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Hur blir man bättre på att analysera? : En studie om elevers uppfattningar av en analysmodell i samhällskunskapsundervisningen. / How might one improve the ability to analyze? : A study of student´s conceptions regarding an analytic model in Social studies.Nersäter, Åsa January 2018 (has links)
Denna studie syftar till att undersöka hur elever i årskurs 1 på gymnasiet uppfattar att de, inom ramen för kursen Samhällskunskap 1b, kan använda en samhällsvetenskaplig analysmodell för att analysera ett samhällsproblem. Studien utgår från två forskningsfrågor: Hur uppfattar elever på gymnasiets högskoleförberedande program att de ska använda analysmodellen? Vilka olika kvaliteter kan skilja mellan en utvecklad och en mindre utvecklad uppfattning av hur analysmodellen ska användas? Undersökningen tar sin utgångspunkt i en yrkeserfarenhet av att elever ofta undrar hur de ska bli bättre på att analysera. Metoden som använts är att 50 elever besvarat en analysuppgift som syftade till att analysera varför ungdomar inte engagerar sig i det formella, demokratiska arbetet. Till hjälp att utreda frågan hade elevgruppen tillgång till analysmodell och källmaterial från den senaste demokratiutredningen, Låt fler forma framtiden! De svar som samlades in analyserades med en fenomenografisk metod, som syftar till att kategorisera olika uppfattningar som undersökningsgruppen har kring hur analysmodellen ska användas. Resultatet, utfallsrummet, är 6 beskrivningskategorier som skiljer sig avseende hur analysmodellen behandlas, strukturell aspekt, och i vad som behandlas i svaret, referentiell aspekt. Den mest avancerade hanteringen av analysmodellen ser dess delar som en helhet och som en struktur, samt väver in material från källor som stöd för sin argumentation. Den minst avancerade hanteringen behandlar, utan koppling till källor, endast en enstaka del av analysmodellen. I analysarbetet kartläggs också de kritiska aspekter som undervisning behöver fokusera på för att hjälpa eleven från en mindre avancerad uppfattning till en mer avancerad uppfattning, det vill säga för att lära sig att analysera med mer kvalité. Den mest centrala kritiska aspekten visar sig vara att se hur källmaterial är bas för en mer vetenskaplig analys. / It is the writer’s professional experience that upper secondary students often wonder how to improve their skills in analytic reasoning. The aim of this study is to examine conceptions of Swedish upper secondary school-students when it comes to use a model for analytical reasoning in the course Social studies 1b. The research questions are: How do upper secondary student perceive the usage of a model for analytic reasoning? Which qualitative differences can there be between a less complex and a complex conception of the model for analytic reasoning? The research method has been to give an analytic task to 50 upper secondary students aiming to analyze the problem with the diminishing engagement among Swedish youth in the formal democracy process. The participantswere asked to analyze this problem by using the analytic model and a number of sources originating from the Commission on Democracy Report (2014). The student´s answers where analyzed by a Phenomenographic method aiming to find categories of student´s conceptions of the skill of analyzing according to the model. The result, called the learning outcome, was 6 hierarchically structured categories of conceptions, differing from one another in how the analytic model was perceived, the structural aspect, and of how the content of the analysis was handled, the referential aspect. The most complex conception of the analytic model was to perceive it parts as a whole and also use its disposition as a model for the structure of their answers. The least complex conception only handle singular parts of the analytic model and does not use the source material as a factual base for their reasoning. The most central critical aspect to consider when designing teaching for improving the student´s analytic skills is to make them discern the need for source based reasoning if the aim is to develop a more scientific approach.
