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INTRODUCTION____________________________________________________9
BARBARA MERRILL, JOSÉ GONZÁLEZ-MONTEAGUDO,
ADRIANNA NIZINSKA, ANDREA GALIMBERTI,
MIGUEL A. BALLESTEROS-MOSCOSIO
SECTION 1
PERSPECTIVES FROM ADULT LEARNING
AND HIGHER EDUCATION
SECTION 3
PERSPECTIVES FROM SCHOOLS AND E-LEARNING
INTRODUCTION
9
continuity and discontinuity underlies the possibility (or the constraint) for a new
personal and work life trajectory, which may represent a critical moment in a
person’s life. Some adults also actively choose to leave their study before finishing.
Although it is a disrupted learning career it may not necessarily be a negative one.
What factors at the micro, meso and macro levels come into play?
In a changing world what potential learning spaces – formal and informal-
can be identified to encourage adults, particularly non-traditional adults, to learn in
ways which are beneficial and positive to them as well as in ways which enables
them to challenge the inequalities they experience in society?
This e-book presents some contributions from papers presented and
discussed at the mentioned Conference. The papers address some of the following
areas across the wide range of adult education contexts: the role and impact of
learning careers in fostering continuity or discontinuity in learning biographies;
developing potentials for learning spaces in a changing world; using concepts,
theory, disciplinary and inter-disciplinary approaches to understanding continuities
and discontinuities in learning careers; inequalities of class, gender, ethnicity and
disability; methodological approaches to researching continuities and discontinuities
in learning careers.
The e-book has three sections. Firstly we include six papers on Perspectives
from adult learning and higher education. The second section includes six papers
and it is organised around Perspectives from community and social education. The
last section contents also five papers and it is focused on Perspectives from schools
and e-learning. To be inclusive, we accepted final full papers in several languages,
including, besides English, papers on French, Spanish and Portuguese. As coeditors
of this e-book, we wish to thank all the authors who have contributed to this volume
for their time, passion and efforts to produce a final high-quality paper.
We need to add that Sense Publishers will publish in Rotterdam a second
book, that will include other papers of this Conference, within the ESREA Series.
The Sense Publisher’s book has been coedited by four of the coeditors of this
volume.
Eventually, we express our gratitude to Andrea Marabini, who coordinated
administrative tasks during the preparation and development of the Conference. He
has also done the design and make up of this publication, with his usual high-level
skills as well as full availability.
10
SECTION 1
PERSPECTIVES FROM ADULT LEARNING
AND HIGHER EDUCATION
11
ANTONIO BOLÍVAR
MAXIMILIANO RITACCO
1
UNA DOBLE Y DISCONTINUA IDENTIDAD PROFESIONAL:
LOS DIRECTORES ESCOLARES EN ESPAÑA
EN UNA DIMENSIÓN BIOGRÁFICO NARRATIVA
INTRODUCCIÓN
Dentro del marco de la Unión Europea España ha compartido con Portugal (hasta
2008) un carácter singular y único de la dirección escolar: el director o directora es
un colega elegido por sus propios compañeros. En este sentido, la identidad profesional
se expone a una transmutación a medida que atraviesa una trayectoria provisional
que pasa por el “estar como” o “ser” director/a (identidad como director/a), a
volver a ejercer de docente que puede, con el tiempo, retornar a la dirección (4-8
años). A la “doble identidad” (docente/director) se le unen otras duplicidades:
gestor/líder, representante de la administración/compañeros; responsable ejecutor
de la normativa y el primum inter pares -representante del profesorado- (Viñao, 2004).
Tales particularidades, sumadas a la discontinuidad en la carrera profesional,
hacen interesante el estudio de la identidad de los directores escolares desde una
perspectiva biográfico-narrativa ya empleada en otras investigaciones (Bolívar et al.,
2001; Bolívar, 2006).
Así pues, la identidad se construye en un proceso y en un espacio (relacional)
que es, a la vez, una construcción subjetiva y una inscripción social (Dubar, 2010).
Es común, por tanto, distinguir dos dimensiones: “identidad para sí” e “identidad
para otros” (Dubar, 1992; Ricoeur, 1996). Ambas vinculantes, ya que son el
resultado de un largo proceso de socialización, emergen de tres factores en
interacción (Day et al., 2006; Day, 2011): socioculturales; contexto de trabajo, y
factores personales.
