Uganda Martyrs University Library Uganda Martyrs University
Archbishop Kiwanuka Memorial Library
  • Home
  • Contact us
    • Our Team
    • About
    • Ask a Librarian
  • Services
    • Library Catalogue
    • Online Journals
    • Past papers
    • Reading lists
    • Newspaper Index
    • Open Access Resources
  • Identify Me
  • Research
    • Staff publications
    • Student dissertations
    • Institutional repository
  • Website

Library Catalog

Find books, articles, CDs, DVDs and more...



Advanced Search | Browse By Subject

Online resources

Find, articles, journals...

  • Student dissertations
  • Institutional repository
  • Website
  • Home
  • Publication

Multimodality and English Education in Ugandan Schools(Journal Article)

In all societies children have many layers of representational resources Ia vailable to them. Play, movement, song, drama, language and artistic activity are but some of the modalities by which they learn to make sense of their world (Short, Kauffman and Kahn 160). The concept of multimodal ways of communicating, however, although very much in vogue in literacy studies, is not a new model within the Ugandan communities in which we work. In many parts of Uganda, indigenous knowledge and ways of communicating have been integrated into non-formal learning contexts, particularly in Freirean-based adult literacy programmes such as UPLIFTUganda (Pokorny 10-1 1) and REFLECT (Attwood, Castle and Smythe 137- 158). Within the formal school system, however, teachers are often constrained in their ability to recognize alternative or indigenous modes of representing and communicating knowledge due to a strong emphasis on examinations, teaching to the curriculum and a lack of resources and teacher training, particularly in rural areas.

Authoured by: Harriet Mutonyi , Norton Bonny

Academic units: Faculty of Education


View

Back to Top

© 2015 Uganda Martyrs University Library