1000 resultados para Lengua materna griega


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El objetivo de este artículo es mostrar la secular tradición misógina occidental desde sus orígenes en Grecia, analizando un texto del intérprete alegórico de la Biblia Filón de Alejandría, el De opifico mundi, al cual aplica una lectura claramente platonizante. El análisis minucioso de los capítulos dedicados a la creación divina de la mujer muestra hasta qué punto no es posible entender este texto sin tener en cuenta una tradición filosófica griega ya entonces secular.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Numerosos son ya los estudios que se han centrado en el llamado "cine serio" de Woody Allen y, entre ellos, cabe mencionar el que Pau Gilabert Barberà, autor de este artículo, escribió (2006) sobre lo que, en su opinión, es el legado sofístico subyacente en el guión de Crimes and Misdemeanors. En esta ocasión, su objetivo es analizar la trayectoria fluctuante del director americano en relación con la tragedia griega, desde la convicción de que, sólo así, es posible revelar su empatía con el espíritu trágico de los griegos y comprender su necesidad de presentar aquel género literario como un paradigma desde el cual entender las grandezas y miserias del mundo contemporáneo.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

La élite de pepaideumenoi del Imperio romano, tanto de lengua griega como latina, viven sumergidos en un mundo libresco: el libro, como objeto material y como concepto intelectual, ha pasado a formar parte de su vida más cotidiana. Este trabajo pretende mostrar cómo esta realidad universal adquiere, sin embargo, rasgos bien particulares según los individuos, con lo cual se conforma un panorama sociológico y cultural que, a través del libro, define bien a las mencionadas élites.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El objetivo de este artículo es mostrar cómo los rasgos esenciales de la misoginia griega, que está en la base de la secular misoginia occidental -y que no es sólo un legado judeocristiano- pervive en un texto medieval del siglo XIII como el De amore de Andreas Capellanus. El autor señala igualmente las vías de transmisión más verosímiles des de la Grecia Antigua hasta el mundo medieval

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The purpose of this article is to treat a currently much debated issue, the effects of age on second language learning. To do so, we contrast data collected by our research team from over one thousand seven hundred young and adult learners with four popular beliefs or generalizations, which, while deeply rooted in this society, are not always corroborated by our data.Two of these generalizations about Second Language Acquisition (languages spoken in the social context) seem to be widely accepted: a) older children, adolescents and adults are quicker and more efficient at the first stages of learning than are younger learners; b) in a natural context children with an early start are more liable to attain higher levels of proficiency. However, in the context of Foreign Language Acquisition, the context in which we collect the data, this second generalization is difficult to verify due to the low number of instructional hours (a maximum of some 800 hours) and the lower levels of language exposure time provided. The design of our research project has allowed us to study differences observed with respect to the age of onset (ranging from 2 to 18+), but in this article we focus on students who began English instruction at the age of 8 (LOGSE Educational System) and those who began at the age of 11 (EGB). We have collected data from both groups after a period of 200 (Time 1) and 416 instructional hours (Time 2), and we are currently collecting data after a period of 726 instructional hours (Time 3). We have designed and administered a variety of tests: tests on English production and reception, both oral and written, and within both academic and communicative oriented approaches, on the learners' L1 (Spanish and Catalan), as well as a questionnaire eliciting personal and sociolinguistic information. The questions we address and the relevant empirical evidence are as follows: 1. "For young children, learning languages is a game. They enjoy it more than adults."Our data demonstrate that the situation is not quite so. Firstly, both at the levels of Primary and Secondary education (ranging from 70.5% in 11-year-olds to 89% in 14-year-olds) students have a positive attitude towards learning English. Secondly, there is a difference between the two groups with respect to the factors they cite as responsible for their motivation to learn English: the younger students cite intrinsic factors, such as the games they play, the methodology used and the teacher, whereas the older students cite extrinsic factors, such as the role of their knowledge of English in the achievement of their future professional goals. 2 ."Young children have more resources to learn languages." Here our data suggest just the opposite. The ability to employ learning strategies (actions or steps used) increases with age. Older learners' strategies are more varied and cognitively more complex. In contrast, younger learners depend more on their interlocutor and external resources and therefore have a lower level of autonomy in their learning. 3. "Young children don't talk much but understand a lot"This third generalization does seem to be confirmed, at least to a certain extent, by our data in relation to the analysis of differences due to the age factor and productive use of the target language. As seen above, the comparably slower progress of the younger learners is confirmed. Our analysis of interpersonal receptive abilities demonstrates as well the advantage of the older learners. Nevertheless, with respect to passive receptive activities (for example, simple recognition of words or sentences) no great differences are observed. Statistical analyses suggest that in this test, in contrast to the others analyzed, the dominance of the subjects' L1s (reflecting a cognitive capacity that grows with age) has no significant influence on the learning process. 4. "The sooner they begin, the better their results will be in written language"This is not either completely confirmed in our research. First of all, we perceive that certain compensatory strategies disappear only with age, but not with the number of instructional hours. Secondly, given an identical number of instructional hours, the older subjects obtain better results. With respect to our analysis of data from subjects of the same age (12 years old) but with a different number of instructional hours (200 and 416 respectively, as they began at the ages of 11 and 8), we observe that those who began earlier excel only in the area of lexical fluency. In conclusion, the superior rate of older learners appears to be due to their higher level of cognitive development, a factor which allows them to benefit more from formal or explicit instruction in the school context. Younger learners, however, do not benefit from the quantity and quality of linguistic exposure typical of a natural acquisition context in which they would be allowed to make use of implicit learning abilities. It seems clear, then, that the initiative in this country to begin foreign language instruction earlier will have positive effects only if it occurs in combination with either higher levels of exposure time to the foreign language, or, alternatively, with its use as the language of instruction in other areas of the curriculum.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El objetivo de este trabajo es analizar cómo los griegos concibieron a los persas aqueménidas como a los bárbaros por antonomasia e inauguraron una construcción de la identidad occidental etnocéntrica y recelosa del mundo oriental.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

