4 resultados para academic work

em Archivo Digital para la Docencia y la Investigación - Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad del País Vasco


Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

This academic work is based on the study of the gold standard, its evolution over the years, their periods of boom and crisis. We will also discuss the arguments that some economists back the return to this monetary system.

Relevância:

60.00% 60.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

[es] Este trabajo presenta una intervención educativa realizada en una Ikastola del País Vasco. Su propósito es atender las necesidades que en el ámbito de la educación emocional presentan los niños y niñas de la escuela de primaria. Con este punto de partida, el objeto de estudio se sitúa en la técnica del mindfulness como herramienta educativa para el desarrollo de las competencias emocionales. El proceso de elaboración de la propuesta ha requerido buscar información sobre el objeto de estudio y elaborar un diagnóstico de necesidades a partir del cual concretar los objetivos de la intervención. Entre los resultados obtenidos cabe destacar que el alumnado participante ha sido capaz de identificar y verbalizar diferentes sentimientos y emociones con las que ha entrado en contacto en la práctica del mindfulness.

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

[EN] This academic activity has been the origin of other work that are also located in this repository. The first one is the dataset of information about the geometry of the Monastery recorded during the two years of fieldwork, then some bachelor thesis and papers are listed:

Relevância:

30.00% 30.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The past years have seen an increasing debate on cooperation and its unique human character. Philosophers and psychologists have proposed that cooperative activities are characterized by shared goals to which participants are committed through the ability to understand each other’s intentions. Despite its popularity, some serious issues arise with this approach to cooperation. First, one may challenge the assumption that high-level mental processes are necessary for engaging in acting cooperatively. If they are, then how do agents that do not possess such ability (preverbal children, or children with autism who are often claimed to be mind-blind) engage in cooperative exchanges, as the evidence suggests? Secondly, to define cooperation as the result of two de-contextualized minds reading each other’s intentions may fail to fully acknowledge the complexity of situated, interactional dynamics and the interplay of variables such as the participants’ relational and personal history and experience. In this paper we challenge such accounts of cooperation, calling for an embodied approach that sees cooperation not only as an individual attitude toward the other, but also as a property of interaction processes. Taking an enactive perspective, we argue that cooperation is an intrinsic part of any interaction, and that there can be cooperative interaction before complex communicative abilities are achieved. The issue then is not whether one is able or not to read the other’s intentions, but what it takes to participate in joint action. From this basic account, it should be possible to build up more complex forms of cooperation as needed. Addressing the study of cooperation in these terms may enhance our understanding of human social development, and foster our knowledge of different ways of engaging with others, as in the case of autism.