TY - CHAP
T1 - Multimodal orchestration for social science–specific meaning – making flow in higher education
AU - Siu, Phoebe
AU - Tong, Esther Ka man
AU - Xuan, Winfred Wenhui
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 selection and editorial matter, Vicent Beltrán-Palanques and Edgar Bernad-Mechó; individual chapters, the contributors.
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - The ecological view of languaging has been “de-centring the analytic focus from the language(s) being used in the interaction to the speakers who are making meaning and constructing original and complex discursive practices”, critically revisiting multimodal discourse analysis in EMI contexts with convergent issues amidst divergent contexts in Asia-Pacific regions. The ecological view of languaging also projects a niche-taking approach to re-examining the nexus analytical framework for integrating content and language in higher education through multimodal orchestration. This book chapter begins with a literature review on cultivating plurilingual Asian teachers and students’ creative authorial agency with the aid of multimodality through soft CLIL and hard CLIL in discipline-specific EMI tertiary education. The book chapter then reports on case study research conducted by the first author using nexus analysis to investigate the potentials and challenges in developing curriculum genres, such as the Multimodalities-Entextualisation Cycle, for multimodal orchestration in discipline-specific EMI tertiary classrooms in Hong Kong.
AB - The ecological view of languaging has been “de-centring the analytic focus from the language(s) being used in the interaction to the speakers who are making meaning and constructing original and complex discursive practices”, critically revisiting multimodal discourse analysis in EMI contexts with convergent issues amidst divergent contexts in Asia-Pacific regions. The ecological view of languaging also projects a niche-taking approach to re-examining the nexus analytical framework for integrating content and language in higher education through multimodal orchestration. This book chapter begins with a literature review on cultivating plurilingual Asian teachers and students’ creative authorial agency with the aid of multimodality through soft CLIL and hard CLIL in discipline-specific EMI tertiary education. The book chapter then reports on case study research conducted by the first author using nexus analysis to investigate the potentials and challenges in developing curriculum genres, such as the Multimodalities-Entextualisation Cycle, for multimodal orchestration in discipline-specific EMI tertiary classrooms in Hong Kong.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85197063352&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4324/9781003205517-5
DO - 10.4324/9781003205517-5
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85197063352
SN - 9781032071312
SN - 9781032071329
SP - 48
EP - 70
BT - Current Trends in EMI and Multimodality in Higher Education
ER -