Identity, Investment, and Digital Storybooks for a Multilingual Future

The world has changed since I published my early work on identity, investment, and language learning in the mid 1990s. Because of advancements in digital technology, there are new relations of power at micro and macro levels, and digital literacy has become essential in 鈥渃laiming the right to speak.鈥 As language learners navigate these changing times, they need to negotiate new identities, investments, and imagined futures (Norton, 2013). Working with Ron Darvin, I have responded to new linguistic landscapes by developing an expanded model of investment that integrates identity, ideology, and linguistic capital in a comprehensive framework (Darvin & Norton, 2015). In this presentation, I will argue that while there are structures that may limit a language learner鈥檚 investment, the model seeks to illustrate how learners can draw on language and literacy practices that enhance possibility. Drawing on my recent research on digital storybooks in both wealthy and poorly resourced global communities, I will discuss the ways in which digital storybooks can harness the linguistic capital of young learners and their parents in homes, schools, and communities in the interests of a more equitable multilingual future (Stranger-Johannessen & Norton, 2017; Stranger-Johannessen, Doherty & Norton, 2018). 

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References

Darvin, R. & Norton, B. (2015). Identity and a model of investment in applied linguistics. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 35, 35-56.

Norton, B. (2013). Identity and language learning: Extending the conversation. 2nd Edition. Bristol: Multilingual Matters. 

Stranger-Johannessen, E., Doherty, L., & Norton, B. (2018). The African Storybook and Storybooks Canada: Digital stories for linguistically diverse children. Language and Literacy, 20(3), 121-133.

Stranger-Johannessen, E. & Norton, B. (2017). The African Storybook and language teacher identity in digital times. Modern Language Journal, 101(S1), 45鈥60.


Recommended Readings

Darvin, R. & Norton, B.(2015) Identity and a model of investment in applied linguistics. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 35, 36-56. 

Stranger-Johannessen, Doherty, and Norton (2018) available at the following site:

小黄书视频 the speaker

Dr. Bonny Norton, FRSC, is a Professor and Distinguished University Scholar in the Department of Language and Literacy Education, UBC. Her primary research interests are identity and language learning, digital literacy, and international development. Recent publications include a 2017 special issue on language teacher identity (MLJ) and a 2013 second edition of Identity and Language Learning (Multilingual Matters). A Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the American Educational Research Association, she was a 2016 co-recipient of the TESOL Distinguished Research Award and in 2018 received the CSSE Graduate Student Mentorship Award. Her current project is and .