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Original Articles

Young Learners’ Transactions With Interactive Digital Texts Using E-Readers

Pages 42-56 | Received 10 Jan 2014, Accepted 23 Jun 2014, Published online: 23 Dec 2015
 

ABSTRACT

This year-long qualitative study draws from multimodal theory and New Literacies Studies to document the digital literacy experiences of a diverse group of 2nd-graders using e-readers. Twenty-first century classrooms must expand traditional notions of literacy to prepare students for the ever-changing, media-rich world. Students participated in small-group digital reading workshops, where they read interactive picture books. The data mainly drew from transcripts of student interactions and open-ended interviews and were analyzed through a combination of comparative and discourse analyses. The author argues that multimodal texts offer opportunities for rehearsal of literacy practices, engagement, talk as a choice of reader response, and student agency. Even though personal digital devices offer opportunities for independent reading, young readers still need social interactions around books to co-construct meaning. The study found the students spent additional time reading and successfully mediated the available resources as they engaged in digital reading.

Additional information

Funding

The project was funded by a National Council of Teachers of English research grant.

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