by Francis Gilbert. How I improved my creative practice by adopting a multimodal approach for a specific audience
ABSTRACT
This research illustrates how teacher-writers can improve their craft and pedagogy by writing for a specific
audience, namely school children. It also illustrates why they might do so. It interrogates what was learnt from
an innovative collaboration between a university teacher-education department, an inner-city secondary
school and the United Kingdom’s National Maritime Museum (NMM).
Multimodality (Barnard 2019) inspired the project: local spaces, institutional settings, historical objects,
photographs, pictures, time-travelling films and narratives motivated the teacher-writer and participants to
read and respond imaginatively to the world.
The author found that the project caused him to “remediate” his own practice: to transfer “existing skills
in order to tackle new genres” (Barnard 2019: 121). This process enabled him to become a more effective
writer and teacher. The research shows that the problem of multimodal overload – having too much choice
regarding what to write about and the many forms writing can take – can be circumnavigated if participants
are given both autonomy and constraints. It illustrates in some depth how the concept of reciprocity is vital to
adopt if writers are to improve their craft.
Keywords: Creative writing, Remediation, Multimodality, Teaching, Reciprocity