In the chapter Talking Back to Teachers: Undergraduate
Research in Multimodal Composition, a group of graduate students studied theory
about multimodal/multimedia work. The students traveled to a Watson conference,
which is a congregation of professors and scholars who work with computers and
composition studies. The students made videos about the experience of seeing
older scholars dealing with technology. The students reference Kate Hayles'
theory of hyper and deep attention. Kate Hayles discusses how many people have
a hard time reading texts because their mind wants to wander to other things
like technology. Many people these days believe college students today don't
have much capacity to focus deeply on a reading task because they prefer to
give their attention in a more hyper manner, switching from sensory input to
sensory input as they move fairly quickly among media texts online rather than
reading a linear book. An example of this theory can be seen in our own
classroom. The week that students presented their blog videos seemed much more
interesting to me than whenever the students just read whatever they posted on
their blogs that day. Watching videos with a length of ninety seconds seemed to
be way more interesting than just a wall of text. The class also seemed to be a
lot shorter that day compared to the other classes. Maybe it was because I was
able to pay more attention due to the short length of the videos mixed with the
audio and visual content. Everyone has their own personal views on technology
and how it affects their attention span.
-Hailey
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