Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Recent Posts
    • Attending Computers and Writing 2025? Be a Session Reviewer! 
    • Charisse Iglesias: Community Engagement Beyond Academia
    • Addison Kliewer – Bridging Academia and Industry with Technical Writing Mastery
    • Philosophy of Technology in Rhetoric and Writing Studies
    • Call for Blog Carnival 23: Digital Circulation in Rhetoric and Writing Studies
    • Introduction to Robert Beck
    • Introduction to Alex Mashny
    • Introduction to Marie Pruitt
    RSS Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative
    • Home
    • Conversations
      • Blog Carnivals
      • DRC Talk Series
      • Hack & Yack
      • DRC Wiki
    • Reviews
      • CCCC Reviews
        • 2023 CCCC Reviews
        • 2022 CCCC Reviews
        • 2021 CCCC Reviews
        • 2019 CCCC Reviews
      • C&W Reviews
        • 2022 C&W Reviews
        • 2019 C&W Reviews
        • 2018 C&W Reviews
        • 2017 C&W Reviews
        • 2016 C&W Reviews
        • 2015 C&W Reviews
        • 2014 C&W Reviews
        • 2013 C&W Reviews
        • 2012 C&W Reviews
      • MLA Reviews
        • 2019 MLA Reviews
        • 2014 MLA Reviews
        • 2013 MLA Reviews
      • Other Reviews
        • 2018 Watson Reviews
        • 2017 Feminisms & Rhetorics
        • 2017 GPACW
        • 2016 Watson Reviews
        • 2015 IDRS Reviews
      • Webtext of the Month
    • Teaching Materials
      • Syllabus Repository
      • Teaching & Learning Materials (TLM) Collection
    • Books
      • Memetic Rhetorics
      • Beyond the Makerspace
      • Video Scholarship and Screen Composing
      • 100 Years of New Media Pedagogy
      • Writing Workflows
      • Rhetorical Code Studies
      • Developing Writers in Higher Education
      • Sites of Translation
      • Rhizcomics
      • Making Space
      • Digital Samaritans
      • DRC Book Prize
      • Submit a Book Proposal
    • DRC Fellow Projects
    • About
      • Advisory Board
      • Graduate Fellows
    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative

    Transformative Pedagogy and Decolonial Approach Through Digital Storytelling 

    0
    By Alexandra Krasova on September 12, 2023 Yack, DRC Fellows Projects

    “Digital Narratives” Project for Digital Rhetoric Collaborative Fellowship 2022-2023, University of Michigan 

    English performs a dominant (Daniel & Zybina, 2019) and colonial (Alim & Paris, 2017) force in multilingual classrooms across the world. Given English’s global supremacy, I offer a transformative pedagogy and decolonial approach across contexts in language classrooms that promote the use of all students’ repertoires beyond monolingual prescriptive. To support transformative pedagogy, decolonial approach, and multilingualism in language classrooms, I created this project to encourage students to draw upon their full linguistic repertoires and assets.

    My research project “Digital Narratives” examines digital stories created by multilingual writers. Digital storytelling has been proved to be a useful classroom tool (Robin, 2008), facilitating students’ creative and communicative skills and teaching them how to share their opinions while writing narratives (Robin, 2016). My work emphasizes the importance of digital storytelling for multilingual writers as a way to construct their digital identities. I argue that digital storytelling is a great tool to use in a multilingual writing classroom since it encourages the use of various modes and promotes multimodal learning, thus supporting a necessary decolonial intervention. In addition, digital storytelling helps ESL and multilingual learners develop their voices (Hanauer, 2015) and provides space for their critical thinking. “Digital Narratives” project highlights the benefits of digital storytelling use in the classroom as a way to help students build their voices and shape their multilingual identities. The project results are drawn from the study conducted with non-native English-speaking participants which emphasizes the importance of integrating the transformative pedagogy to promoting multicultural understanding in multilingual and ESL classrooms. I facilitate an online workshop with Liza, Ekaterina, and other participants to teach them how to create digital stories and explained the purpose of the project. One of the participants, Dr. Moroz, shared her previously created digital story. I suggest integrating digital storytelling into transformative pedagogy, decolonial approach, and research. Finally, my project “Digital Narratives” raises awareness about multilingual writing practices in digital space which promotes digital diversity and multiculturalism. Several examples of students’ digital narratives are included below. 

