Promoting intercultural and visual media competence in the foreign language classroom with the Autobiography of Intercultural Encounters through Visual Media
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2021
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“It is because pictures say nothing in words that so much can be said in words about
them.” This quote from the introduction to The Mind’s Eye: Using Pictures Creatively
in Language Learning (Maley, Duff, & Grellet, 1980) neatly summarizes why
communicative approaches to foreign language education (FLE) have a history of
using visual aids in the classroom. Beyond the common use of images as prompts for
language production or to support reading and listening in the second language,
educationalists in the field (e.g., Goldstein, 2008; Hecke & Surkamp, 2010) have
more recently seen a role for FLE in fostering visual media literacy,1 which,
according to Averginou and Ericson (1997), Eilam (2012), and Stokes (2002),
involves developing in students the cognitive skills needed to engage criticallywith the myriad of print and digital images from all over the world with which they
are confronted daily.
In view of the encounters with otherness that take place through these globally
transmitted images, the authors of this chapter propose that language learners need
not only visual media literacy but also intercultural competence to engage with
images and articulate their reactions to them. Specifically, the authors of this chapter
report on insights for teaching gained from using the Council of Europe’s Images of
Others: An Autobiography of Intercultural Encounters Through Visual Media
(AIEVM) (Barrett, Byram, Ipgrave, & Seurrat, 2013a) in an online intercultural
exchange (OIE) that was conducted between preservice teachers of English at
Dortmund University (Germany) and Jaén University (Spain). In this exchange,
the AIEVM served as the central instrument around which activities were developed
to help students reflect on the way cultural “otherness” is represented in and
interpreted through images. An analysis of students’ work during the exchange
and post-exchange feedback suggests that the OIE learning environment enriched
the experience of working with the AIEVM and helped in particular to heighten
critical cultural awareness of visual media.
The chapter opens with a brief overview of the role of visual media literacy in
education, then considers more specifically the use of visuals in FLE. It is argued
that, although visuals are widely used in FLE teaching materials today, visual media
literacy generally and intercultural and visual media competence in particular are
rarely promoted. The chapter then presents the AIEVM and the theoretical framework
that underpins it. It shows how this educational tool is designed to encourage
structured reflection on intercultural encounters through image, which in turn can
activate intercultural and visual media competence to help users deconstruct images
of “others” and “otherness” in relation to their own sociocultural context(s) (Barrett
et al., 2013a; Barrett, Byram, Ipgrave, & Seurrat, 2013b). The chapter explains the
rationale for using the AIEVM in the FLE classroom and in language teacher training
and then goes on to outline how it was implemented in the online exchange
mentioned above. In the discussion of this learning scenario, excerpts from students’
work and feedback are included to illustrate the learning opportunities afforded by
the AIEVM in a multiliteracies approach to FLE.