Multimodal composing is part of the Common Core vision of the twenty-first-century student. Two descriptive studies were conducted of fifth-grade students’ digital folktale retellings. Study 1 analyzed 83 retellings in relation to the types and frequencies of modal use, such as image, sound, movement, and written text, as well as their retelling accuracy. Students composed within a scaffolded digital composing environment which comprised the PowerPoint authoring/presentation tool and a researcher-developed story frame. All students’ retellings included writing and visual design, 80% included animation, and 70% included sound. Retelling accuracy scores averaged 54%. Study 2 was conducted with a new group of 14 fifth-grade students who had previous digital retelling experience. The retellings included the same types of modal use, but at a higher level of frequency. In their retrospective design interviews, students expressed design intentionality and a metamodal awareness of how modes work together to create an appealing story.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Fifth-Grade Students’ Digital Retellings and the Common Core
Modal Use and Design Intentionality
Bridget Dalton,
University of Colorado, Boulder
Kristin H. Robinson,
CAST, Inc.
Jason F. Lovvorn,
Belmont University
Blaine E. Smith,
University of Miami
Tara Alvey,
Austin Peay State University
Elaine Mo,
University of the Pacific
Paola Uccelli, and
Harvard University
C. Patrick Proctor
Boston College
ARTICLE CITATION
Bridget Dalton, Kristin H. Robinson, Jason F. Lovvorn, Blaine E. Smith, Tara Alvey, Elaine Mo, Paola Uccelli, and C. Patrick Proctor, "Fifth-Grade Students’ Digital Retellings and the Common Core: Modal Use and Design Intentionality," The Elementary School Journal 115, no. 4 (June 2015): 548-569.
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