Abstract
Higher education needs to produce increasing numbers of good quality graduates. Included herein is the
need for graduates that can engage in high level quantitative literacy practices, which requires designs
for learning that understand how texts are constructed through language, images and mathematical
notation, which together form the meaning-making repertoire of quantitative literacy. This paper applies
a framework for quantitative literacy events in the analysis of a particular graphical procedure used
during undergraduate civil engineering courses throughout South Africa. The framework draws on the
New Literacies Studies’ view of literacy as social practice and examines the specific practices that
students need to engage with during individual quantitative literacy events. Application of the framework
demonstrates that such graphical procedures constitute quantitative literacy events in which students
engage in various quantitative practices, the implications of which inform designs for learning in civil
engineering in several key respects.