This is a presentation given at the HKUST Language Centre Retreat on Dec 21, 2011. It describes a project-based course in English for Academic Purposes, in which students create both scientific documentaries (using digital video) and more traditional lab reports.
Scientific documentaries as a bridge to academic writing
1. Scientific Documentaries as a Bridge to
Academic Writing
Christoph Hafner & Lindsay Miller
City University of Hong Kong
http://www1.english.cityu.edu.hk/acadlit
UST Language Centre Retreat 2011
3. Context for this study
• City University of HK, English for Science and
Technology course for students of:
– Applied Biology
– Applied Chemistry
– Environmental Science and Management
– Mathematics
4. Innovation of course design
• Self-contained ESP course:
– Genre-based
– Project-based: Authentic materials and tasks
– Focus on language form and function
– Promoting situated learning (Lave and Wenger,
1991; Gee, 2004)
5. Rationale for the innovation
• Can we realistically predict what language
communication needs our students will have in the
future?
• How can we stay within the existing course framework
but make the course content more interesting?
• How can we motivate students to reflect on and
improve their spoken English?
• As teachers of English literacy, how do we prepare
students to participate in globalized online spaces,
which utilize new forms of multimodal
representation?
6. English for Science Project
• Students report the
aims, procedure and
outcomes of a simple
quasi-scientific study
– In the form of a
multimedia scientific
documentary (groups)
– In the form of a written
lab report (individuals)
7. Topics
• Blind as a bat
– To determine whether
the size of the blindspot
is different for men than
it is for women.
• Taste me if you can
– To determine what (if
any) effect the sense of
smell has on the sense of
taste
8. The genre:
Scientific documentary
• Hybrid genre which mixes:
– Popular genres (e.g. news
report, documentary)
– Scientific genres (e.g. research
article, report)
• An example from the BBC
– Opening
– Introduction
– Methods
– Results
– Discussion
– Closing
http://youtu.be/fK2b6UtVW70
10. Data sources
• Student scientific documentaries
– Analysis draws on Baldry and Thibault, 2006:
• Move, Shot, visual frame
• Speech
• Soundtrack
• Setting/participants
• Action/gaze gesture
• Camera position/perspective
• Student focus group interviews
• Student comments to course blog
11. Focus questions
• What multimodal rhetorical strategies do
students draw on when they create a
multimedia scientific documentary?
• How can this activity benefit their development
of academic literacies in the science domain?
13. The challenge of attention
The first impression of audience is the critical point
to determine the success of a good documentary
since if the audience’s attention cannot be attracted
at the beginning, they will have no interest to
continue to watch the video even the information is
rich and constructive. I agree with t01_john. He said
that visual stimulation would be the easiest way to
make them remember the video. [Student blog post,
October 7th, 2009 at 11:22 pm]
14. The challenge of multimodality
I think the most challenging thing is how to give
an attractive and interesting present[ation]
because we use lots of method involved in our
video. For example, use pictures, use a narrator,
stand in front of the camera for speaking and use
music or many, many elements we involved in
order to give a whole product to make it more
interesting. [Student focus group interview]
15. Thinking about multimodality
• Moving images and animation
• Charts and tables for scientific data
• Subtitles
• Different camera angles and lighting,
• Background music
• Sound effects
• Interesting locations
• Interesting participants
• Facial expression
16. 3 Cases and rhetorical devices
• Investigation of a startling fact
– Did you realize there is a blind spot in your eye?
• Investigation of a social issue
– Why does the cafeteria food taste so bad? Is it only
the taste, or is it the smell as well?
• Investigation of a personal issue
– Why can’t I taste this orange juice? Is there
something wrong with me?
26. Student identity
• Student as ‘reporter’
• Narrator role is more prominent, with an on-
screen narrator (the reporter), who appears at
various points throughout the documentary
• Watch for intertextual references and use of
sound
30. Student identity
• Student as ‘traveller’ on a ‘journey of
experiment’
• Narrator role is prominent, the narrator is a
part of the action as in a first person
documentary
• Watch for the range of visual information and
effective use of sound
34. Recontextualizing the
documentary
• A process that is transferrable
– Issues of audience, purpose, rhetorical structure
• From non-specialist to specialist audience
– Which aspects of the presentation are transferrable
to the new context? Which are not?
