Fill out the table below by identifying the modes and the type of multimodal text in each item.

Type Multimodal Texts

17. Movies
18. Infographics
19. Manuals
20. Digital posters​


Sagot :

Answer:

modes

17. In digital camera terminology, movie mode is a function of the digital camera that enables your digital camera to capture moving subjects in a video format. Most digital cameras come with a movie mode that records both video and also sound

18. Linguistic – word choice; delivery of spoken or written text (tone); organization into sentences, phrases, paragraphs, etc.; coherence of individual words and ideas.

Visual – color, layout, style, size, perspective.

19. Manual mode on a camera allows the photographer to determine the exposure of an image by letting them select an aperture value and a shutter speed value. ... These modes give the user control of either aperture or shutter speed, while letting the camera determine the remaining setting for best exposure.

20. Simply put, a digital poster is a poster that’s displayed on a screen instead of being printed. As such, be sure to master the traditional poster before incorporating multimedia, zooms, and transitions.

type of multimodal texts

17. Digital multimodal texts include film, animation, slide shows, e-posters, digital stories, podcasts, and web pages that may include hyperlinks to external pronunciation guides or translations.

18. Infographics combine both text and image, making them tools able to engage both verbal and visual learning styles. The combination of verbal and visual learning styles has been shown to ultimately increase students’ retention of basic skills by 21% and higher order skills by 20%. Having students research, conceptualize and create infographics in groups also addresses verbal and participatory approaches.

19. A multimodal text conveys meaning through a combination of two or more modes, for example, a poster conveys meaning through a combination of written language, still image, and spatial design. Each mode has its own specific task and function (Kress, 2010, p. 28) in the meaning making process, and usually carries only a part of the message in a multimodal text. In a picture book, the print and the image both contribute to the overall telling of the story but do so in different ways.

20. Paper-based multimodal texts include picture books, text books, graphic novels, comics, and posters. Live multimodal texts, for example, dance, performance, and oral storytelling, convey meaning through combinations of various modes such as gestural, spatial, audio, and oral language