Multimodal Mondays: Rocking the B Side: The Soundtrack of Low-Stakes Assignments

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Kim Haimes-Korn is a Professor of English and Digital Writing at Kennesaw State University. She also trains graduate student teachers in composition theory and pedagogy. Kim’s teaching philosophy encourages dynamic learning and critical digital literacies and focuses on students’ powers to create their own knowledge through language and various “acts of composition.” She is a regular contributor to this Multimodal Monday academic blog since 2014. She likes to have fun every day, return to nature when things get too crazy, and think deeply about way too many things. She loves teaching. It has helped her understand the value of amazing relationships and boundless creativity. You can reach Kim at khaimesk@kennesaw.edu or visit her website: Acts of Composition

 

I just returned from the 4Cs (Conference on College Composition and Communication), our discipline’s premier national conference in Baltimore. It was a great opportunity to interact with other engaged composition teachers and to explore new ideas. I was encouraged to see the number of presentations focusing on and featuring multimodal projects and pedagogy. Multimodal composition is firmly planted within our field.  

This trip was particularly special because I had the pleasure of presenting and mentoring three of my graduate students on a panel at the conference. I met these students through my work in my Composition Theory and Pedagogy class in 2024, where I teach about the impact, processes, and practices of multimodal composition. These students, who are now Teachers of Record in their own FYC classes, have incorporated these approaches into their curriculum. I dedicate this post to our experience at the conference and share materials from our presentation.  

Some Context:

In his essay “Writing Is Not Natural,” composition professor Dylan B. Dryer calls to our attention to the fact that writing is, and always has been, an expression of technologies. The feather quill, the ballpoint pen, and yes, the very laptops our students use are all technologies in their own right. Writing has always been a way to embrace technology. As a cohort, we have bonded over the possibilities of this communication. We remix the ideas surrounding multimodality and sample this idea across different formats, believing that the best way to honor composition’s past is by embracing its future. Our students, as it turns out, often agree. We share a series of low-stakes assignments that celebrate multimodal technologies and practices.

Follow links for Presentation Slides and HandoutFollow links for Presentation Slides and Handout

Writing itself is a remix as we cross disciplines and genres. Digital and multimodal composition brings together visual, audio, and kinesthetic modes along with the written text. We now consider design and audience experience as part of our rhetorical situation and train students to move around and explore options that lead to critical and creative thinking. Our classrooms themselves are intricate symphonies that harmonize through collaboration, composition, cadence, pitch, and rhythm. Music is a natural metaphor for what we do as composition teachers. The A-side of composition is reading and writing, but the B-side is the low-stakes multimodal assignments where the students experience learning through invention without a heavily weighted penalty, developing a soundtrack for their writing. Remixing the first-year composition course requires innovative scaffolding. 

We share multimodal, low-stakes assignments that draw upon music, both literally and metaphorically. Through using music as a lens, students come to understand connections to events, emotions, ideas, and cultural influences. What follows are our individual ideas and the ways we use technology tools to promote critical and creative thinking. For the full details for each assignment, see the attached presentation slides and handout.  

Kim Haimes Korn  - Curating Creative Playlists

Curation is an important skill for students to understand the processes of collecting, selecting, interpreting, creating, and sharing in the FYC classroom and across the curriculum. Students curate research articles, images, and a variety of shared content. We tend to think about playlists existing outside of the classroom, but they can engage students in a range of important rhetorical and interpretive skills that promote research and critical thinking. Playlists can inform, tell stories, express themes, and communicate ideas. Kim shares some low-stakes assignments that engage students in curation and interpretation through playlists, such as the soundtrack of your life, cultural critiques, thematic threads, and place-based and generational research. See my full post, Curating Creative Playlists (2023) as part of the Multimodal Mondays blog.

 

Emily Crocker - Jamming With Canva and Mood Boards

The power of visuals cannot be overstated, especially in an attention-based environment such as the FYC classroom. Much like how an album cover is vital to the promotion of a record, Canva serves as a design platform that allows students to deliver professional content such as videos, presentations, Instagram reels, wallpaper, and much more. Emily shares her Canva Mood Board assignment that remixes student research through collage. Students learn the benefits of visual design and data visualization through extending their research ideas in new ways.

Heather Voraphongphibul - Composition Karaoke

Students can delight in the aural qualities of traditional rhetoric as they aid in understanding audience awareness and rhetorical appeals. Modern recording technologies provide instructors with mediums that enhance the repetition, alliteration, and poetic waxings of rhetors that impact audience awareness and the skills of growing writers. Heather shares a Composition Karaoke lesson, using Voice Thread, that further pushes these remixing practices by allowing students to incorporate songs, sound effects, and other sonorous approaches to convey meaningful messages. She has students research, rewrite, and record movie monologues through the lenses of genre, audience, and tone.

Emily Chick - ReVision and Remix

Remixing is revising through changing, blending, or altering to create something new. In this project, students remix the narrative essay through three modes: text, visual, and audio. Each part of this project extends students' creative and critical thinking skills. Students write a narrative, create a vision board, and generate a song using the Gen AI program Suno Music creator. This program offers features like personalized lyrics, discovering new artists, and curating playlists, making it a versatile tool for creative projects. Emily discusses the ways instructors can incorporate multimodal, low-stakes assignments through reVision and remix.

