This project will capture and examine a range of practice innovations in multimodal digital education, resulting in the co-creation of cross-institutional principles and interactive resources that model truly future-facing learning, teaching, and assessment.
Multimodal digital strategies can empower educators to explore new pedagogical practices, connect students with a wider range of resources, and support new forms of knowledge production. This project aims to generate and utilise actionable knowledge related to how educational spaces and practices are being reimagined through different conceptualisations of multimodality to inform new avenues for learning, teaching, and assessment.
Through collaborative fieldwork involving a consortium of University Alliance institutions, this project will develop a shared understanding of cross-institution multimodal strategies, approaches, and arrangements through identifying and examining a range of practice-based interventions and initiatives designed to provide flexible and inclusive learning, teaching, and assessment.
Outputs
The project team will develop practical outputs to support the sector to adopt innovative multimodal digital education in their own contexts including:
Read the project blog
Learn more about the project in blog posts by Professor Sam Elkington from Teesside University.
- A set of evidence-informed principles for effective digital multimodal learning, teaching, and assessment designs and practices.
- A series of accessible and interactive resources to illustrate effective practice models aligned to the principles for multimodal digital education.
- A symposium event to showcase the resources and share best practices.
Tune into the podcast series
The project team are developing a podcast series which explores understandings of multimodalities. Each podcast addresses a sub-theme from the project including simulation in education, Artificial Intelligence, multimodality and assessment, and spatial fluency. These reflect the institutional priorities of the four project partners.
Lead institution: Teesside University
Partner institutions: Birmingham City University, University of Greenwich and Anglia Ruskin University
Other Collaborative Enhancement Projects
QAA supports a number of projects every year, covering a range of topics and interest areas. Each is led by a QAA Member, working in collaboration with other members institutions. You can find more information on all projects, and access resources and outputs, on our website.