Desde esta perspectiva (identitaria), aquello que sea “la dirección” dependerá
de cómo se es reconocido por los otros y, sobre todo, por los colegas. La relevancia
en “sí mismo” en la dirección, como puso de manifiesto magistralmente Ricoeur
(1996), no sería tal sin que “otro” la reconozca con su autonomía y capacidad para
tomar sus propias decisiones. Por ello, en definitiva, la autonomía e identidad del
12
ejercicio de la dirección, paradójicamente, depende de los otros, dado que requiere
su reconocimiento y aceptación.
Los tiempos actuales de individualización y desinstitucionalización (Dubet,
2006), propios de la modernidad tardía (late modern age, Giddens, 1995), han
cambiando las reglas del juego recomponiendo los aspectos esenciales de la
identidad profesional, del compromiso y del ejercicio cotidiano (Bauman, 2001).
Estos procesos, ineludiblemente, tienen un impacto en la identidad profesional (Beck &
Beck-Gernsheim, 2002) señalándola como un indicador de análisis de las prácticas
(dinámicas) que adoptan los docentes para construir sus vidas y enfrentarse a su
trabajo.
Merece, pues, estudiar, desde las voces de los directores-docentes sobre
cómo vivencian identitariamente estas condiciones (duplicidad, discontinuidad, etc.)
en su profesionalización y a lo largo de su carrera (Aspin, Chapman et al., 2012).
MARCO TEÓRICO
13
“entre las definiciones ‘oficiales’, atribuidas por otro y la
identificaciones ‘subjetivas’, reivindicadas para sí y sometidas al
reconocimiento del otro, son posibles muchas combinaciones”.
Paralelamente, por la identidad del rol (Day y Gu 2015: 93): “cómo el profesor
se ve a sí mismo en el papel concreto que juega como profesor en como miembro
del equipo directivo”.
Cabe aclarar que los roles suelen ser relativamente estables, mientras que las
identidades tienden a ser variables, dependiendo de la negociación con los otros y
con los contextos. Las personas pueden ocupar diferentes roles y sentirse con la
misma identidad o, al contrario, tener múltiples identidades al ocupar distintos roles.
En cualquier caso, como afirman Scribner & Crow (2012: 246): “La identidad
proporciona la motivación para asumir y poner en práctica un rol”.
Por último, se integra el factor personal. Ya que el ejercicio profesional está
mediado por lo personal, se ha constatado que hay una inevitable interrelación entre
la identidad profesional y la identidad personal. Como ha advertido Christopher Day (2011,
p. 48; Day & Kington, 2008: 9):
14
la Administración es altamente susceptible de añorar volver a ocupar el rol de
docente. Igualmente, se dan casos en donde el rol se identifica provisionalmente con
la identidad: sentirse docente, mientras se ejerce como tal; e identificarse como
director, mientras se ocupa el rol. Roles e identidades, en el caso español, en efecto,
no se identifican.
Referido a la profesión docente, Zabalza y Zabalza Cerdeiriña (2012) hablaban
de la diferencia entre el “ser” y el “estar” en el ejercicio profesional. Aplicándolo a la
dirección escolar, estar o ejercer de director es una cosa bien distinta de sentirse director,
a vivirlo identitariamente e implicarse de modo comprometido e intenso en esa
experiencia. De modo similar, en un estudio específico sobre el tema, Fernández
(2011: 26-29) hacía referencia a:
15
METODOLOGÍA
El diseño del estudio se enmarcó dentro del enfoque cualitativo. Así mismo, un
conjunto de decisiones metodológicas establecieron las pautas previas al trabajo de
campo: a) Considerar el peso del discurso como fuente de información; b) considerar
una perspectiva cronológica e histórica de las percepciones y valoraciones de los sujetos
intervinientes; c)aplicar el análisis del contenido como técnica del proceso metodológico
(Wertz, Charmaz y McMullen, 2011) [y] d) aplicar la teoría fundamentada como base
para la construcción de un conocimiento emergente (Strauss y Corbin, 2002).
16
vuelco” permitió la reorganización de los indicadores (I) en una serie de categorías
emergentes ya consolidadas.
