Multimodal Literacy for Improving Presentation Quality
Riesky Riesky
English Education Department, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Jl. Dr. Setiabudhi 229, Bandung, Indonesia
riesky@upi.edu
Keywords: Multimodal literacy, Texts, Verbal, Visual, Presentation, Design.
Abstract: The advance of communication and information technology has significantly changed the way people
communicate in many areas of life. Ideas, which used to be shared “mostly by verbal texts”, have been
realized in a more multimodal form nowadays, further influencing the way knowledge is constructed and
meanings are created. This paper addresses the importance of developing multimodal literacy to improve the
quality of presentation, particularly in academic settings. Some important principles in how to design
multimodal presentation, particularly which composed of texts and visuals are proposed here.
1 INTRODUCTION
Being able to convey ideas and to share knowledge in
an effective and understandable way is something
desirable for many academics. Ways of teaching and
presenting ideas that once were dominated by the use
of spoken and written texts have been slowly and
gradually replaced by modern ways of conveying
ideas that utilize more audio-visual elements. The
rapid development of information and
communication technology (ICT) has triggered the
proliferation of communication channels and social
media that provide “multimodal” features that make
human interactions more alive. To some extent, it also
has influenced how teaching and learning are
practiced in the classroom.
However, despite the increasing use of high-tech
tools and softwares for information dan
communication in the classrooms and seminar
venues, such as laptop, LCDs, and presentation
softwares like Powerpoint and Keynote, what does
not seem to change significantly, particularly in
Indonesia, is the way the users communicate their
ideas: using texts dominantly while hoping that the
audience will understand every single sentence they
type in their slides.
To put an emphasis on why multimodal literacy is
important and how it can be applied in designing and
creating a good quality presentation, this paper
discusses four important things, namely (1)
Multimodality and meaning-making practices, (2)
Why multimodal literacy is important (3) How to
develop multimodal literacy for improving academic
presentation quality, and (4) Key principles in
designing a multimodal presentation.
2 MULTIMODALITY AND
MEANING-MAKING
PRACTICES
The term “multimodality” can be simply understood
as an approach to understand how meaning is created
through the use of a variety of semiotic modes in a
communication practices (see Van-Leeuwen, 2005;
Baldry and Thibault, 2006; Jewitt, 2013). A mode
itself in the word “multimodality” refers to culturally
shaped resources for making meaning (Bourne, et
al., 2004). These resources can appear in the forms of
verbal, visual, aural, spatial, and gestural shapes. The
meanings that are then produced by the combination
of these resources need to be understood by
considering the culturally specific contexts in which
they appear.
In the practice of communication, people utilize a
variety of modes, choosing and combining certain
modes to create meanings that a single mode alone
cannot do. While traditional ways of communication
have been for so long dominated by linguistic forms,
the rapid development of ICT has made the use of
multi-modes in conveying ideas a common practice
in people’s daily communication nowadays. That’s
why Bezemer and Kress (2008) once stated that in
this era multimodal texts have become significantly
prominent as the carriers of meaning.
554
Riesky, R.
Multimodal Literacy for Improving Presentation Quality.
DOI: 10.5220/0007170805540558
In Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference
on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education (CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017) - Literacy, Culture, and Technology in Language Pedagogy and Use, pages 554-558
ISBN: 978-989-758-332-2
Copyright © 2018 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
The use of a variety of semiotic modes in
communication has made the practices of meaning-
making interesting to study. The unstoppable urge to
have adequate skills in using various kinds of digital
gadgets in nowadays’ world has forced people to
learn and use these gadgets for survival purposes, one
of which is for the purpose of sharing meaning and
ideas to others. This becomes obviously true
particularly in the fields of education. Teachers,
students, and presenters, for instance, utilize a variety
of modes with their own personal styles and strategies
in interacting and communicating with others for
academic purposes. What makes it interesting to
observe, regardless the massive use of multimodal
texts in informal communication practices, is that the
ways people communicate in academic setting do not
seem to change significantly. Verbal texts seem to
characterize the process of transferring ideas and
knowledge in many classes and seminar venues. Even
if some have made their sharing of ideas so-called
multimodal”, the effectiveness of combining the
semiotic modes still needs improvement.
The advance of ICT and the extensive use of
audio-visual equipment in many educational
institutions have made it easier for many academics
to choose and to combine types of modes for
conveying ideas and messages. As suggested by
Jewitt (2013), “the features of technology (‘old’ and
‘new’ technologies) provide different kinds
of constraints and possibilities for meaning making
(p. 14).” Each of the modes that is chosen in the
process of delivering idea basically has what Kress,
et.al. (2014) call as “affordance”, which relates to the
ability of each mode to “get things done”. In Jewitt’s
(2008, p. 247) word, it has to do with what a certain
mode can express and represent easily. What
becomes the key here is the ability of people in
choosing and making use of the available modes to
effectively create and deliver the meaning they want
to share.