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Projetos de letramento na educa??o de jovens e adultos: o ensino da escrita em uma perspectiva emancipat?riaSantos, Ivoneide Bezerra de Araujo 28 June 2012 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2012-06-28 / This ethnographical research-action is included in the Applied Linguistics area and its study object is related to literacy projects (KLEIMAN, 2000), since they bring a new sense to the literacy practices in school and emphasizes the agentive writing character and the role of the discursive genres in the formation of literacy agents who aim at the action and the social change. Considering the emancipatory potential that these didactic organizations have in the civic literacy of those who live in social risk and vulnerability situations our aim in this investigation is: to reflect about the role of the redefinition of the literacy school practices and investigate how the action of teachers and students as literacy agents occur. The specific aims are: to promote literacy events which encourage the writing practice for the action and social change; to comprehend how the identity construction of the literacy student-agent occurs by the reflection of its agency process in the literacy projects; to identify teaching strategies and procedures which enable the development of emancipatory language practices; to investigate the axiological values constructed by the learners in and about the writing work in literacy projects. Our discussion is based on the language conception supported by Bakhtin (BAKHTIN/VOLOSHINOV, 2000; BAKHTIN, 1990, 2003); in literacy studies (KLEIMAN, 1995; BAYNHAM, 1995; BARTON; HAMILTON; IVANIC, 2000, LAZERE, 2005); on critical studies which defend the idea that the texts are ideological instruments able to give power to the individuals (MCLAREN, 1988, 1991, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001; FREIRE, 1971, 1978, 1979, 1982, 1992, 1996, 2001a, 2001b, 2009; GIROUX, 1983, 1986, 1990, 1992, 1997, 1999, 2003; APPLE, 1989); on the social genre approach inspired by the New Rhetoric (BAZERMAN, 2005, 2006, 2007; MILLER, 1984, 2009). The data were generated between 2006 and 2010 in the Youth and Adult Education (YAE), in public schools in Natal-RN. The research permitted us to deduce, firstly, that the redefinition of the work with discursive genres provide the learner to read and write to act discursively in the social world, earning, thus, empowerment, autonomy and emancipation; secondly, that involving the students in literacy projects goes beyond didactic competence related to specificities and content domain. It is necessary that the teacher is certain about to whom, what, why and how to teach and that he/she gets a reflexive posture, becoming a learner as well; thirdly, that through the literacy practices which were developed, the collaborators of the research have constructed a more conscious and a more critical view in relation to the language and to the world where they live through the social-political writing and they have improved as interventive and politicized citizens / Esta pesquisa-a??o, de vertente etnogr?fica, se insere no campo da Lingu?stica Aplicada, tendo por objeto de estudo os projetos de letramento (KLEIMAN, 2000), por imprimirem um novo sentido ?s pr?ticas de letramento escolarizadas, pondo em relevo o car?ter agentivo da escrita e o papel dos g?neros discursivos na forma??o de agentes de letramento que visam ? a??o e ? mudan?a social. Considerando o potencial emancipat?rio que assumem essas organiza??es did?ticas no letramento c?vico de educandos que vivem em situa??o de risco e vulnerabilidade social, objetivamos, nesta investiga??o: refletir sobre o papel dos projetos na ressignifica??o das pr?ticas de letramento escolar e investigar como se d? a a??o de professores e alunos como agentes de letramento. De forma mais espec?fica, elegemos como objetivos: promover eventos de letramento que oportunizem a pr?tica da escrita para a a??o e a mudan?a social; compreender como se d? a constru??o identit?ria de alunos-agentes de letramento, refletindo sobre seu processo de ag?ncia nos projetos de letramento; identificar estrat?gias e procedimentos de ensino que possibilitam o desenvolvimento de