914 resultados para coerência textual
Resumo:
Partindo da hipótese de que a criança possui uma gramática internalizada, uma vez que ela é falante da língua, este trabalho procura detectar os parâmetros desta gramática. Para isso, analisamos os mecanismos de coesão/coerência textual utilizados por alunos de 3ª série do 1º grau para a produção de textos.
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O estudo ora desenvolvido parte do pressuposto segundo o qual o texto é entendido como o lugar de constituição e de interação de sujeitos sociais, como um evento no qual convergem ações linguísticas, cognitivas e sociais, segundo uma concepção dialógica do texto (BAKHTIN, 1992). Nos dias atuais, os livros didáticos continuam, em muitas das salas de aula brasileiras, a ditar os procedimentos de ensino (MESERANI, 2001 e MARCUSCHI apud DIONÍSIO; BEZERRA, 2005) e entende-se que a articulação das atividades de trabalho com textos, encontradas em tais materiais para o Ensino Fundamental (EF), a recursos como a intertextualidade e a interdiscursividade, importantes para a construção da textualidade e para a produção de sentidos, configura-se como um tema de pesquisa relevante. Assim, nessa investigação analisam-se a) as instruções metodológicas presentes no Manual do Professor e b) as atividades de produção e recepção textual retiradas de duas coleções de livro didático de Ensino Fundamental (6 ao 9 anos). Tal investigação prioriza o aspecto qualitativo, a natureza analítico-descritiva e o caráter interpretativista de pesquisa e visa a trazer novas referências para pesquisas em Língua Portuguesa no nível estudado, estabelecendo um diálogo com as práticas de ensino de leitura e escrita na escola, além de permitir uma análise crítica da forma como o livro didático é utilizado em sala. A análise apoia-se, principalmente, na Semiolinguística, uma vertente da Análise de Discurso Francesa (ADF), que constitui um olhar sobre o discurso, entendido como um processo interativo em uma determinada situação, resultante de um contrato (CHARAUDEAU, 2008) atribuído por um determinado grupo social, em uma dada situação sociointerativa. Considerando-se a análise dos LDP, observa-se a pouca ênfase que os autores dão ao papel da intertextualidade como recurso coesivo, tendo em vista a coerência textual, e como modo de manifestação da argumentatividade inerente a qualquer texto; da mesma forma, em relação à interdiscursividade, ressalta-se a falta de menção aos pressupostos discursivos e aos outros índices de polifonia, assim como à ironia, nas atividades de leitura e de produção escrita
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Esta é uma investigação sobre os erros linguísticos mais frequentes praticados por professores e alunos em textos formais. Trata-se de um estudo de caso, realizado numa escola pública com ensino básico e secundário da Região Autónoma da Madeira. Os testes dos alunos e as atas que os professores redigem das várias reuniões em que participam na escola constituem os corpora dos textos formais. Os informantes foram trinta e dois alunos, todos do 12º ano de cursos científico-humanísticos, e oitenta professores de diversos grupos disciplinares. Dado que não foi possível abranger todos os tipos de erros observados, optou-se por analisar as três áreas gramaticais em que a sua ocorrência foi mais problemática, a saber, ortografia, pontuação e coesão sintática, em detrimento de outras como a semântica, a lexicologia e a coerência textual. Este é um trabalho eminentemente prático que tem como objetivos primordiais enumerar os principais erros observados e comparar as diferenças de desempenho entre os dois grupos de informantes. Para isso, dividiu-se a análise em duas partes: a primeira é, essencialmente, descritiva e interpretativa; enquanto a segunda se baseia nos dados quantitativos para chegar a conclusões que, de outra forma, não seriam percetíveis. No final, sugerem-se algumas estratégias que poderão ajudar a diminuir a incidência do erro no meio escolar.