La epigrafía anfórica griega continúa todavía sin merecer en nuestro país toda la atención que merece. Cuando uno se acerca a los trabajos de un filólogo que estudia la epigrafía griega en la Península Ibérica, se encuentra con que, para su mentalidad, una inscripción en el asa de un ánfora es tan sólo un documento menor, no yendo entonces más allá de repasar, sin revisar el material, los sellos publicados en los años cincuenta por Almagro o en alguna que otra antigua noticia sobre el descubrimiento de ánforas griegas con epigrafía.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Publicado en inglés en el año 1978, el libro de K. J. Dover Homosexualidad griega se considera el primer ensayo serio dedicado a la homosexualidad masculina en la Grecia clásica. Éste y otros trabajos del mismo autor tuvieron influencia importante en los dos volúmenes centrados en la antigüedad de Histoire de la sexualité de Michel Foucault, de quién la edición española incluye como prólogo la reseña que el filósofo escribió a raíz de la edición francesa de la obra de K. J. Dover en 1982. La presente edición incluye, además, un actualizado apartado bibliográfico sobre la sexualidad en el mundo grecorromano y la homosexualidad en Grecia.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

En la sociedad actual, la educación y la formación a través de comunidades de práctica, virtuales o presenciales, se convierte en una práctica habitual que, con mayor o menor fortuna, está siendo experimentada en diferentes ám- bitos formativos (en la universidad, en la empresa, en el sistema escolar, en la educación no formal, etc.). Partiendo de la idea de que la misión de la Universidad en los inicios del siglo xxi sigue siendo la difusión del conocimiento científico, consideramos que la creación de comunidades de práctica es un reto necesario a asumir por todos los profesionales de la educación y la formación, dado que a través de ellas se puede, por una parte, transferir y generar nuevo conocimiento y por otra, lograr mejores prácticas en el campo de la investigación y la docencia. Todo este planteamiento nos permite avalar la necesidad de desarrollar un trabajo que tenga como finalidad la conformación de una comunidad de práctica entre profesores universitarios, noveles y experimentados.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The purpose of this article is to treat a currently much debated issue, the effects of age on second language learning. To do so, we contrast data collected by our research team from over one thousand seven hundred young and adult learners with four popular beliefs or generalizations, which, while deeply rooted in this society, are not always corroborated by our data.Two of these generalizations about Second Language Acquisition (languages spoken in the social context) seem to be widely accepted: a) older children, adolescents and adults are quicker and more efficient at the first stages of learning than are younger learners; b) in a natural context children with an early start are more liable to attain higher levels of proficiency. However, in the context of Foreign Language Acquisition, the context in which we collect the data, this second generalization is difficult to verify due to the low number of instructional hours (a maximum of some 800 hours) and the lower levels of language exposure time provided. The design of our research project has allowed us to study differences observed with respect to the age of onset (ranging from 2 to 18+), but in this article we focus on students who began English instruction at the age of 8 (LOGSE Educational System) and those who began at the age of 11 (EGB). We have collected data from both groups after a period of 200 (Time 1) and 416 instructional hours (Time 2), and we are currently collecting data after a period of 726 instructional hours (Time 3). We have designed and administered a variety of tests: tests on English production and reception, both oral and written, and within both academic and communicative oriented approaches, on the learners' L1 (Spanish and Catalan), as well as a questionnaire eliciting personal and sociolinguistic information. The questions we address and the relevant empirical evidence are as follows: 1. "For young children, learning languages is a game. They enjoy it more than adults."Our data demonstrate that the situation is not quite so. Firstly, both at the levels of Primary and Secondary education (ranging from 70.5% in 11-year-olds to 89% in 14-year-olds) students have a positive attitude towards learning English. Secondly, there is a difference between the two groups with respect to the factors they cite as responsible for their motivation to learn English: the younger students cite intrinsic factors, such as the games they play, the methodology used and the teacher, whereas the older students cite extrinsic factors, such as the role of their knowledge of English in the achievement of their future professional goals. 