Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school

Bilingual minoritised youth face challenging conditions for learning Science in South African schools. Among these are restrictive school-level language policies; entrenched monoglossic language ideologies within the education system which play out in classroom practice; and a lack of learning and t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tyler, Robyn Lucy
Other Authors: Mckinney, Carolyn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2019
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613523237928960
access_status_str Open Access
author Tyler, Robyn Lucy
author2 Mckinney, Carolyn
author_browse Mckinney, Carolyn
Tyler, Robyn Lucy
author_facet Mckinney, Carolyn
Tyler, Robyn Lucy
author_sort Tyler, Robyn Lucy
collection Thesis
description Bilingual minoritised youth face challenging conditions for learning Science in South African schools. Among these are restrictive school-level language policies; entrenched monoglossic language ideologies within the education system which play out in classroom practice; and a lack of learning and teaching materials in African languages. Despite these challenges, learners work daily to make meaning in specific Science topics. It is this meaning-making process which is the focus of this case study. The study proceeds from the view of language as one of multiple semiotic resources comprising an individual’s semiotic repertoire which they draw upon to make meaning. Further, following Bakhtin, an understanding of the inherently heteroglossic nature of language is brought to bear on the learners’ bilingual practices as they journey along a meaning trajectory through a Science topic. These practices are described taking up the recently developed term ‘translanguaging’ and Angel Lin’s ‘trans-semiotizing’ with the theoretical work of these terms being extended to include different registers as well as named languages and modes. A case study employing the tools and perspectives of linguistic ethnography was undertaken for a period of nine months in a high school in Khayelitsha, Cape Town. The author joined a Grade 9 (13/14 year olds) class as a participant-observer during their study of the topic ‘Chemical Reactions’ and facilitated a study group with volunteers from the class of 36 learners. Interactional data from multiple sources of audio and video recordings was collected from ten Natural Science lessons and eight study group meetings. Learner texts, school policy documents, photographs, interviews with staff and questionnaires were also employed to enable analysis of the language environment of the school and microethnographic analyses of the multimodal interactional data. Building on the taxonomies developed by scholars of social semiotics working in Science learning contexts (Jay Lemke, Eduardo Mortimer and Philip Scott, Gunther Kress and Carey Jewitt) three broad categories of learner meaning-making are identified in the data: constrained, guided and spontaneous meaning-making. Forming the major theoretical contribution of this dissertation, these categories serve to provide a framework for understanding learners’ meaning-making – conceptual development as well as identity work - in monolingual and/or bilingual contexts. Key insights from the data analysis include that while constrained meaning-making can facilitate the acquisition of fixed words in scientific discourse, guided and spontaneous meaning-making are required for discourse appropriation and flexible expression of scientific ideas, often through a meshed register. Further research and teaching practice attention focused on guided and spontaneous meaning-making in content subjects drawing on multiple modes is argued for.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30139
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:37:30.085Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher School of Education
publisherStr School of Education
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30139 Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school Tyler, Robyn Lucy Mckinney, Carolyn Bilingual minoritised youth face challenging conditions for learning Science in South African schools. Among these are restrictive school-level language policies; entrenched monoglossic language ideologies within the education system which play out in classroom practice; and a lack of learning and teaching materials in African languages. Despite these challenges, learners work daily to make meaning in specific Science topics. It is this meaning-making process which is the focus of this case study. The study proceeds from the view of language as one of multiple semiotic resources comprising an individual’s semiotic repertoire which they draw upon to make meaning. Further, following Bakhtin, an understanding of the inherently heteroglossic nature of language is brought to bear on the learners’ bilingual practices as they journey along a meaning trajectory through a Science topic. These practices are described taking up the recently developed term ‘translanguaging’ and Angel Lin’s ‘trans-semiotizing’ with the theoretical work of these terms being extended to include different registers as well as named languages and modes. A case study employing the tools and perspectives of linguistic ethnography was undertaken for a period of nine months in a high school in Khayelitsha, Cape Town. The author joined a Grade 9 (13/14 year olds) class as a participant-observer during their study of the topic ‘Chemical Reactions’ and facilitated a study group with volunteers from the class of 36 learners. Interactional data from multiple sources of audio and video recordings was collected from ten Natural Science lessons and eight study group meetings. Learner texts, school policy documents, photographs, interviews with staff and questionnaires were also employed to enable analysis of the language environment of the school and microethnographic analyses of the multimodal interactional data. Building on the taxonomies developed by scholars of social semiotics working in Science learning contexts (Jay Lemke, Eduardo Mortimer and Philip Scott, Gunther Kress and Carey Jewitt) three broad categories of learner meaning-making are identified in the data: constrained, guided and spontaneous meaning-making. Forming the major theoretical contribution of this dissertation, these categories serve to provide a framework for understanding learners’ meaning-making – conceptual development as well as identity work - in monolingual and/or bilingual contexts. Key insights from the data analysis include that while constrained meaning-making can facilitate the acquisition of fixed words in scientific discourse, guided and spontaneous meaning-making are required for discourse appropriation and flexible expression of scientific ideas, often through a meshed register. Further research and teaching practice attention focused on guided and spontaneous meaning-making in content subjects drawing on multiple modes is argued for. 2019-05-16T07:44:46Z 2019-05-16T07:44:46Z 2018 2019-05-15T13:05:57Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30139 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Tyler, Robyn Lucy
Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school
title_full Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school
title_fullStr Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school
title_full_unstemmed Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school
title_short Semiotic repertoires in bilingual Science learning: a study of learners - meaning-making practices in two sites in a Cape Town high school
title_sort semiotic repertoires in bilingual science learning a study of learners meaning making practices in two sites in a cape town high school
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30139
work_keys_str_mv AT tylerrobynlucy semioticrepertoiresinbilingualsciencelearningastudyoflearnersmeaningmakingpracticesintwositesinacapetownhighschool