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[…] The action research cycle results show that task
design should follow a certain sequence: First, tasks should
focus on gaining an understanding of the e-literacy skills
required when working with tools such as forums, wikis, and
social bookmarking sites for language learning and teaching
purposes. Ideally, this understanding should enable teachers
to provide a rationale for using bespoke tools. Next, tasks
should raise their awareness of a tool’s specific affordances,
i.e. the constraints and possibilities of the modes available
for meaning making and communication (Hampel & Hauck,
2006). This will allow the teachers to move to the next level
of Hampel and Stickler’s (2005) skills pyramid by fostering
their multimodal communicative competence and thus
their professional literacy (Willis, 2001). These steps are
a prerequisite for the subsequent phase in which teachers
themselves design tasks with the goal of fostering, in turn,
their learners’ multimodal competence and autonomy since
merely equipping learners with creative and democratic
representational online resources will not necessarily result
in higher student control over the learning process or the
development of autonomy (Hampel & Hauck, 2006).
(Carolin Fuchs, Andreas Müller-Hartmann, Mirjam Hauck.
Promoting learner autonomy through multiliteracy
skills development in cross-institutional exchanges. Adaptado)
For a language teacher, a significant implication of focusing on a tool’s constraints in task design is