2 ."Young children have more resources to learn languages." Here our data suggest just the opposite. The ability to employ learning strategies (actions or steps used) increases with age. Older learners' strategies are more varied and cognitively more complex. In contrast, younger learners depend more on their interlocutor and external resources and therefore have a lower level of autonomy in their learning. 3. "Young children don't talk much but understand a lot"This third generalization does seem to be confirmed, at least to a certain extent, by our data in relation to the analysis of differences due to the age factor and productive use of the target language. As seen above, the comparably slower progress of the younger learners is confirmed. Our analysis of interpersonal receptive abilities demonstrates as well the advantage of the older learners. Nevertheless, with respect to passive receptive activities (for example, simple recognition of words or sentences) no great differences are observed. Statistical analyses suggest that in this test, in contrast to the others analyzed, the dominance of the subjects' L1s (reflecting a cognitive capacity that grows with age) has no significant influence on the learning process. 4. "The sooner they begin, the better their results will be in written language"This is not either completely confirmed in our research. First of all, we perceive that certain compensatory strategies disappear only with age, but not with the number of instructional hours. Secondly, given an identical number of instructional hours, the older subjects obtain better results. With respect to our analysis of data from subjects of the same age (12 years old) but with a different number of instructional hours (200 and 416 respectively, as they began at the ages of 11 and 8), we observe that those who began earlier excel only in the area of lexical fluency. In conclusion, the superior rate of older learners appears to be due to their higher level of cognitive development, a factor which allows them to benefit more from formal or explicit instruction in the school context. Younger learners, however, do not benefit from the quantity and quality of linguistic exposure typical of a natural acquisition context in which they would be allowed to make use of implicit learning abilities. It seems clear, then, that the initiative in this country to begin foreign language instruction earlier will have positive effects only if it occurs in combination with either higher levels of exposure time to the foreign language, or, alternatively, with its use as the language of instruction in other areas of the curriculum.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Introducción: Hay poco conocimiento sobre la similitud de la mecánica entre la lactancia materna y la artificial. Evaluamos la mecánica de la succión en neonatos con lactancia materna exclusiva, lactancia artificial exclusiva y lactancia mixta. Nuestra hipótesis fue que el patrón fisiológico de los movimientos de succión varía según el tipo de alimentación. Según esta hipótesis, los niños con lactancia materna exclusiva realizan unos movimientos al mamar distintos a los de la succión de una tetina, realizados por niños con lactancia artificial. Los niños con lactancia mixta mezclan ambos tipos de movimientos de succión. Métodos: Estudio transversal de neonatos de 21-28 días de edad con lactancia materna o artificial exclusiva (124 parejas madre-hijo), y ensayo de campo, abierto, cruzado y aleatorizado, realizado en neonatos de 21-28 días (110 parejas madre-hijo) y en lactantes de 3-5 meses de edad (125 parejas madre-hijo) con lactancia mixta. Las variables principales fueron los movimientos de succión y las pausas. Resultados: Los neonatos de 21-28 días de edad alimentados con lactancia artificial exclusiva mostraron un menor número de movimientos de succión y el mismo número de pausas, pero de mayor duración, que los neonatos con lactancia materna exclusiva. Entre los niños que recibieron lactancia mixta, el número de movimientos de succión al recibir alimentación con biberón fue similar y las pausas menos numerosas y de menor duración respecto a lo observado al amamantar, tanto a los 21-28 días como a los 3-5 meses de edad. En este grupo de lactancia mixta, la cifra media de tomas de lactancia materna fue de 5,83 ± 1,93 a los 21-28 días de vida y de 4,42 ± 1,67 a los 3-5 meses de edad. En el análisis de equivalencia, realizado sobre los niños que recibieron lactancia mixta, el intervalo de confianza del 95% de la razón de movimientos con lactancia artificial y con lactancia materna se situó fuera del rango de equivalencia, indicó un número de movimientos de succión menor en un 5,9-8,7% al tomar el biberón, así como un menor número de pausas y una duración más breve de ellas en este mismo grupo. Conclusiones: En la lactancia mixta, la comparación entre las tomas de biberón y las de pecho se situó fuera del rango de equivalencia, aunque las diferencias fueron pequeñas. Los niños con lactancia mixta mezclan ambos tipos de movimientos (lactancia materna y lactancia artificial) durante la fase de aprendizaje y adoptan su propio patrón.