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A coerência é o processo responsável pela formação do sentido que garante a compreensibilidade de um texto. Investigações sobre o tema se caracterizam por: (a) um enfoque puramente lingüístico, ficando em aberto questões relacionadas ao desenvolvimento e aos fatores que o influenciam; e (b) examinar a coerência estabelecida pelo receptor do texto, sendo raras as investigações que abordam a perspectiva do narrador. em uma abordagem de desenvolvimento, o presente estudo examinou as possibilidades e dificuldades de crianças em estabelecer a coerência ao produzir um texto. Histórias elaboradas por crianças de 6-7 anos foram analisadas em função de indicadores específicos agrupados em um sistema de análise que expressa diferentes níveis no estabelecimento da coerência. Observou-se que o desenvolvimento da coerência se relaciona à aquisição da leitura e da escrita. Críticas são feitas quanto à ausência de um sistema de análise que contribua para o exame da coerência textual em crianças.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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O presente estudo parte da análise de uma amostra de 100 redações produzidas no exame de Vestibular da UERJ/2002. Tem por objetivo estabelecer critérios para o reconhecimento dos problemas de progressão argumentativa. Com base nas teorias propostas em Lingüística Textual e Análise do Discurso discutiram-se as noções de Cognição, Textualidade, Argumentação e coerência. Apresentou-se uma proposta metodológica de Produção Textual no Ensino Médio e exercícios didáticos. Os resultados da pesquisa apontam para a necessidade de que os recentes estudos sobre Cognição, Textualidade, Argumentação, Progressão e Métodos de Produção Textual sejam divulgados, debatidos e absorvidos pelos profissionais que exercem o ensino da disciplina
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This book explores the interrelation of literacy and religion as practiced by Western Christians in, first, historical contexts and, second, in one contemporary church setting. Using both a case study and a Foucauldian theoretical framework, the book provides a sustained analysis of the reciprocal discursive construction of literacy, religiosity and identity in one Seventh-day Adventist Church community of Northern Australia. Critical linguistic and discourse analytic theory is used to disclose processes of theological (church), familial (home) and educational (school) normalisation of community members into regulated ways of hearing and speaking, reading and writing, being and believing. Detailed analyses of spoken and written texts taken from institutional and local community settings show how textual religion is an exemplary technology of the self, a politics constituted by canonical texts, interpretive norms, textual practices, ritualised events and sociopolitical protocols that, ultimately, are turned in upon the self. The purpose of these analyses is to show how, across denominational difference in belief (tradition) and practice, particular versions of self and society are constructed through economies of truth from text, enabling and constraining what can and cannot be spoken and enacted by believers.
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Textual cultural heritage artefacts present two serious problems for the encoder: how to record different or revised versions of the same work, and how to encode conflicting perspectives of the text using markup. Both are forms of textual variation, and can be accurately recorded using a multi-version document, based on a minimally redundant directed graph that cleanly separates variation from content.
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Objective: To describe unintentional injuries to children aged less than one year, using coded and textual information, in three-month age bands to reflect their development over the year. Methods: Data from the Queensland Injury Surveillance Unit was used. The Unit collects demographic, clinical and circumstantial details about injured persons presenting to selected emergency departments across the State. Only injuries coded as unintentional in children admitted to hospital were included for this analysis. Results: After editing, 1,082 children remained for analysis, 24 with transport-related injuries. Falls were the most common injury, but becoming proportionately less over the year, whereas burns and scalds and foreign body injuries increased. The proportion of injuries due to contact with persons or objects varied little, but poisonings were relatively more common in the first and fourth three-month periods. Descriptions indicated that family members were somehow causally involved in 16% of injuries. Our findings are in qualitative agreement with comparable previous studies. Conclusion: The pattern of injuries varies over the first year of life and is clearly linked to the child's increasing mobility. Implications: Injury patterns in the first year of life should be reported over shorter intervals. Preventive measures for young children need to be designed with their rapidly changing developmental stage in mind, using a variety of strategies, one of which could be opportunistic developmentally specific education of parents. Injuries in young children are of abiding concern given their immediate health and emotional effects, and potential for long-term adverse sequelae. In Australia, in the financial year 2006/07, 2,869 children less than 12 months of age were admitted to hospital for an unintentional injury, a rate of 10.6 per 1,000, representing a considerable economic and social burden. Given that many of these injuries are preventable, this is particularly concerning. Most epidemiologic studies analyse data in five-year age bands, so children less than five years of age are examined as a group. This study includes only those children younger than one year of age to identify injury detail lost in analyses of the larger group, as we hypothesised that the injury pattern varied with the developmental stage of the child. The authors of several North American studies have commented that in dealing with injuries in pre-school children, broad age groupings are inadequate to do justice to the rapid developmental changes in infancy and early childhood, and have in consequence analysed injuries in shorter intervals. To our knowledge, no similar analysis of Australian infant injuries has been published to date. This paper describes injury in children less than 12 months of age using data from the Queensland Injury Surveillance Unit (QISU).