3 WHY MULTIMODAL
LITERACY IS IMPORTANT
Multimodal literacy encompasses not only the ability
to read and to write multimodal texts but also the
ability to operate technological sources to enable
someone to make meaning through the available
modes. This kind of literacy becomes essential in
nowadays’ communication due to the fact that there
has been a massive shift from a dominant use of
linguistic or verbal texts to a more digital form of
communication, which largely uses multimodal texts.
Borrowing Jewitt’s (2013) idea, there are at least
six important reasons why multimodal approach
needs to be taken into account, particularly in the
context of meaning making and understanding. First,
a multimodal approach provides a more holistic
understanding of meaning. By having a good degree
of multimodal literacy, one can have a framework to
describe more systematically how certain modes
represent and contribute to meaning. This framework
can also be used as a guide to construct meaning as
intended by its producers.
Second, a multimodal approach provides a new
lens to understanding the elements and the process of
communication and making meaning. In the context
of collecting and analysing data in communication
research, for instance, researchers will no longer
regard language as the only mode that contributes to
the construction of meaning. This is not to say that
language is no longer important, but to underline the
existence of other modes that also contributes to how
meaning is created and interpreted.
Third, a multimodal approach can be used to
identify power distribution in communication. It can
make the uneven distribution of semiotic resources
across different groups easier to see, and show how
the differences created say something about power
and power relation that are built.
Fourth, a multimodal approach can be used to
investigate how modes are taken up differently in
different contexts. It can trace the changes in modal
practices across time periods by different actors for
different purposes. It can also provide analysis of
types of semiotic resources available, how they are
used, and what they can and cannot do across
different eras. The comparison made by using a
multimodal approach like this can strengthen
people’s understanding on how technologies created
by human beings have significantly changed the
representation of knowledge and how knowledge is
represented.
Fifth, a multimodal approach particularly in its
application on digital technologies has made it
possible in creating new resources. For instance, the
innovation in digital synthesizers has been able to
reshape human voice into “other new forms of voice
that can be further used for different purposes such as
music, announcement, and many others.
Sixth, a multimodal approach can contribute to
the development of new perspective in conducting
research. Through observing and analysing many
forms of modes and their application in teaching and
learning interactions, Jewitt, Kress and their research
Multimodal Literacy for Improving Presentation Quality
555
team members, for instance, can further develop an
innovative framework to explore issues surrounding
multimodal practices in classroom interaction.
Taking these six important reasons into account,
the need to develop multimodal literacy particularly
among academics becomes undeniable. Academics,
such as teachers, lecturers, and scholars who regularly
have to present ideas and have a critical contribution
to the representation and development of knowledge,
have to be aware of this expectation.
4 HOW TO DEVELOP
MULTIMODAL LITERACY
FOR IMPROVING ACADEMIC
PRESENTATION QUALITY
Presentation quality, particularly in academic
contexts, has a big influence on how knowledge is
represented, understood, and made into actions by
academic audience. What becomes the main concern
to address here is that many presentations conducted
in academic institutions, as observed in many
occasions, still lack the application of effective
multimodality. It is still common to find presenters
deliver their ideas or concepts by using Powerpoint
slides loaded with dense lines of texts, accompanied
by rigid and boring layout, decorated with dreary
colour schemes, and delivered with a monotonous
voice. What usually happens in this kind of
presentation is whether the presenters make their
audience easily bored or they make them go to sleep
quickly.
The ability to design and deliver a presentation in
an effective way is a skill that can be learned by
everyone. Multimodal literacy can play a huge role in
improving presentation quality for many academics,
particularly in the context of representing knowledge
to the audience.
To develop multimodal literacy among academics
for the purpose of improving their presentation
quality, several important steps can be taken into
consideration. First, an effort to build the awareness
of academics on the need to change the way of
communicating ideas into a more multimodal style
should be systematically and continuously carried
out. An emphasis on how technology has changed
many aspects of human’s life including interaction
and communication practices needs to be
foregrounded in many occasions, both through offline
and online channels.
Second, encouragement to utilize and combine a
variety of modes in presenting ideas should be given
to all academics. Supports realized in the forms of
providing relevant information and communication
facilities will be very helpful. Reminding teachers or
lecturers of how nowadays’ students have been used
to multimodal forms of communication and how they
can get bored easily with traditional ways of teaching
or presenting can psychologically trigger them to
improve.
