Creating Texts in the Digital Age (EDUC90680)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | August |
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Fees | Look up fees |
This subject draws on current educational theories, debates, policies and practices to critically analyse how text creation practices achieve social purposes. Social semiotics, text function and form, functional linguistics, and criticality will frame the subject. Participants will reflect on the role of text creation in their lives. They will broaden their text creation experiences, as they plan, draft, and craft texts, and act upon feedback. The text creation process will support participants to reflect on the relationship between text and identity and analyse the teacher/writer identity. Students will investigate different contexts for text creation when exploring written, audio, visual, and multimodal texts. They will examine plurilingual writing, writing for critical purposes, writing with generative AI and First Nations' text creation. The rapidly and expanding field(s) of technology and its relationship to text will be critically examined, with particular emphasis on educational contexts. Participants will develop and apply a metalanguage of writing to examine the developmental stages of writing and to critique pedagogical models, frameworks and writing assessments.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Examine theoretical perspectives about the creation of written, spoken and multimodal texts in diverse contexts
- Explain the role of text creation for groups of people, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People
- Analyse the various contexts for creating texts, including an awareness of audience, purpose, and semiotic and technical choices available to the text creator
- Critically reflect on their identity as a creator through their individual composition and analysis of a range of texts for different purposes and audiences
- Formulate a learning design for students' text creation based on analysis of writing data.
Generic skills
This subject will assist students to develop the following transferable skills:
- Critical reasoning and thinking
- Communication
- Evidence-based decision making
- Teamwork and professional collaboration.
Last updated: 4 March 2025