pr?ticas de linguagem emancipat?rias; investigar valores axiol?gicos constru?dos pelos educandos no e sobre o trabalho com a escrita em projetos de letramento. A nossa discuss?o est? ancorada na concep??o de linguagem de base bakhtiniana (BAKHTIN/VOLOSHINOV, 2000; BAKHTIN, 1990, 2003); nos estudos de letramento (KLEIMAN, 1995; BAYNHAM, 1995; BARTON; HAMILTON; IVANIC, 2000, LAZERE, 2005); nos estudos cr?ticos defensores da ideia de que os textos se constituem em instrumentos ideol?gicos capazes de conferir poder aos indiv?duos (MCLAREN, 1988, 1991, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001; FREIRE, 1971, 1978, 1979, 1982, 1992, 1996, 2001a, 2001b, 2009; GIROUX, 1983, 1986, 1990, 1992, 1997, 1999, 2003; APPLE, 1989); na abordagem social de g?nero inspirada na Nova Ret?rica (BAZERMAN, 2005, 2006, 2007; MILLER, 1984, 2009). Os dados foram gerados no per?odo de 2006 a 2010, na Educa??o de Jovens e Adultos (EJA), em escolas da rede p?blica de ensino de Natal-RN. A pesquisa permitiu-nos depreender, em primeiro lugar, que a ressignifica??o do trabalho com os g?neros discursivos abre a possibilidade para que o educando leia e escreva para agir discursivamente no mundo social, ganhando, assim, empoderamento, autonomia e emancipa??o; em segundo lugar, que envolver alunos em projetos de letramento vai al?m de uma compet?ncia did?tica vinculada a especificidades e ao dom?nio de conte?dos. ? preciso que o professor tenha clareza de para quem, o qu?, por que e como ensinar e assuma uma postura reflexiva, tornando-se tamb?m um aprendiz; em terceiro lugar, que a partir das pr?ticas de letramento desenvolvidas, os colaboradores da pesquisa constru?ram uma vis?o mais consciente e cr?tica em rela??o ? l?ngua e ao mundo no qual atuaram, mediante a escrita sociopol?tica, como cidad?os interventivos e politizados
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[pt] A PRESENÇA DA SOCIOLOGIA NO ENSINO MÉDIO: LETRAMENTO CÍVICO E DEMOCRACIA / [en] THE PRESENCE OF SOCIOLOGY IN HIGH SCHOOL: CIVIC LITERACY AND DEMOCRACYLAURA DE ALMEIDA BRAGA ROSSI 18 September 2015 (has links)
[pt] Este trabalho dissertativo tem por objetivo encarar a presença da Sociologia na escola brasileira a partir de três enfoques: sua chegada, sua implementação e suas possibilidades. Em primeiro lugar, remetemo-nos ao próprio desenvolvimento das Ciências Sociais no país, que acreditamos ter forte relação com a mobilização e as disputas que culminaram na lei n. 11.684/08, que institui a obrigatoriedade do ensino da disciplina no Ensino Médio. Ainda, analisaremos a transformação destes esforços na definição de currículos e programas de avaliação, bem como a aprendizagem dos conteúdos sociológicos a partir de resultados de avaliações em três estados do país. E, por fim, realizaremos uma discussão acerca da finalidade da presença da Sociologia na escola, mais especificamente a sua contribuição para o letramento cívico, à luz de um debate que parte dos dados sobre a relação da Sociologia com o senso comum. A hipótese geral trata da aprendizagem pelos alunos daquilo que está mais próximo do senso comum, ou seja, de conteúdos já sociologizados na vida cotidiana. / [en] This dissertation aims to discuss the presence of Sociology in Brazilian schools from three different perspectives: its arrival, its implementation process and the possibilities it offers. Firstly, through examining the institutionalization of the social sciences in the country and its relation to the law 11.684 from 2008, which established Sociology as an obligatory class in high schools. Secondly, the transformation of this effort into the development of curriculum and assessment programs nationwide, as well as assessment results from three different states that allow a discussion about student learning in this discipline. At last, regarding the assessment results, a debate is drawn about the purposes of the presence of a Sociology class in school level, more specifically its possibility to contribute to civic literacy. The general hypothesis is that students are having difficulty learning contents that are farther from the common sense that surrounds them. That means they are learning contents that are already present in their day-to-day lives, contents that have been already sociologized.