    Liza

    A medical school student, residing in Moscow, Russia, Liza speaks three languages: Russian, English, and Chinese. She has been learning English for 9 years and uses both English and Russian in her everyday life. Her digital narrative focuses on her medical education journey and demonstrates the response to decolonial intervention using multiple languages and modes of communication in her story. Speaking English as an additional language, Liza engages in transformative practices by integrating translanguaging (Vogel & Garcia, 2017; Wei, 2018) into her digital story along with multiple visuals that fulfill her narrative. Liza felt encouraged to participate in the project and was enthusiastic throughout the workshop. 

    Ekaterina

    Ekaterina is a multilingual student living in Russia. She speaks Russian and is learning English and French as additional languages. Ekaterina enjoys reading in different languages and composes her digital story about her favorite books. She includes a short description mixing various languages and modalities, which makes her story unique. While telling her story in English, she manages to integrate various modalities in her writing to emphasize her multilingual identity. Although Ekaterina makes her narrative less personal, she expresses her feeling towards the stories she was reading and represents decolonial interventions through the use of diverse modalities and full linguistic repertoires. Ekaterina underlined the importance of an online workshop in creation of your story as well as enjoyed the opportunity to use various modalities in her narrative.  

    Oksana

    Dr. Oksana Moroz willingly shared her digital story to support transformative pedagogy in language classrooms. Her story demonstrates a strong connection to her culture and language while describing her digital literacy journey. A Mama Ph.D. at Indiana University of Pennsylvania and a native Ukrainian, Dr. Moroz speaks Ukrainian, English, Polish, Russian, and French. She implements her identity into a digital story by integrating multiple languages and modalities. Her narrative emphasizes the necessity of introducing decolonial approaches in the classroom to shape students’ multilingual identities, thus supporting their diverse linguistic repertoires.  

    References

    Amin, N. (1997). Race and the identity of the nonnative ESL teacher. TESOL Quarterly, 31(3), 580-583.

    Daniel, S. M., & Zybina, M. (2019). Resettled Refugee Teens’ Perspectives: Identifying a Need to Centralize Youths’ “Funds of Strategies” in Future Efforts to Enact Culturally Responsive Pedagogy. The Urban Review, 51(3), 345–368.

    Hanauer, D. I. (2015). Measuring voice in poetry written by second language learners.            Written Communication, 32(1), 66-86. https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0741088314563023

    Li, W. (2018). Translanguaging as a practical theory of language. Applied Linguistics, 39(1), 9-30. https://doi.org/10.1093/applin/amx044.

    Robin, B. R. (2008). Digital storytelling: A powerful technology tool for the 21st century          classroom. Theory into Practice, 47(3), 220–228. https://doi.org/10.1080/00405840802153916

    Robin, B. R. (2016). The educational uses of digital storytelling. Digital Education Review, 30.

    Vogel, S., & García, O. (2017). Translanguaging. In G. W. Noblit (Eds.), Oxford research encyclopedias (pp. 2–21). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190264093.013.181


    Author

    • Alexandra Krasova
      Alexandra Krasova

      View all posts
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    By Alyse CampbellMay 6, 20250

    Attending Computers and Writing 2025? Be a Session Reviewer! 

    By Thais Rodrigues Cons, Toluwani OdedeyiApril 25, 20250

    Charisse Iglesias: Community Engagement Beyond Academia

    By Toluwani Odedeyi, Thais Rodrigues ConsMarch 31, 20250

    Addison Kliewer – Bridging Academia and Industry with Technical Writing Mastery

    By Mehdi MohammadiFebruary 11, 20250

    Philosophy of Technology in Rhetoric and Writing Studies

    By Marie Pruitt, Robert Beck, Alex MashnyFebruary 4, 20250

    Call for Blog Carnival 23: Digital Circulation in Rhetoric and Writing Studies

    Digital Rhetoric Collaborative | Gayle Morris Sweetland Center for Writing | University of Michigan

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.