Conversing with a text—or talking back to a text and its author—helps you move beyond your early notes to form judgments about what you’ve read, seen, or heard. You might choose to pose questions, point out something that is puzzling or provocative and why, or explain a disagreement you have with the image or the text.
The following questions will help you converse with a multimodal text.
Many writers use a double-entry notebook to converse with a text and generate ideas for writing. A double-entry notebook allows you to separate what a text says and does from what a text means. To create one, draw a line down the center of a notebook page. As you record details and features of a multimodal text on the left side of the notebook page and your own responses on the right side, you can visualize the conversation as it develops.
To create a double-entry notebook electronically, you can use a table or text boxes in a word processing program.
Excerpt from a double-entry notebook for a multimodal text (an advertisement)
Guidelines for actively reading a multimodal text