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Labor, Literacies, and Liberation: A Rhetorical Biography of Stetson KennedyEidson, Diana 09 May 2014 (has links)
William Stetson Kennedy (1916-2011), an activist and muckraking journalist, focused on social and economic conditions in the South. In seven decades of activism, he fought for peace, workers’ rights, civil rights, and environmental protections. Kennedy collected oral histories as a folklorist with the Federal Writer’s Project, and he infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan and worked to get their state charters revoked. This project breaks new ground by bringing to light a neglected aspect of Stetson Kennedy’s work: his years (1943-1947) as the editorial director for the Political Action Committee of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO-PAC). In this role, Kennedy fought against voting restrictions and informed workers about candidates and voting issues.
This dissertation explores several research questions: How are alphabetic, civic, and critical literacies activated and enhanced through labor rhetoric? In what ways are these three literacies connected? What are the implications of interconnected literate praxis in academic spaces and beyond? The writer employs archival research, primary field research, and critical theory. Using critical theory enables the writer to stake new claims about key concepts: the subject, agency, ideology, discourse, rhetoric, and literacy. This project enriches existing scholarship in rhetoric and composition through focusing on literacy programs in labor movements. Although labor unions have long provided instruction in reading, writing, history, and political economy, little work outside of history and sociology has been done on worker education. Literacy building outside the classroom has received some attention in rhetoric and composition, but the role that unions play in this process has been neglected.
In addition, this rhetorical biography provides an historical account of a writer who helped educate workers largely through the use of dialect, folklore, and other forms of vernacular/working-class discourse. Vernacular discourse must be recovered in order to rectify the privileging of academic/elite discourse and to end the longstanding silence about socioeconomic class in US society. Furthermore, this project connects rhetorical theory to rhetorical practice, what Paulo Freire called praxis. Ultimately, this project provides a new view of literacy by theorizing how three different literacies interact, as well as the implications of these interactions in classrooms and communities.
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Samhällskunskapslärares tankar om samhällsbegreppet i samhällskunskapsundervisningen. : En studie i metoden fokusgruppsintervju av nio yrkesverksamma samhällskunskapslärare på två olika gymnasieskolor. / Social science theatchers thoughts on societals concept in social studies. : A study in the focus group interview method of nine professional social sciense teatchers in two different upper secondary schools.Andersson, Jemima January 2019 (has links)
The purpose of this qualitative study is to investigate how social science teachers perceive and express the concept of society in social studies. The study consists of focus group interviews with nine social science teachers at two upper secondary schools and its results are analyzed against the theoretical backdrop of Odenstad's orientation topics, analytical subjects and discussion topics and Sandahl’s first-order and second-order concepts. In short, the two different conceptual devices can be described as the skills and abilities that are most important for the students to master in order to develop advanced thinking skills in social science. Particular emphasis is put on critical thinking, that is, the ability to seek, structure and evaluate information from different sources and to draw conclusions from this process. The emerging results show a certain consensus on the concept of society among social science teachers as the potential subject of study and analysis that would simplify and clarify the analyses of the different levels in society which, in turn, would contribute to adding significance and bringing cohesion to the subject as a whole. As for the skills and abilities that stem from Odenstad's orientation topics and Sandahl’s first-order concepts, the interviewed teachers all emphasize conceptual ability as well as good external knowledge to have knowledge of how society is made up. With reference to Odenstad's analytical subject and discussion topics and Sandahl's second-order concepts, it would seem that it is not only important but a prerequisite that students develop an analytical ability and critical thinking as well as the ability to sift through and process large amounts of information and assume different perspectives on the topic or issue at hand.