– Use of visuals? Register? Strategies for getting
attention?
35. Thank you! Questions?
• Further information about this project can be
obtained from the project website:
http://www1.english.cityu.edu.hk/acadlit
Publications:
• Hafner, C. A. and Miller, L. (2011) ‘Fostering Learner Autonomy in English for
Science: A Collaborative Digital Video Project in a Technological Learning
Environment’. Language Learning & Technology. 15/3, 68-86
Editor's Notes
We were looking at the rhetorical strategies used in creating the videos and whether or not these could be of use when preparing to write a Lab Report.
Students were concerned to meet the challenge of creating an interesting documentary capable of attracting the attention of viewers – many students felt that this was the most challenging aspect of the video overall. In their comments some students discuss how multimodal presentation techniques can be strategically used to creatively get attention, e.g. by providing an attention-getting opening to their documentary or a memorable closing.
The combination of modes is identified as a challenge by this student. In this extract the student articulates an awareness of the need to combine multiple modes simultaneously in order to communicate their message effectively.
Similarly, in their comments on the course weblog (made in the course of the semester) students demonstrate an appreciation of the range of multimodal semiotic resources available. In week 2, students were asked to evaluate sample documentaries and answer the question: “What do you think worked well in the documentaries that we viewed?” In their responses students commented on the way that different modalities complement one another. In the online discussion, students referred to a wide range of semiotic resources: moving images and animation, charts and tables for scientific data, subtitles, different camera angles and lighting, background music, sound effects, interesting locations, interesting participants, facial expression. Taking into account these observations, many students suggested possible strategies to use in their own documentaries.
Out of the 18 videos that students made, we identified 3 that we thought were particularly interesting, and which use slightly different rhetorical devices in order to respond to the challenge of getting attention. The first presents itself in a scientific fashion, and in order to get the attention of the audience the students present their topic as an investigation of a startling fact, pointing out that while we might feel that our vision is 100% complete, in actual fact each eye has a blind spot and objects that fall into this blind spot cannot be perceived. The students here are like scientists explaining concepts to a lay and uninformed audience. The second presents itself in a more journalistic fashion as a TV show on the CityU scientific channel and in order to get the attention of the audience the students present their topic as an investigation of a social issue, the complaints about food at the cafeteria. The students here are like investigative reporters. The third presents itself in a dramatic way as a kind of story, and in order to get the audience’s attention the students present their topic as an investigation of a personal issue, the problem that one student has tasting his orange juice. The students here are like adventurers who go on a quest to discover the truth.
In the first case, on the ‘Blind as a Bat’ topic, the students created a serious production with an objective tone that evoked a scientific or technical presentation. In order to catch the attention of the audience they present their topic as an investigation of a startling fact, pointing out that while we might feel that our vision is 100% complete, in actual fact each eye has a blind spot and objects that fall into this blind spot cannot be perceived. In the documentary they firmly adopt the identity of a scientist explaining a study to a lay, uninformed audience.
The narrator role is backgrounded as the students mainly use voiceover to narrate their documentary. As a result, there are fewer opportunities for interaction than there might otherwise be, and an increased social distance between the producers and their audience is achieved. The documentary is less personal and this contributes to a sense of objectivity that fits in with the role that students have adopted.
This is the opening ‘hook’ which presents the rhetorical device: ‘investigation of a startling fact’
The opening presents the startling idea that what we see may not be true, and that a tennis ball could suddenly disappear in front of us ‘naturally’. This is reinforced by the visual image, which shows a man throwing a ball toward the camera, and we see the ball disappear and reappear as it comes hurtling towards us. The visual image has strong elements of interpersonal interaction. Although the shot is medium long, with corresponding far social distance, the image is a nevertheless a demand (Kress and van Leeuwen, 2006) with the man looking directly at us and the ball hurtling towards us. This composition strongly engages the viewer, and the action of the ball disappearing confronts the viewer with a vision that they now cannot be true.
