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Articles

Meaning between, in and around words, gestures and postures – multimodal meaning-making in children's classroom discourse

Pages 401-420 | Received 30 Jul 2013, Accepted 25 Nov 2013, Published online: 25 Feb 2014
 

Abstract

The view of language from a social semiotic perspective is clear. Language is one of many semiotic resources we employ in our communicative practices. That is to say that while language is at times dominant, it always operates within a multimodal frame and furthermore, at times modes other than language are dominant. The 2014 National Curriculum for the UK, on the other hand, values pupils’ face-to-face classroom interaction in terms of standard spoken English (i.e. in terms of the mode of language alone). This paper offers examples demonstrating how embodied modes such as gesture, posture, facial expression, gaze and haptics work in conjunction with speech in children's collaborative construction of knowledge. In other words, what may have been previously conceived as gaps and silences – often interpreted as an absence of language – are in fact instantiations of the work of semiotic modes other than language. In order to consider this closely, this paper offers evidence from a multimodal micro-analysis of pupil-to-pupil, face-to-face interaction in one science lesson in a Year Five UK Primary classroom. It demonstrates how children's meaning-making is achieved through apt use of all available semiotic resources.

Note

Notes

1. It is common practice in UK classrooms for teachers to signal the objectives of the lesson by writing on the board WALT (We Are Learning Today) and Success Criteria.

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