Reflections of Identify in Multimodal Projects
6
Issues in Teacher Education
Reflections of Identity in Multimodal Projects
Teacher Education in the Pacific
Marva Cappello
San Diego State University
Issues in Teacher Education, Spring 2019
Introduction
Contemporary societies, whether in the United States or the Pacific
are overwhelming visual in character. Yet, schools at all levels continue to
privilege written text as demonstrations of learning over any other form
of communication. A visual curriculum has the potential to strengthen
instruction across disciplines and offers students another way to express
their knowledge. As a receptive mediator, images can provide support
for students who may be new to school, or English, or otherwise in
need additional scaffolding of verbal language experiences (Cappello
& Walker, 2016; Marzano, Pickering, & Pollock, 2001). When used for
literacy production, visuals may also help students to communicate
their new ideas and understandings (Cappelo & Hollingsworth, 2008;
Cappello & Lafferty, 2015; Eisner, 2002). Moreover, privileging visual
texts as student demonstrations of knowledge may provide students
an otherwise missing opportunity to express cultural knowledge and
identity (Franquiz & Brochin-Ceballos, 2006).
Indeed, visuals can improve learning outcomes by creating new op-
Marva Cappello is a professor and director of the Graduate Reading
Program and director of the Center for Visual Literacies in the College
of Education at San Diego State University, San Diego, California. Her
email address is cappello@mail.sdsu.edu
© 2019 by Caddo Gap Press