The students create an animation which draws on analytical images in order to show how the eye works. There is clear concurrence between the image and the text here: in the first frame, the image depicts light moving from the picture to the eye, refracting through the lens of the eye ending up on the retina. The animation zooms in on the eye to portray nerves, which flash as if stimulated. The animation then zooms out and the image shows how the information moves to the brain, with arrows appearing at the eye and forming a path to the brain.
In this shot, the students draw on a range of multimodal resources in order to assume the identity of the scientist explaining the results. First, they have chosen a setting and various props, equipment and tools that are associated with the university scientist. The student, portrayed at medium close distance from an oblique angle, is wearing a white laboratory coat, and is seated at the front of a university classroom in front of a computer. The student uses gaze in order to cue the involvement of the audience. At the beginning of the shot, his gaze is fixed on the screen, reflecting his involvement in his ‘work’ on the computer. Then his gaze shifts to us and the visual image shifts to a demand and we are invited to listen to what he has to say. Finally, his gaze shifts away again, as he continues his ‘work’.
In this case, on the taste me if you can topic, the students have created a video that evokes the experience of watching a lighthearted news programme on TV. In order to catch the attention of the audience they present their video as an investigation of a social issue. In their opening they point out that students have recently been complaining about the food in the university cafeteria, and set out to investigate why the food is so bad by doing an investigation of smell and taste.
With a more prominent narrator role, this documentary comes across as more personal than the previous one. As a consequence of closer social distance, the tone is more personal and there is a greater sense of involvement on the part of the audience as we are invited to identify with the narrator when he talks to us throughout the documentary.
This sequence precedes the opening hook and is interesting for the intertextual references that the students draw upon.
In this opening, the students draw heavily on multimodal intertextual resources – text, visuals and sound are all reminiscent of a TV channel and TV show, so that we have the distinct impression that we are watching the beginning of a TV show on the ‘CityU Scientific Channel’. We first see a television test screen, then we see a title page which incorporates information about language and weather (top left cluster), TV channel (top right cluster, CUSC stands for CityU Scientific Channel, as well as scrolling along the bottom cluster: ‘Scientific channel’) and the Next program announcement (middle cluster), then we see the advertisement for the upcoming programme, then the scientific channel logo, then the programme intro including some credits, finally we see the reporter at the scene, eating food in the cafeteria.
In this case, also on the taste me if you can topic, the students have created a video which evokes a drama and tells a story. In order to catch the attention of the audience, the students have presented their topic as an investigation of a personal issue. Near the beginning of the video there is a role play between two students, one of whom has a bad cold and can’t taste his orange juice. He is about to rush to the clinic to see what is wrong when the other stops him, and they decide to investigate the issue on their own.
In this case the narrator role is still prominent but the narrator is more closely involved in the action because of the way that the video follows the two friends and tells the story of their ‘journey of experiment’. This is more in the style of a participatory documentary and there is quite a lot of interpersonal engagement as we are invited to identify with the protagonists and be involved in their story.
At this point the story is told entirely visually, with a very impressive range of visuals (different kinds of shots, camera angles and distances) and effective use of the soundtrack to liven up the subject. The upbeat funky music played here contrasts with the activity itself, which is doing research in the library. With effective use of multimodal resources the students are able to portray this activity in a much more positive way.
The basic idea is that the documentary task presents students with a medium that they are very familiar with, and challenges them to create something that will attract the attention of the audience. In doing so, they have to think about issues of audience, purpose and rhetorical structure in a process that is broadly similar to writing in any context. When subsequently they recontextualize their documentaries and re-present them as written lab reports, they are faced with a different kind of challenge, namely of repurposing the content for a specialist audience, whose expectations they may be less familiar with. This opens up a space to reflect on which aspects of the presentation that they did are transferrable to the new context and which ones are not. In particular, on our course, it stimulated discussion about using visuals in scientific discourse and about register in scientific discourse. It could equally well stimulate a discussion about the discursive strategies that scientists use in order to get the attention of their audience.