844 resultados para Bernsteinian sociology of education
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Recently, Bourdieu’s sociological tradition has emerged as an important trend in research in science education. This paper presents some critiques elaborated by Bernard Lahire towards Bourdieu’s sociological approach. The main purpose of our incursion into Lahire’s critique is to argue and introduce the methodology of sociological portraits as an important resource for research in science education. After describing this methodology, it is illustrated with a portrait of dropout on an undergraduate course in chemistry. Diogo’s portrait illustrates, at the empirical level, some basic features of individual dispositions (variability, genesis, transferability, dichotomy and contextuality). From this portrait, it was possible to illustrate how the resonance between students’ and institution’s dispositions helps explain their sense of membership and belonging to the course. Finally, we highlight some potentialities of sociological portraits to the purposes of sociological research in science education.
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O presente trabalho enfoca a participação e atuação dos pais no Conselho de Escola. Tal participação passou a ser possível após a Constituição de 1988 e a Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional nº. 9394/96 LDBEN. O estudo tem por objetivo identificar a concepção de participação dos pais membros do Conselho de Escola, e traçar os possíveis perfis ideológicos dos mesmos quanto à gestão escolar. A pesquisa é de natureza empírica, todavia ela se apóia em perfis ideológicos, construídos a partir de análises propiciadas pela Sociologia da Educação e pela Ciência Política. Como referencial teórico apropriamo-nos de Luis Pereira, Juan Bordenave, Maurício Tragtenberg, Edmundo Campos e de C.B. Macpherson. A pesquisa concentrou-se em uma das escolas da Rede Estadual no Município de São Bernardo do Campo SP. Utilizamos métodos de pesquisa de campo e bibliográfica. Além da pesquisa de campo, que teve como base entrevista qualitativa e semi-aberta, realizamos análises das Legislações Federal e Estadual com o objetivo de verificarmos as lacunas existentes na legislação, assim como os limites por ela impostos à participação dos pais na gestão escolar.(AU)
Resumo:
O presente trabalho enfoca a participação e atuação dos pais no Conselho de Escola. Tal participação passou a ser possível após a Constituição de 1988 e a Lei de Diretrizes e Bases da Educação Nacional nº. 9394/96 LDBEN. O estudo tem por objetivo identificar a concepção de participação dos pais membros do Conselho de Escola, e traçar os possíveis perfis ideológicos dos mesmos quanto à gestão escolar. A pesquisa é de natureza empírica, todavia ela se apóia em perfis ideológicos, construídos a partir de análises propiciadas pela Sociologia da Educação e pela Ciência Política. Como referencial teórico apropriamo-nos de Luis Pereira, Juan Bordenave, Maurício Tragtenberg, Edmundo Campos e de C.B. Macpherson. A pesquisa concentrou-se em uma das escolas da Rede Estadual no Município de São Bernardo do Campo SP. Utilizamos métodos de pesquisa de campo e bibliográfica. Além da pesquisa de campo, que teve como base entrevista qualitativa e semi-aberta, realizamos análises das Legislações Federal e Estadual com o objetivo de verificarmos as lacunas existentes na legislação, assim como os limites por ela impostos à participação dos pais na gestão escolar.(AU)
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Current index to journals in education
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The boys’ debate internationally is being fuelled by a range of texts on boys and masculinity. Many of the most popular texts are situated firmly within a backlash politics. These politics suggest that boys are the new ‘victims’ of schooling and that the girls’ agenda in schooling is a completed one. This paper will challenge the arguments contained within a number of the most recent of these ‘backlash blockbusters’. The paper will argue that, rather than boys being placed on the educational agenda in the status of victims, the ways in which dominant forms of masculinities and the harms they cause many girls and some boys need to be addressed.
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This paper explores the connections between scaffolding, second language learning and bilingual shared reading experiences. A socio- cultural theory of cognition underpins the investigation, which involved implementing a language and culture awareness program (LCAP) in a year 4 classroom and in the school community. Selected passages from observations are used to analyse the learning of three students, particularly in relation to languages other than English (LOTE). As these three case study students interacted in the classroom, at home and in the community, they co-constructed, appropriated and applied knowledge form one language to another. Through scaffolding, social spaces were constructed, where students learning and development were extended through a variety of activities that involved active participation, such as experimenting with language, asking questions and making suggestions. Extending these opportunities for student learning and development is considered in relation to creating teaching and learning environments that celebrate socio-cultural and linguistic diversity.
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Frequent calls for more male teachers are being made in English-speaking countries. Many of these calls are based upon the fact that the teaching profession has become (even more) 'feminized' and the presumption that this has had negative effects for the education of boys. The employment of more male teachers is sometimes suggested as a way to re-masculinize schools so they become more 'boy-friendly' and thus contribute to improving boys' school performance. The focus of this paper is on an Australian education policy document in the state of Queensland that is concerned with the attraction, recruitment and retention of male teachers in the government education system. It considers the failure of this document, as with many of the calls for more male teachers, to take into account complex matters of gender raised by feminism and the sociology of masculinities. The paper then critiques the primary argument given for the need for more male teachers: that is, that male teachers provide boys with much needed role models.
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The Australian media's interest in education, as in many Anglophone countries, is frequently dominated by concerns about boys in schools. In 2002, in a country region of the Australian State of Queensland, this concern was evident in a debate on the merits of single sex schooling that took place in a small local newspaper. The debate was fuelled by the inclusion in this newspaper of an advertising brochure for an elite private girls' school. The advertisement utilized the current concerns about boys in schools to advocate the benefits of girls' only schools. Drawing on research that suggests that boys are a problem in school, and utilising a peculiar mix of liberal feminism alongside a neo-liberal class politics, it implicitly denigrated the education provided by government co-educational schools. The local government high and primary school principals, incensed at this advertisement, contacted the paper to refute many of its claims and assumptions and to assert the benefits, to both boys and girls, of their particular schools. A letters to the editor debate then followed an article representing these government school principals' views. These letters were from two private school principals. This country newspaper thus became a medium through which various school principals engaged with the current boys' debate, and research associated with it, in order to market their schools. This paper examines this particular newspaper debate and argues that, in the absence of nuanced, research based, and thoughtful policy responses to gender issues, many school policies on gender are being shaped through and by the media in ways that elide the complexities of the issues involved.
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This paper explores the policy of single-sex classes that is currently being adopted in some schools as a strategy for addressing boys' educational and social needs. It draws on research in one Australian government, coeducational primary school to examine teachers' and students' experiences of this strategy. Interviews with the principal, male and female teachers responsible for teaching the single-sex classes and the students involved in these classes are used to illustrate the impact and effect of the strategy on pedagogical practices in this particular school. The data are used to raise critical questions about the impact and effects of teachers' pedagogical practices in light of the current literature and research about single-sex classes. In this case study, it was found that teachers had a tendency to modify their pedagogical practices and the curriculum to suit stereotypical constructions about boys' and girls' supposed oppositional orientations to learning. It is concluded that teacher knowledges and assumptions about gender play an important role in the execution of their pedagogies in the single-sex classroom.