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Explaining Civil Society Core Activism in Post-Soviet LatviaLindén, Tove January 2008 (has links)
<p>Civil society activism in traditional non-governmental organizations (NGOs) is seen as one of the cornerstones of a vibrant participatory liberal democracy in most Western democratic states. Whereas this issue has been explored from a variety of perspectives in a Western context, only limited research has been carried out in a post-Soviet context. This study presents unique survey data on civil society core activism in post-Soviet Latvia addressing the following two main questions: What are the characteristics and factors that influence a person to become a core activist in a civil society organization? How does the post-Soviet Latvian context influence civil society core activism?</p><p>Two nationwide surveys were carried out among core activists in all sorts of NGOs and for a comparative purpose among the population at large, from which non-activists have been extracted. Through cross-tabulations based on the three comparative dimensions: a) activists in general vs. non-activists, b) fields of interest and c) position in organization, this study indicates that many of the factors proven to be important when explaining civil society core activism in Western contexts also have explanatory power in post-Soviet Latvia. Important factors are an individual’s educational level, empathic ability and level of civic literacy, as well as the presence of activist role models and positive support for the decision to become involved in civil society activism. Citizenship and gender are other important factors, but unlike Western countries women dominate the civil society sector in Latvia. Two new factors are also suggested and tested, showing that the perception that one has the ability to organize activity and prior leadership experience from a communist organization are important for Latvian core activists.</p><p>Binary logistic regression analysis is further used to test the significance of each of the independent variables alone and in combination with each other, introducing different types of core activists based on gender, motives for activism, intensity of political, charity and recreational activity, as well as the positions they have in their organizations.</p>
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Explaining Civil Society Core Activism in Post-Soviet LatviaLindén, Tove January 2008 (has links)
Civil society activism in traditional non-governmental organizations (NGOs) is seen as one of the cornerstones of a vibrant participatory liberal democracy in most Western democratic states. Whereas this issue has been explored from a variety of perspectives in a Western context, only limited research has been carried out in a post-Soviet context. This study presents unique survey data on civil society core activism in post-Soviet Latvia addressing the following two main questions: What are the characteristics and factors that influence a person to become a core activist in a civil society organization? How does the post-Soviet Latvian context influence civil society core activism? Two nationwide surveys were carried out among core activists in all sorts of NGOs and for a comparative purpose among the population at large, from which non-activists have been extracted. Through cross-tabulations based on the three comparative dimensions: a) activists in general vs. non-activists, b) fields of interest and c) position in organization, this study indicates that many of the factors proven to be important when explaining civil society core activism in Western contexts also have explanatory power in post-Soviet Latvia. Important factors are an individual’s educational level, empathic ability and level of civic literacy, as well as the presence of activist role models and positive support for the decision to become involved in civil society activism. Citizenship and gender are other important factors, but unlike Western countries women dominate the civil society sector in Latvia. Two new factors are also suggested and tested, showing that the perception that one has the ability to organize activity and prior leadership experience from a communist organization are important for Latvian core activists. Binary logistic regression analysis is further used to test the significance of each of the independent variables alone and in combination with each other, introducing different types of core activists based on gender, motives for activism, intensity of political, charity and recreational activity, as well as the positions they have in their organizations.
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Att ta sig an världen : Lärare diskuterar innehåll och mål i samhällskunskapsämnetSandahl, Johan January 2011 (has links)
The focus of this investigation is civics in the Swedish upper secondary school. In addition to subject matter, civics is also an agent for democratic socialisation. The study explores and analyses the reflections of six teachers on their teaching about globalisation. These reflections, or voices, are researched through interviews and classroom observations. The starting point is the teachers’ description of content and goals in their teaching. The overall aim is to identify and analyse first and second order concepts in their teaching and analyse the relationship between the concepts and democratic socialisation. Despite the strong position of civics as one of the main subjects in school curricula very little research has been done. By focusing on one substantial case, globalisation, this study tries to reach beyond the various topics covered in civics. In order to understand civics teaching the researcher use the history didactic terms of first and second order concepts to find a new way to explore and understand civics. Manifested in the teachers’ voices are ideas on how to organise, analyse, interpret and critically review discourses in society. The second order concepts of civics found in the teachers’ voices are social science perspectives, social science causality, social science inference, social science evidence and social science abstraction. In order to reach their goals in civics the teachers underline the importance of using second order concepts. When pupils work more scientifically they develop a way of thinking about society and they have to challenge their set opinions about different topics. Therefore, the second order concepts are important for achieving civic literacy.
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