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Visual Communication
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Differential discourses: the contribution of visual analysis to defining scientific literacy in the early years classroom

Susan Britsch

Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA, sbritsch{at}purdue.edu

This article presents a kindergarten science inquiry as an exemplar for the purpose of suggesting an analytic graphic that is visually inclusive of the multimodal resources brought to bear by children and teachers engaged in classroom interaction. The central aim is the visual representation of the analysis so that the analysis itself becomes visual communication, a means of generating knowledge about multimodal discourse. This makes the discourse structure much more accessible to viewers than a verbal transcript. Findings demonstrate that the children and teacher carried out activity that reflected generally mismatched classroom discourses. The children engaged in the science processes of observation, interpretation, and design of the investigation while the teacher focused on the social process of classroom management. Visual communication is central in helping researchers and teachers to visually associate the elements and structure of interactions so that teaching response can be designed.

Key Words: discourse analysis • early childhood • early literacy development • information design • multimodal communication • scientific literacy development • visual analysis • visual communication

Visual Communication, Vol. 8, No. 2, 207-228 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1470357209102114


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