scholarly journals Young Children’s Imaginative Play and Dynamic Literacy Practices in the Digital Age

Author(s):  
Sara Sintonen ◽  
Kristiina Kumpulainen ◽  
Jenni Vartiainen
2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosie Flewitt

In this article I reflect on the insights that the well established traditions of ethnography can bring to the more recent analytic tools of multimodality in the investigation of early literacy practices. First, I consider the intersection between ethnography and multimodality, their compatibility and the tensions and ambivalences that arise from their potentially conflicting epistemological framings. Drawing on ESRC-funded case studies of three and four-year-old children’s experiences of literacy with printed and digital media,1 I then illustrate how an ethnographic toolkit that incorporates a social semiotic approach to multimodality can produce richly situated insights into the complexities of early literacy development in a digital age, and can inform socially and culturally sensitive theories of literacy as social practice (Street, 1984, 2008).


2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackie Marsh ◽  
Peter Hannon ◽  
Margaret Lewis ◽  
Louise Ritchie

Author(s):  
Earl Aguilera ◽  
Olivia G. Stewart ◽  
Areej Mawasi ◽  
Luis E. Pérez Cortés

This chapter outlines a multidimensional framework for theorizing digital-age literacies—one which considers the content, procedural, and contextual dimensions of literacy practices enacted through and around digital technologies. The authors then provide an overview of three empirical studies that illustrate the application of this framework to understand the integration of digital technologies and literacy pedagogies. The authors offer their experiences as classroom teachers, teacher-educators, learning scientists, and literacy specialists working to understand and support the literacy and language practices of learners in the 21st century. The goal of the chapter is to illustrate the value of shifting conversations about digital technologies away from notions of moral panic and techno-idealism, and instead toward a renewed focus on technology-mediated social practices that shape what it means to be and become literate in contemporary society.


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