Resumen: With the development of Web 2.0 we have witnessed an ever-expanding repertoire of digital genres. This brings with it new communicative needs and invites us to reflect on possible ways of teaching digital multimodal composing in EAP courses. Using case study research and genre theory as a heuristic, this article critically discusses the implementation of a pedagogical practice that sought to raise the students' rhetorical consciousness of aspects of genre continuity, evolution and innovation, focusing on digital genres of professional and public science communication. The examination of the digital texts composed by the students shows that several factors (genre awareness, genre knowledge transfer, reliance on acquired content and formal schemata and interdiscursive performance) may play an important role when recontextualising specialised content across genres. The study findings also suggest that while rhetorical consciousness facilitates the processes of recontextualising and repurposing content to reach broad audiences, L1 transfer could negatively influence digital genre composing. In light of the findings, I advocate explicit instruction in “metageneric texts” and methodologies for raising awareness of “inter-genre-al” forms across connected genres online. This could support the students’ professional development and the participatory framework for scientific research advocated by the Open Science agenda. Idioma: Inglés DOI: 10.1016/j.jeap.2024.101349 Año: 2024 Publicado en: Journal of English for Academic Purposes 68 (2024), 101349 [24 pp.] ISSN: 1475-1585 Financiación: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/ES/MICINN/PID2019-105655RB-I00 Tipo y forma: Artículo (Versión definitiva) Área (Departamento): Área Filología Inglesa (Dpto. Filolog.Inglesa y Alema.)