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While literary interpretation and other traditional written genres have continued to be foundational to secondary English language arts curricula, there has concurrently been a call for an expanded view of literacy that requires students to be skillful consumers and producers of digital multimodal compositions. Bridging these often-conflicting priorities in the ELA classroom, some scholars have begun to examine how adolescents can interpret literature through digital multimodal composing. This study builds upon this developing field by exploring how 27 culturally and linguistically diverse 10th-grade students collaboratively interpreted literature by creating two digital projects-a hypertext literary analysis and a video literary analysis. In particular, sociocultural and social semiotics theoretical frameworks were integrated to understand how working with visuals, sound, and text in digital spaces mediated students' interpretations of literature during their composing processes. Data sources included screen capture and video observations, design interviews, written reflections, and multimodal products. Through qualitative and multimodal data analysis, three main themes emerged for how multiple modes mediated students' literary interpretive processes: (1) conceptualizing literary themes, (2) constructing multilevel connections to literature, and (3) elucidating literary meaning. These findings contribute new insights into how multiple modes can serve as valuable tools for thinking during students' composing processes, including helping students to collaboratively discuss and articulate their understanding in complex and innovative ways. This study concludes with implications for how secondary ELA teachers can effectively integrate digital multimodal projects in the multilingual classroom to support literary interpretation.
Literary interpretation and analysis have a long history in high school English language arts classrooms. By assigning interpretive essays, ELA teachers aim for students to advance beyond a cursory understanding of plot and characters to carefully examine how various rhetorical devices (e.g., metaphor and symbolism) contribute to their understanding of a literary work as a whole. Effective interpretation requires students to substantiate their detailed analysis with textual evidence and sound reasoning (Hillocks, 2011). Along with supporting students in becoming critical readers, analyzing literature fosters empathy and the ability to take another person's point of view (Mar, Oatley, & Peterson, 2009). Research also underscores that literary interpretation is a complex problem-solving task (Lee, Goldman, Levine, & Magliano, 2016) that is particularly challenging for culturally and linguistically diverse students (National Assessment of Educational Progress, 2011).
While literary...