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In 2009, Mark Deuze proposed an updated approach to media studies to incorporate ‘media life’, a concept he suggests addresses the invisibleness of ubiquitous media. Media life provides a useful lens for researchers to understand the human condition in media and not with media. At a similar time, public service media (PSM) strategies have aligned audience participation with the so‐called Reithian trinity which suggest the PSB should inform, educate and entertain while performing its core values of public service broadcasting (Enli 2008). Remix within the PSM institution relies on audience participation, employing ‘the people formerly known as the audience’ (Rosen 2006) as cultural artifact producers, and draws on their experience from within the media. Remix as a practice then enables us to examine the shift of the core PSM values by understanding how audience participation, informed by a human condition mobilised from our existence of being in media and not merely with media. However, remix within PSM challenges the once elitist construction of meaning models with an egalitarian approach towards socially reappropriated texts, questioning its affect on the cultural landscape. This paper draws on three years of ethnographic data from within the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC), exploring the remix culture of ABC Pool. ABC Pool operates under a Creative Commons licensing regime to enable remix practice under the auspices of the ABC. ABC Pool users provide a useful group of remix practitioners to examine as they had access to a vast ABC archival collection and were invited to remix those cultural artefacts, often adding cultural and fiscal value. This paper maintains a focus on the audience participation within PSM through remix culture by applying media dependency theory to remix as cultural practice and calls to expand and update the societal representation within the ABC.
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Flows of cultural heritage in textual practices are vital to sustaining Indigenous communities. Indigenous heritage, whether passed on by oral tradition or ubiquitous social media, can be seen as a “conversation between the past and the future” (Fairclough, 2012, xv). Indigenous heritage involves appropriating memories within a cultural flow to pass on a spiritual legacy. This presentation reports ethnographic research of social media practices in a small independent Aboriginal school in Southeast Queensland, Australia that is resided over by the Yugambeh elders and an Aboriginal principal. The purpose was to rupture existing notions of white literacies in schools, and to deterritorialize the uses of digital media by dominant cultures in the public sphere. Examples of learning experiences included the following: i. Integrating Indigenous language and knowledge into media text production; ii. Using conversations with Indigenous elders and material artifacts as an entry point for storytelling; iii. Dadirri – spiritual listening in the yarning circle to develop storytelling (Ungunmerr-Baumann, 2002); and iv. Writing and publicly sharing oral histories through digital scrapbooking shared via social media. The program aligned with the Australian National Curriculum English (ACARA, 2012), which mandates the teaching of multimodal text creation. Data sources included a class set of digital scrapbooks collaboratively created in a multi-age primary classroom. The digital scrapbooks combined digitally encoded words, images of material artifacts, and digital music files. A key feature of the writing and digital design task was to retell and digitally display and archive a cultural narrative of significance to the Indigenous Australian community and its memories and material traces of the past for the future. Data analysis of the students’ digital stories involved the application of key themes of negotiated, material, and digitally mediated forms of heritage practice. It drew on Australian Indigenous research by Keddie et al. (2013) to guard against the homogenizing of culture that can arise from a focus on a static view of culture. The interpretation of findings located Indigenous appropriation of social media within broader racialized politics that enables Indigenous literacy to be understood as a dynamic, negotiated, and transgenerational flows of practice. The findings demonstrate that Indigenous children’s use of media production reflects “shifting and negotiated identities” in response to changing media environments that can function to sustain Indigenous cultural heritages (Appadurai, 1696, xv). It demonstrated how the children’s experiences of culture are layered over time, as successive generations inherit, interweave, and hear others’ cultural stories or maps. It also demonstrated how the children’s production of narratives through multimedia can provide a platform for the flow and reconstruction of performative collective memories and “lived traces of a common past” (Giaccardi, 2012). It disrupts notions of cultural reductionism and racial incommensurability that fix and homogenize Indigenous practices within and against a dominant White norm. Recommendations are provided for an approach to appropriating social media in schools that explicitly attends to the dynamic nature of Indigenous practices, negotiated through intercultural constructions and flows, and opening space for a critical anti-racist approach to multimodal text production.
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This paper offers insights into the relationship between curriculum decision making, positive school climate, and academic achievement for same-sex attracted (SSA) students. The authors use critical discourse analysis to present a ‘conversation’ between six same-sex attracted young people, aged 14-19, and three pop-culture texts currently popular with both teachers and school-aged peers: The Hunger Games, Tomorrow When the War Began, and Neighbours. Analysis starts from the perspective that schools are empowered agents in the production of students’ sexualised identities and seeks to understand how textual choices function as active discourse in that production. Through this analysis, an argument is made for expanding notions of what it means to ‘attend to’ gender and sexuality through textual choice and critical pedagogy.