Grammars and Modes

Grammars and Modes


By Moira McCavana

Each mode has a grammar or a catalog of “moves” that can be performed within that mode. Think of a “move” as a micro decision regarding how to present a unit of knowledge.

infographic explaining the

Different modes often have some moves that are analogous to moves in other modes.

  • As above, sequencing might be a move shared by both film and written text, as each is a mode that builds a temporal narrative. Sequencing, however, is not a move shared by drawing, as the contents of a drawing are not dispersed temporally, but rather, are simultaneously made available to the viewer. 
  • Drawing does share several moves with film, such as composing a frame. 
infographic explaining the

Some modes might have analogous moves in other modes, but simply function as a “better” vessel for certain ideas (another way of thinking about this is to say that  each mode has its own particular affordances ).

  • When it comes to a basic comparison between two images, drawing will work just fine, but when it comes to articulating a slightly more nuanced comparison, again, like A<B; A=B, A≠B, or A+B → some new insight, a language-based mode like written text, narrated film, or podcasting might be a “better” vessel for that content
  • A basic example: when it comes to analyzing still or moving images, a visual mode is probably more effective than written text

Fluency in one or multiple grammars is relevant to various actors within the universe of multimodal scholarship and pedagogy.

  • Students and scholars: in order to identify what mode best suits their scholarship,  students and scholars need to have a rough understanding of what kinds of moves you can make in each so that you can choose the mode best suited to your argument
  • Advisors/peer reviewers: as the academy becomes more hospitable to work produced in nontraditional modes, those responsible for assessing the quality of that work must have a basic understanding of the particular affordances of each mode in order to evaluate how they’re being utilized by the scholar to make or reveal meaning. 
  • Teachers: as students develop literacy in various modes beyond written language, understanding the grammar of each mode allows teachers to leverage students’ own fluencies to develop their critical thinking and communication skills.
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