Author(s): Grace M. Kim
Year of publication: 2016
Keywords: Multicultural learning, Transcultural digital literacies, Online discussion forum, Self-representations, Multimodal texts
Methodology/Sample: Virtual ethnography/1 website
Reference: Kim, G. M. (2016). Transcultural digital literacies: Cross‐border connections and self‐representations in an online forum. Reading Research Quarterly, 51(2), 199-219. https://doi.org/10.1002/rrq.131
Abstract
Research on multicultural learning has focused on formal and local settings, such as schools, but young people are interacting with, and therefore learning from, informal settings and nonlocal contexts, including online platforms. That is, multicultural education is no longer limited to formal institutions, local contexts, or the printed word. Young people consume new media texts produced by geographically distant places but also compose their own multimodal texts around these media. Transcultural digital literacies refer to this phenomenon as using new technological affordances to learn, imagine, and create knowledge that traverses national boundaries and conventional cultural borders. To illustrate transcultural digital literacy practices, this study analyzes youths’ engagements with digitally mediated texts to construct cross-border connections and self-representations. An online discussion forum about Korean dramas serves as an empirical case. Literacy practices within the forum revealed how its participants rendered it a dynamic space for multicultural learning. Participants engaged in dialogic readings of Korean culture, in addition to other cultures. Moreover, their online multimodal literacy practices allowed them to disrupt a notion of identity as constituted monolithically according to singular categories of difference, such as race, ethnicity, or nationality. Examining these informal, nonlocal, and digitally mediated literacy practices has implications for understanding a dynamic literacy landscape and multicultural and global learning.
> Summary
- The paper explores transcultural digital literacies, emphasizing informal, self-directed online practices beyond traditional literacy frameworks.
- It highlights how young people engage with global texts and create multimodal content across cultural boundaries.
- The study analyzes an online forum about Korean dramas, illustrating dynamic multicultural learning experiences.
- It argues that literacy is no longer confined to printed texts, expanding to include visual and aural media.
- The research contributes to understanding the evolving landscape of literacy in a globalized, digital context.
> Problem statement
- The paper discusses how multicultural education is limited to formal settings, neglecting informal online contexts where youth learn about diverse cultures.
- It highlights the need to understand transcultural digital literacies that cross national and cultural boundaries.
- The study addresses the problematic interactions and stereotypes perpetuated in online communities, particularly regarding cultural identities.
- It emphasizes the structural inequalities and societal issues that persist despite the potential of transcultural digital literacies.
- The research aims to illustrate how youth engage with media texts to construct identities beyond traditional categories of difference.
> Methods used
- The study employs unobtrusive methods to analyze online interactions without direct contact with participants.
- Ethnography is utilized, particularly focusing on online data sources and participants’ movements across digital platforms.
- Qualitative content analysis is applied to trace and analyze discussion threads in the online forum.
- The research emphasizes multimodal composing to explore identity articulation in digital spaces.
- The study recognizes the need for adaptive methods to address evolving online literacy landscapes.
- The research highlights the importance of analyzing informal learning spaces for understanding literacy practices.
> Practical implications
- The study highlights the need for multicultural education to adapt to informal, nonlocal contexts like online platforms.
- It emphasizes the importance of transcultural digital literacies in supporting global citizenship and cultural flexibility.
- The findings suggest that online communities can facilitate dynamic multicultural learning experiences.
- Educators should consider the global environment in which young people engage, especially online.
- The research calls for a broader understanding of identity that transcends traditional categories.

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