RESULTADOS
! IDENTIDAD PERSONAL
Como definen Demazière y Dubar (1997, p. 304) la identidad es: “un proceso de
construcción y de reconocimiento de una definición de sí que sea satisfactoria a la
vez para sí mismo y validado por las instituciones que le enmarcan e inscriben
socialmente.
Por el contrario, en otro contexto, el director se reconoce anti-autoritario,
porque estima que debe crear un buen clima de centro, que tendrá su impacto en la
enseñanza:
De este modo, comenta otra directora, se logra implicar al personal: “ya luego
nos vamos extendiendo al resto de la comunidad escolar…vas implicando a gente
poco a poco…luego el grado de implicación es bueno”.
17
! IDENTIDAD PROFESIONAL (PERSPECTIVA INTERNA)
Ejercer un papel de liderazgo implica tener unas metas o propósitos que contribuyan
a conseguir los objetivos deseables para el centro e implicar a los demás a seguirlos.
En esta línea de liderazgo pedagógico uno de los entrevistados entiende que su
misión es ser núcleo generador de propuestas: “una de mis funciones es orientar,
canalizar, llevar propuestas y, en base a ellas, sin partir de 0, crear”. Otro señala, “la
iniciativa de “vamos a hacer” surge del equipo directivo, generalmente, luego se
implican muchos pero esa iniciativa, surge en el 90% de los casos de la dirección”.
Se suelen reconocer como eje de las iniciativas y modelo:
18
En otros casos se resalta que: “como director lo que haces es un poco
coordinar eso y sacar lo que vale y poner a cada uno a trabajar en su lugar”.
En cualquier caso, la tarea principal es lograr la cohesión del trabajo del
profesorado:
! IDENTIDAD SOCIAL
La identidad se concibe como la auto-percepción de un sujeto con respecto a otros,
a lo que corresponde –a su vez– al reconocimiento y la aprobación de los demás.
Como tal, no es una esencia, un atributo o una propiedad intrínseca del sujeto, sino
que tiene un carácter intersubjetivo y relacional. Claude Dubar (1992) ha señalado
que la identidad social es resultado de la articulación de estos dos procesos de
socialización: 1) la atribución de la identidad dada por instancias y agentes con los
que interacciona cotidianamente, a modo de “etiquetado”; y 2) la interiorización de
la identidad por parte de los propios individuos. Estos dos ejes de biografía y
relación se combinan para definir, como señalábamos antes, lo que Dubar llama
“formas identitarias”, es decir, formas sociales de identificación de los individuos en
19
relación con los otros. El director percibe que los demás lo ven socialmente como
aquel que soluciona problemas y “apaga fuegos!
La dirección escolar estima que, socialmente, se la identifica como un agente
que soluciona problemas de convivencia, apuros del profesorado, conflictos basados
en el aquí y en el ahora:
20
Un director o directora debe contar con un amplio conjunto de competencias,
pero prioritariamente debe ejercer una dirección pedagógica, es decir un liderazgo
pedagógico en los procesos de enseñanza-aprendizaje que se desarrolla en el centro:
“por eso, este tipo de dirección pedagógica es muy compleja, adaptada a personas y
más aún a personas que no tienen una formación específica”.
De este modo, comenta otro:
Sin tener claro por dónde debía ir una profesionalización, reclaman una
formación o carrera diferenciada que precede a la docencia:
! PROFESIONALIZACIÓN
La identidad profesional docente se caracteriza por el conjunto de saberes y
competencias necesarias para practicar el oficio de la enseñanza y que, como tales,
son reconocidas socialmente. Las características generales que identifican una
profesión, a su vez, se concretan en lo que es la identidad profesional docente, como
algo común a todos los docentes, pero también fruto individual de una construcción
particular, mediada por identidades profesionales diferenciadas, como es el caso del
profesorado de Primaria o de Secundaria. “Si yo soy director y lo voy a ser 4 años
mas será porque el profesorado está de acuerdo conmigo”, afirma uno.
Pero el director no puede ser sólo un representante del profesorado, por eso
reclaman una profesionalización. Aparecen en las voces de los directores continuas
críticas al sistema actual de selección: “esa elección, en principio está
21
viciada…mientras se bareme la formación de un director por lo ‘viejo’ que seas o
por méritos ajenos a lo que es una dirección del centro”.
