.
Master
VT17 IPS PDA184:3
Language
eng