Identifying Key Domains and Criteria for the Assessment of K-12 Students’ Digital Multimodal Composition: A Literature Review
박소희
University of Delaware
korean language education research 53Vol. 5No. pp.111-137 (2018)
Abstract
The study systemically reviewed empirical studies on the assessment of digital multimodal composition (DMC) and identified key domains and criteria for the assessment of K-12 students’ DMC. Based on the concept of multimodality and universal theoretical assumptions on it (Jewitt, 2014), this study argued that assessment tools of DMC should consider both linguistic and non-linguistic modes, their unique communicative roles, relationships between modes, and social norms and conventions about signs. The multi-step analyses drew 19 distinguishable criteria from 111 criteria presented in 15 relevant studies. The findings section defined new criteria and described how they are related to the a priori domains and the existing criteria. This literature review contributes to the field by providing a comprehensive list of criteria for DMC teaching and assessment. Limitations of the study and suggestions for future studies were also discussed.
Keywords
MultimodalityDigital multimodal compositionMultimodal assessmentDomains and criteria of literacy assessmentLiterature review
