898 resultados para pedagogical lexicography
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This paper presents a cautious argument for re-thinking both the nature and the centrality of the one-to-one teacher/student relationship in contemporary pedagogy. A case is made that learning in and for our times requires us to broaden our understanding of pedagogical relations beyond the singularity of the teacher/student binary and to promote the connected teacher as better placed to lead learning for these times. The argument proceeds in three parts: first, a characterization of our times as defined increasingly by the digital knowledge explosion of Big Data; second, a re-thinking of the nature of pedagogical relationships in the context of Big Data; and third, an account of the ways in which leaders can support their teachers to become more effective in leading learning by being more closely connected to their professional colleagues.
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In this chapter we detail our understandings of inclusive pedagogical practices that enable all students to assemble complex literate repertoires. We discuss generative concepts from international related literature (eg Au, Dyson, Janks, Luke, McNaughton, Moll, Thomson,). We then present descriptions of two lessons as examples of how inclusive pedagogical practices might look in primary and secondary classrooms. The focus will be on how texts work to represent the world in particular ways and not others – and the implications of this for the inclusion of diverse student cohorts in developing complex literate repertoires.
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This chapter presents an inquiry learning framework that can be used as a pathway for the development of information literacy in both K-12 and higher education. Inquiry learning is advocated as an authentic and active approach that draws upon students’ natural curiosity. The pedagogical and curriculum framework incorporates three major elements: questioning frameworks, information literacy and an iterative research cycle. Models and strategies for the elements of the framework are presented and discussed. The chapter ends with an acknowledgement of the challenges associated with implementing inquiry learning.
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[EN] Progress in methodology in specific fields is usually very closely linked to the technological progress in other areas of knowledge. This justifies the fact that lexicographical techniques have had to wait for the arrival of the IT era of the last decades of the 20th century in order to be able to create specialised electronic dictionaries which can house and systemise enormous amounts of information which can later be dealt with quickly and efficiently. This study proposes a practical-methodological model which aims to solve the grammatical treatment of adverbs in Ancient Latin. We have suggested a list of 5 types, in a decreasing order from a greater to lesser degree of specialisation; technical (T), semi-technical (S-T), instrumental-valued (I-V), instrumental- descriptive (I-D), instrumental-expository (I-E).
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Presentation for the 5th International Conference on Corpus Linguistics (CILC 2013), V Congreso Internacional de Lingüistica de Corpus.
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Como gênero, o dicionário inscreve-se na sociedade entre as obras de autoridade, que servem como referência para a construção dos mais diferentes gêneros. Além disso, encerra um discurso pedagógico, já que, por meio das definições, consulentes partilham do conhecimento detido pelo lexicógrafo. O dicionário é também um gênero múltiplo, formado por diferentes subgêneros, como o verbete e os textos de abertura (prefácio, apresentação, detalhamento). Espécie de colônia, que agrega outros textos, define-se também por suas características formais bem marcadas, como a alfabetação e a composição por verbetes. Múltiplo por sua própria natureza e sujeito ao dialogismo da enunciação, o dicionário é atravessado por muitas vozes e enunciadores, não apenas os próprios redatores, mas também outras obras de referência, técnicas ou de outras línguas. Essas vozes são costuradas pelo dicionarista, figura do discurso que gerencia os enunciados, envoltos na expectativa da neutralidade da descrição isenta. É nosso grande interesse observar em termos práticos quais são as fronteiras entre o discurso aparentemente isento que se pretende que o dicionário tenha e as brechas de onde emergem outras vozes que povoam essa colônia. Para buscá-las, valemo-nos basicamente dos estudos de polifonia de Ducrot, da noção de ethos de Maingueneau e Charaudeau e das formas de modalização que Castilho e Castilho (2002) arrolaram em seu estudo sobre os advérbios na Gramática do português falado, volume II. Por meio da pesquisa reversa com base nos termos modalizadores de Castilho e Castilho no Dicionário Aurélio da língua portuguesa (DALP, 2010) e no Dicionário Houaiss da língua portuguesa (DHLP, 2009), buscamos partir da definição para as entradas, identificando os enunciadores que se mostram ou se escondem, afiançam ou refutam, negam ou afirmam uma proposição. Por meio dessas ocorrências, podemos chegar a enunciados postos e pressupostos e explorar diferentes aspectos da enunciação, desnudando parte das vozes que povoam essa colônia
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Ratcliffe, M. Thomas, L. Ellis, W. Thomasson, B. Capturing Collaborative Designs to Assist the Pedagogical Process.ACM SIGCSE Bulletin Volume 35 , Issue 3 (September 2003)
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One finding of user studies is that information on meaning tends to be what diction¬ary users want most from their dictionaries. This is consistent with the traditional image of the dictionary as a repository of meanings of words, and this is also borne out in definitions of the item DICTIONARY itself as given in dictionaries. While this popular view has not changed much, the growing role of electronic dictionaries can change the lexicographers' approach to meaning repre¬sentation. Traditionally, paper dictionaries have explained words with words, using either a defi¬nition or an equivalent, and occasionally a line-drawn picture. However, a prominent feature of the electronic medium is its multimodality, and this offers potential for the description of meaning. While it is much easier to include pictorial content, electronic dictionaries can also hold media objects which paper cannot carry, such as audio, animation or video. Publishers are drawn by the attraction of these new options, but are they always functionally useful for the dictionary users? In this article, the existing evidence is examined, and informed guesses are offered where evidence is not yet available.
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Environmental activism has a long history in protest, addressing issues of degradation and segregation that threaten existing ecologies, social and built fabrics. Environmental activism is traditionally understood as a reaction, chiefly by groups of people, against a perceived external threat. In the 60’s and 70’s, an activist stance began to emerge in the work of some artists and architects, who used creative methods such as performances, happenings, temporary spatial interventions etc to convey their political/aesthetic messages. Some of this work engaged directly with communities but predominantly it was the production of one individual working ‘outside’ society. However such actions demonstrated not only the power of the visual in conveying a political message but also the potential of conceptual creative approaches to reveal alternative values and hidden potentials. This marked a shift from activism as protestation towards an activism of reconceptualisation. Recently, activist groups have developed a more politically informed process. Whilst their ‘tools’ may resemble work from the 60’s and 70’s , their methodologies are non-traditional, ’rhizomatic’, pedagogical and fluid; working alongside, rather than against, the established power and funding structures. Such creative processes build new, often unexpected, stakeholder networks; offer neutral spaces in which contentious issues can be faced; and create better understanding of values and identities. They can also lead to permanent improvements and development in the physical fabric. This paper will discuss a pedagogical example of activism in architectural education. The event (www.fourdaysontheoutside.com) is in its fifth year of existence and as such has revealed a value and impulse beyond its learning and teaching value. The paper will discuss how the event contributes to the university’s outreach programme and how its structure acts as a seedbed for potential research projects and partnerships. UK Universities talk extensively about applied research but have few actual strategies by which to generate it. Fourdaysontheoutside offers some potential ways forward.