Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment
Although multimodal assignments have increasingly been incorporated into academic writing curricula, research into their impact on student writing remains limited. This study, conducted at a Singaporean university, required students to transform a written essay draft into a video essay and then revi...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1820692025-01-11T17:00:32Z Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment Frattarola, Angela Ahn, Hyejeong Dixon, Ian School of Humanities Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Arts and Humanities Transmediation Video essay Although multimodal assignments have increasingly been incorporated into academic writing curricula, research into their impact on student writing remains limited. This study, conducted at a Singaporean university, required students to transform a written essay draft into a video essay and then revise their draft into a written essay assignment. By comparing students’ initial drafts and their final submissions, and analysing interviews and reflective journals, we identified significant benefits stemming from the transmediation between written and multimodal text. Specifically, we found that 1) transmediation enabled students to self-evaluate their writing as they repeatedly listened to their voiceovers, found concrete visuals to illustrate their ideas, and edited their work to fit the concise video format; 2) students broke with habitual, less useful revision practices as they were freed from the conventional and grammatical concerns of written academic text and narrated their arguments colloquially in their voiceovers; 3) students exhibited an improved awareness of audience and medium; and 4) students were more enthusiastic with the course due to the novelty of the multimodal assignment. These findings suggest that including a video essay assignment during the drafting process can serve as an effective tool in advancing students’ abilities to evaluate their own academic writing. Nanyang Technological University Submitted/Accepted version This work was supported by an EdeX Grant from the Centre for Teaching, Learning and Pedagogy, Nanyang Technological University. 2025-01-07T01:47:55Z 2025-01-07T01:47:55Z 2024 Journal Article Frattarola, A., Ahn, H. & Dixon, I. (2024). Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment. Computers and Composition, 74, 102891-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102891 8755-4615 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182069 10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102891 2-s2.0-85209109285 74 102891 en Computers and Composition © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the copyright holder. The Version of Record is available online at http://doi.org/10.1016/j.compcom.2024.102891. application/pdf |
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Arts and Humanities Transmediation Video essay Frattarola, Angela Ahn, Hyejeong Dixon, Ian Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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Although multimodal assignments have increasingly been incorporated into academic writing curricula, research into their impact on student writing remains limited. This study, conducted at a Singaporean university, required students to transform a written essay draft into a video essay and then revise their draft into a written essay assignment. By comparing students’ initial drafts and their final submissions, and analysing interviews and reflective journals, we identified significant benefits stemming from the transmediation between written and multimodal text. Specifically, we found that 1) transmediation enabled students to self-evaluate their writing as they repeatedly listened to their voiceovers, found concrete visuals to illustrate their ideas, and edited their work to fit the concise video format; 2) students broke with habitual, less useful revision practices as they were freed from the conventional and grammatical concerns of written academic text and narrated their arguments colloquially in their voiceovers; 3) students exhibited an improved awareness of audience and medium; and 4) students were more enthusiastic with the course due to the novelty of the multimodal assignment. These findings suggest that including a video essay assignment during the drafting process can serve as an effective tool in advancing students’ abilities to evaluate their own academic writing. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Frattarola, Angela Ahn, Hyejeong Dixon, Ian |
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Frattarola, Angela Ahn, Hyejeong Dixon, Ian |
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Frattarola, Angela |
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Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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Transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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transformative transmediation: eliciting student self-evaluation of academic writing through the video essay assignment |
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2025 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182069 |
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