Literature and Data-driven Learning
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30646Date
2023-03-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This article aims to examine how and why we can use digital storytelling (DST)
to teach literature in the upper secondary classroom, and makes use of Mark
Haddon’s complex, multimodal novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the
Night-Time (2004) as an example. DST is a powerful tool for the 21st century
classroom, with the potential to help pupils to become empathetic, creative,
inquisitive and critical thinkers. When applied to literature, DST allows pupils to
continue the literary text in creative ways by making their own digital story using
a basic video editing application such as iMovie or Microsoft Bilder. Such
literature-based DST (LDST) distinguishes itself from ordinary DST use in
school. The values, qualities and peculiarities of literature offer an imaginative
point of departure for new ways of using digital media in school. The Curious
Incident is an exceptionally appropriate novel to use with DST, because the novel
and the method share numerous features, not least multimodal ones. The narrative
structures and aesthetic dimensions of the novel overlap with characteristics of
DST. Furthermore, the many hermeneutic dimensions of Haddon’s novel can also
be explored by the imaginative possibilities of DST. The definitions and
interrelations between literature, text and modality are discussed throughout the
article with reference to both philosophers and school didacticians. LDST is
remarkable in the way it encourages pupils to sympathise, to interpret, to think
critically and to develop their own imaginative ability and language skills. This
article argues that LDST is useful in upper secondary education by examining the
corresponding educational qualities and possibilities of Haddon’s multimodal
novel and DST, and by drawing upon the new education reform in Norway
articulated in the Core curriculum of 2020 and the Curriculum in English.
Furthermore, the article concludes with the presentation, analysis and assessment
of a pilot LDST-project conducted in an upper secondary school in Troms County
as part of an MA lector thesis at UiT The Arctic University Norway. Thus, this
article’s wider aim is to bring new research perspectives to English education,
with a special focus on the use of literature and active forms of learning.
Publisher
Department of Language Studies, Umeå UniversityCitation
Krogh IMR, Moi R. Literature and Data-driven Learning. Nordic Journal of English Studies (NJES). 2023;22(1):182-204Metadata
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