Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education

Includes bibliographical references. === The focus of this study is pedagogy - the 'how' of teaching. In particular, a negotiated and multimodal pedagogical approach which I have coined scenario pedagogy is of interest. Scenario pedagogy involves embedding an entire curriculum into a topic...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Grant, Terri
Other Authors: Archer, Arlene
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10561
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-105612020-07-22T05:08:02Z Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education Grant, Terri Archer, Arlene Education Includes bibliographical references. The focus of this study is pedagogy - the 'how' of teaching. In particular, a negotiated and multimodal pedagogical approach which I have coined scenario pedagogy is of interest. Scenario pedagogy involves embedding an entire curriculum into a topical and authentic scenario, relevant to a particular group of students in higher education. The course in question is professional communication and the target group comprises senior and post-graduate accounting and other finance and information systems students registered in the commerce faculty. They are not communication students per se but register for a one-semester professional communication course towards their respective commerce degrees. In this study I examine how these students develop their professional communication practices using a wide variety of verbal and visual semiotic resources. Their selection of hybrid discursive, generic and modal resources are foregrounded at both draft and final product stage and include their communicative processes as well as the material artefacts they deliver in class. How students instantiate their meaning making and emerging identity as professionals-to-be is highlighted against a pedagogical framework of negotiated design. This framework combines a multiliteracies cum multimodal perspective which is underpinned by the notion of transformed practice. As pivotal elements of transformation - personally, collectively and societally - education and communication play significant roles, particularly in post-Apartheid South Africa still characterised by enormous socio-economic disparities and disadvantage. 2014-12-30T06:50:40Z 2014-12-30T06:50:40Z 2012 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10561 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities School of Education
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Education
spellingShingle Education
Grant, Terri
Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
description Includes bibliographical references. === The focus of this study is pedagogy - the 'how' of teaching. In particular, a negotiated and multimodal pedagogical approach which I have coined scenario pedagogy is of interest. Scenario pedagogy involves embedding an entire curriculum into a topical and authentic scenario, relevant to a particular group of students in higher education. The course in question is professional communication and the target group comprises senior and post-graduate accounting and other finance and information systems students registered in the commerce faculty. They are not communication students per se but register for a one-semester professional communication course towards their respective commerce degrees. In this study I examine how these students develop their professional communication practices using a wide variety of verbal and visual semiotic resources. Their selection of hybrid discursive, generic and modal resources are foregrounded at both draft and final product stage and include their communicative processes as well as the material artefacts they deliver in class. How students instantiate their meaning making and emerging identity as professionals-to-be is highlighted against a pedagogical framework of negotiated design. This framework combines a multiliteracies cum multimodal perspective which is underpinned by the notion of transformed practice. As pivotal elements of transformation - personally, collectively and societally - education and communication play significant roles, particularly in post-Apartheid South Africa still characterised by enormous socio-economic disparities and disadvantage.
author2 Archer, Arlene
author_facet Archer, Arlene
Grant, Terri
author Grant, Terri
author_sort Grant, Terri
title Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
title_short Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
title_full Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
title_fullStr Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
title_full_unstemmed Scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
title_sort scenario pedagogy as a negotiated, multimodal approach to developing professional communication practices in higher education
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10561
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