Although new technologies are embedded in students' lives today, there
is often an assumption that their use is transparent, inconsequential,
or a distraction. This book combines complex systems theory with
sociocultural theory and the multimodal theory of communication,
providing an innovative theoretical framework to examine how
communication and meaning-making in the language classroom have
developed over time, how technology impacts on meaning-making, and what
the implications are for learners, teachers, institutions and policy
makers. Recent studies provide evidence for the disruptive effect of
technology which has resulted in a phase shift that is reshaping
language education by creating new interaction patterns, allowing for
multimodal communication, and introducing real-world communication into
the classroom. The book proposes ways of responding to this shift before
concluding that the new technologies are radically transforming the way
we learn. It is likely to appeal to a range of readers, including
students, academics, teachers and policy-makers.