2 resultados para general religious education (GRE)

em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal


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O nosso estudo debruça-se sobre o uso de estruturadores do discurso na interacção verbal, em contexto pedagógico. As nossas referências teóricas estão vinculadas à Análise do Discurso, quer à escola francesa (com origem na Linguística), quer à escola anglo-saxónica (com origem na Antropologia). Em relação à área da Linguística, buscámos os pressupostos da Pragmática, Sociolinguística e Psicolinguística; relativamente à Antropologia, seguimos as abordagens etnográficas, etnometodológicas e interaccionistas. Nesta pesquisa participaram 15 professores e 778 alunos de cinco escolas do ensino secundário/equiparado da cidade da Beira e da região de Maputo (Moçambique), que integravam, nomeadamente, as turmas do 1.º e 2.º ano do ramo comercial e 9.ª e 10.ª classe do ensino secundário geral. Observámos 40 aulas, das quais foram transcritas e analisadas 10 aulas. A transcrição e a anotação foram realizadas com o auxílio do programa Transcriber. Usámos métodos qualitativos e quantitativos e, predominantemente, procedimentos descritivos. Identificámos 4700 marcadores discursivos distribuídos nas seguintes subcategorias: marcadores discursivos directivos, marcadores discursivos de confirmação, marcadores discursivos de natureza fáctica e de concordância e as interjeições como marcadores discursivos. Os resultados da nossa pesquisa permitiram-nos concluir que os marcadores discursivos e as disfluências desempenham funções ligadas à estruturação textual-interactiva. Estes fenómenos linguísticos, ao estruturarem o discurso de professores e alunos, contribuem para a produção/compreensão de sentido das frases.

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Socio-economic changes, alterations in societal expectations and new public policies have put pressures on higher education public funding, bringing the issue of funding diversification to the forefront. Income diversification, namely, generation of funds from private, as well as from competitive public sources, has become increasingly important in European higher education due to a complex financial environment and perceived deficit of innovation transfer. Although there are numerous studies about changes in national funding systems and allocation mechanisms, few have focused on diversification of funding sources, especially in the European context, making Portugal no exception. Thus, this study aims at exploring income diversification at the institutional level and its influence on the internal organisational structures. For this purpose two Portuguese public universities were chosen as case studies. The empirical material was collected through semi-structured interviews with top management and middle management of each university and through documentary analysis. Data analysis demonstrated that both universities are in the process of institutionalizing and formalising practices of income diversification, notably by getting more professional in how they are dealing with external stakeholders, such as businesses, local community, and students. However, the study also revealed that there is no formal, organised strategy to deal with income diversification. In general, the universities are reacting to external demands rather than pro-actively exploring opportunities. In this respect, the analysis determined several factors that promote or inhibit income diversification activities. Quality and favourable organizational culture were named by the interviewees as the most relevant factors for successful income diversification. External factors such as legal arrangements and funding conditions were cited as major constraints. This research has also revealed that revenue diversification activities tend to develop along the continuum towards higher sophistication and systematisation of activities that are supported by a powerful infrastructure. Together with efforts at the institutional level, the role of government policies proves to be crucial in providing tools and incentives to higher education institutions and creating a harmonious higher education system.