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As academic professionals, we often present at conferences to share our ideas and teaching practices, but this post gives us a chance to expand our reach and share with our readers here. As a long-time teacher of teachers, I appreciate the mentorship opportunities that these platforms provide.  bell hooks reminds us in Teaching to Transgress, that teaching is about experimentation and engagement in the classroom. Multimodal pedagogies offer many possibilities for learning and expression. We are reminded that integrated, low-stakes, multimodal assignments provide incremental scaffolding that helps students think critically and creatively on their way to their larger, major assignments.

References:

Dryer, Dylan B. “Writing Is Not Natural.” Naming What We Know, Linda Adler-Kassner, University Press of Colorado, 2015.

hooks, bell. Teaching to Transgress. Routledge, 1994.

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In this post, I’ll provide you with information about Dog translator and dog whistle sounds, which help us unlock the secrets of canine communication, transforming how we connect with our furry friends. With my dog, Tommy, I’ve explored how these tools decode dog vocal cues and enhance training.

This guide dives into: dog whistle sound

  • Understanding dog whistle sounds and their role in human-dog communication.
  • How dog translators analyze barks, whines, and yelps for emotional insights.
  • Top apps dog whistle sound translators of 2025.
  • Benefits, challenges, and future tech, like wearable tech for dogs.
  • FAQs addressing the dog whistle sound and its different aspects.

Ready to deepen your bond with your pup? Explore how dog translators and dog whistle sounds can make you fluent in “dog” – start decoding today!

 

 

Dog Whistle Sounds: What Does It Mean?

I’ll walk you through something fascinating today: dog whistle sounds and why they’re a big deal for anyone who loves dogs or wants to understand them better.

Back in the day, I thought a dog whistle was just a quirky training tool, like something you’d see in an old cartoon. Then I got my first pup, Tommy, and realized there’s a whole world of high-frequency dog sounds we humans can’t even hear. Simple. Dogs pick up these ultrasonic dog vocalizations like it’s their native language, while we’re stuck in the dark.

Tools like dog translators are popping up to help decode these sounds, and I’ll explain how they fit in as we go. Let me take you into what these sounds are, why they matter, and how you can use this knowledge to connect with your furry friend.

What Does a Dog Whistle Sound Mean?

I’ll explain: dog whistle sounds are high-frequency dog sounds, typically above 20,000 Hz, that dogs hear but humans don’t. These consist of whistles and sounds like whines or yelps. Dogs also produce infrasonic dog sounds—low-frequency rumbles below our range, like deep growls. 

Dog translators can sometimes pick up these frequencies, analyzing patterns to guess what your pup’s saying. How about an example? A trainer blows a whistle at 25,000 Hz to call a dog back. The dog bolts toward them, while you hear nothing. That’s the magic of dog whistle frequencies.

Here’s the catch: not all dog sounds are whistles. Growls and howls often fall in our audible range, but dog whines (high-pitched) or yelps can creep into ultrasonic dog vocalizations. (According to a 2018 study in Animal Cognition, dogs’ vocal range spans 20 Hz to 45,000 Hz!)

Fun fact: the term “dog whistle” also applies to politics. A political dog whistle is coded language only a specific group “hears,” like a subtle nod to an audience segment—sneaky, right?

Cool tip: Record your dog’s vocalizations with a high-quality mic and analyze them with free software like Audacity. You might spot sounds dogs make humans can’t hear. For extra fun, try a dog translator app to see if it catches the same frequencies.

In short, dog whistle sounds—whether training tools, natural dog vocal range, or decoded by dog translators—are a mix of science and communication. They’re how dogs “talk” in ways we’re only starting to grasp.

Why is Understanding Dog Whistle Sound Crucial?

Why should you care about dog communication sounds? Simple. They bridge the gap between you and your dog. Back in the day, I’d get frustrated when Tommy ignored my commands, thinking he was stubborn. Turns out, he was responding to dog sound perception cues I didn’t know existed.

Understanding these sounds, with or without dog translators, helps you “speak” your dog’s language, making training easier and your bond stronger.

From an evolutionary angle, wolf vocalizations were about survival—coordinating hunts or warning the pack. Domesticated dogs kept some of that, but domestication effects on vocalizations made their sounds more varied to communicate with us.

Dog translators can sometimes pick up these nuances, though they’re better with context than raw frequency. Ignoring these cues? That’s 1000% WRONG—you’re missing half the conversation.

Cool tip: Spend 10 minutes observing your dog’s sounds in different situations (eating, playing, sleeping). Jot down what you hear to decode their types of dog vocalizations. Pair this with a dog translator app to cross-check your observations—it’s like cracking a secret code!

Grasping high-frequency dog whistle sounds, their roots in wolf vocalizations, and tools like dog translators make you a better dog parent. It’s about connection, not just control.

In a nutshell, implementing this means blending tools, observation, and patience to unlock dog vocal range with help from dog translators. You’ll feel closer to your pup than ever.