989 resultados para Ramos, Marise Nogueira


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Cet article vise à souligner l’importance de l’ethnographie de l’éducation comme outil pour comprendre et décrire de manière critique les pratiques pédagogiques innovatrices qui ne prennent du sens que lorsqu’elles sont envisagées à partir de l’intérieur, c’est-à-dire du point de vue de leurs praticiens. D’autre part, elle fait le compte-rendu de l’extension de cette méthode d’analyse de l’école, à travers les programmes de Master et de Doctorat de Sciences de l’Education, dans la spécialité d’Innovation Pédagogique de l’Université de Madère et son Centre de Recherche en Education (CIE-UMa), qui se déroulent à Madère, à Santarém (près de Lisbonne) et au Brésil (dans les villes de Brasília, São Luis do Maranhão, Salvador, Ibicaraí, Feira de Santana, Recife et Fortaleza) et qui intègrent une bonne partie de la pensée ethnographique de Lapassade, parmi d’ autres auteurs. Finalement, la communication témoigne de notre hommage en forme d’action à la contribution scientifique de Georges Lapassade.

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A comunicação, escrita do ponto de vista do utente que, por dever de ofício, é avaliador implícito da adequabilidade educativa de software, pretende reflectir sobre alguns dos pressupostos que devem condicionar o design de software "educativo". Discute, sucintamente, esses pressupostos à luz de um enfoque construcionista e de algumas das contribuições consideradas relevantes oriundas da teoria histórico-cultural da actividade.

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Starting from the analysis of a Manifest placed in the World Wide Web in order to gather signatures, the paper discusses the arousal of a wide spread movement of scepticism in the so called Portuguese “civil socie ty” against the overall result of almost forty years of uninterrupted educational reform that has taken place in Portugal since the late sixties and has lead to an increasing percentage of illiteracy and innumeracy. That Manifest is presented as part of a broader movement, deeply rooted in the Portuguese society, and silent so far, which is becoming stronger and has now strength enough to be part of the political agenda. It is also our concern to unveil an emerging trend of blaming sciences of education and badly trained teachers as responsible for the poor outcome of our schooling system.