Third, a specific training or a workshop on
technological literacy, such as how to design an
effective Powerpoint presentation, how to edit
pictures and videos using a certain software, or how
to create interesting teaching media, should be given
in a regular basis. This kind of training will be
particularly helpful for older generation, which is
often considered traditional and outdated in terms of
the ability to use recent high-tech facilities. By
following this activity, there is a hope that older
academics can catch up with younger generations in
terms of technological skills and find “similar
frequency” to communicate with the young more
easily.
Finally, an effort to strengthen understanding of
essential principles in multimodality that can be
effectively applied in the context of academic
presentation needs to be carried out. Encouraging
academics to apply frameworks proposed by some
scholars who have conducted research in
multimodality is one of the best ways to do.
These four steps need to be taken seriously if the
improvement of academic presentation quality
becomes the main concern. An elaboration on
important principles to be applied in designing
multimodal slide is to be presented in the ensuing
section.
5 KEY PRINCIPLES IN
DESIGNING A MULTIMODAL
PRESENTATION
Every lecture or presentation given in a classroom has
been basically multimodal. A lecturer or presenter
presenting a topic will almost certainly use their
voice, printed text, intonation, gestures, and
movements to represent their intended meaning.
However, the degree of being multimodal here has
not automatically fulfilled the criteria of effective
multimodality.
When related to designing an effective
multimodal presentation, there are several key
principles that need to consider. The key principles
presented here are adapted from different scholars
CONAPLIN and ICOLLITE 2017 - Tenth Conference on Applied Linguistics and the Second English Language Teaching and Technology
Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education
556
and practitioners particularly in the fields of
multimodality and presentation.
First, simple is beautiful. Being multimodal does
not necessarily mean that we put as many modes as
possible as we wish in one slide. In designing a
presentation slide, for instance, it is highly
recommended that we present only one big idea at a
time in every single page. When texts are needed,
make sure that only key words or simple sentences
appear on the page (see Forsyth, 2009; Reynolds,
2012).
Second, building chemistry among modes is
important. Whenever, for instance, texts and images
are to be combined to create a multimodal
presentation slide, make sure that the relationship
between the texts and the images creates “chemistry.
To understand about the relationship that texts and
images create in a multimodal text, Marsh and
White’s (2003) “taxonomy of functions of images to
the text” can become a valuable framework to adopt.
In their framework, Marsh and White (2003) provide
a taxonomy consisting of three main functions,
namely (A) functions expressing little relation to the
text, (B) functions expressing close relation to the
text, and (C) functions that go beyond the text. The
main point to underline here is that the combination
of texts and images created should be made with
dominant functions of (B), with occasional functions
of (C), and with minimal use of functions (A).
Third, compositions determine information
values, coherence and attention. By referring to the
framework of composition proposed by Kress and
Van Leeuwen (2006), which is closely related to the
idea of Halliday’s (1994) textual meaning, three
important related components are underlined, namely
(1) information value, which has to do with the
positioning of elements in certain areas that convey
specific values, (2) salience, which has to do with the
degree of importance, or worthiness, or attractiveness
and (3) framing, which is related to the sense of
connection and separation created by colour
composition, shapes, or lines. This composition
framework basically includes some important
understanding commonly expected from a graphic
designer, such as layout, typography, and colour
schemes. One important point to consider here is that
in composing a multimodal slide, the placement of
information or ideas (in the forms of texts or images),
the way the key information is emphasized, and the
way the texts and images put together should be based
on an understanding of how different compositions
can result in different interpretations of meaning from
the readers’ perspectives.
Fourth, orchestrating semiotic modes creates
harmony and effectiveness in delivering messages. A
study conducted by Bucher dan Niemann (2012)
found that a presenter’s ability in orchestrating
various available semiotic modes in his or her
presentation will play a determining role in the
success of delivering messages to the audience.
Regardless the quality of high-tech equipment
available, in the end the skills of the presenter in using
the equipment and his understanding on the
affordances of every single mode he or she uses will
determine the success of the presentation. Therefore,
training oneself to get used to operating with different
semiotic modes in communication becomes crucial
here.
6 CONCLUSIONS
Among many things elaborated in the sections above,
two important points deserve a special attention. First,
developing and strengthening academics’ awareness
on the strong impact of technology on human
communication is still a big homework to do. Many
academics are truly aware of this situation but seem
to close their ears and eyes and consider everything is
still the same in relation to teaching and presenting
ideas in the classroom or academic forums: in other
words, “no need to change”. Second, the proliferation
of multimodal texts in today’s digital world create
challenges for academics to improve the quality of
their multiliteracies, including technological and
multimodal literacies. By continuously improving
their multiliteracy capacity, the role of teachers and
lecturers as the main characters in education can
remain strong and influential.
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Conference in collaboration with the First International Conference on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education
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