En otros casos se refieren a cómo el mecanismo de elección por el Consejo
Escolar puede no ser objetivo, dependiendo de la micro-política del centro: “en un
Consejo Escolar un profesor me dice que mi actuación ha sido mala, porque días
anteriores le había llamado la atención”.
! DOBLE IDENTIDAD
Un colega elegido por sus colegas genera una cierta “cautividad”: entre las demandas
de la administración, que requieren una autoridad formal y las tensiones con el
profesorado, del que formas parte y volverás en el futuro. Así lo expresa un director:
“Es que eso entronca con la concepción del modelo de dirección que
se tiene en este país, un modelo muy institucionalizado y manipulado
políticamente, es que eres cautivo, es el modelo cautivo”.
“lo primero que impide es esa relación que tenemos con nuestros
compañeros y los seguimos llamando compañeros es muy curioso
pero yo sigo siendo ‘compañera de…’ de cualquier profesor, claro
que –además- soy la directora”.
DISCUSION
La complejidad del modelo español de dirección escolar merece ser analizada desde
la cuestión de la doble identidad de los directores escolares. La duplicidad no solo se
22
manifiesta en el complicado y simultáneo ejercicio del rol “docente-director-
docente”, sino también en las tensiones que genera ocupar un posicionamiento
intermedio entre las demandas de la administración y las negociaciones con sus
“colegas” del profesorado. Esta “encrucijada” se agrava si se tiene en cuenta el
itinerario de ida y vuelta –transeúnte- por el cargo y su sistema de elección,
ciertamente corporativo.
En este sentido, fruto de las contradicciones, el impacto en la identidad
profesional no se hace esperar. Los directivos no niegan la pérdida del ejercicio de
autoridad formal. A cambio, se requiere del desarrollo de habilidades socio-
personales en pos del logro progresivo de un tipo de autoridad “moral” que
encuentra sus límites en las aristas de la cultura escolar, dícese, por ejemplo, en la
supervisión pedagógica.
Sin remedio a estas cuestiones, la identidad profesional de los directivos define
un perfil identitario en una serie de posicionamientos. Reconocerse cómo un núcleo
generador de propuestas e iniciativas, cómo un coordinador que organiza los
recursos humanos, un mediador de conflictos, un agente para la cohesión y el logro
de una buena convivencia (clima de trabajo positivo)..., no son más -ni menos- que
la expresión de un conjunto de formas identitarias que se expresan más allá del rol
formal y dentro de los limitados márgenes del “modelo cautivo”.
Sin más, queda pendiente el proceso de profesionalización de los directivos
escolares. El estado de la cuestión no debate en si es más o menos formación, sino
en que marco y/o coordenadas se inscribe. Al respecto, no hay dudas que la
complejidad de las cuestiones reflejadas deberá ser revisada profundamente si se
pretende el desarrollo y consolidación de una identidad profesional de los directivos a la
altura de una dirección escolar para la mejora educativa.
REFERENCIAS
23
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reconstrucción. Archidona: Aljibe
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(2006): Variations in teachers’ work, lives and effectiveness. DfES Research Report
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Day, C., Kington, A., Sammons, P., & Stobart, G. (2006b). The personal and
professional selves of teachers: stable and unstable identities. British Educational
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Day, C.; Kington, A. (2008). Identity, well-being and effectiveness: the emotional
contexts of teaching. Pedagogy, Culture & Society, 16 (1), 7-23.
Day, C. y Gu, Q. (2015). Educadores resilientes, escuelas resilientes. Madrid. Narcea.
Demazière, D. & Dubar, C. (1997). Analyser les entretiens biographiques. L'exemple des
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Dubar, C. (1992). Formes identitaires et socialisation professionnelle. Revue française
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AFILIACIONES
25
SOLEDAD ROMERO RODRÍGUEZ
PILAR FIGUERA GAZO
MONTSERRAT FREIXA NIELLA
2
NARRATING EMERGING ADULTHOOD AT UNIVERSITY
This paper focuses on students aged 18-22 who gained admission to the University
of Barcelona in 2010. By their ages, we can place these students in the emerging
26
adulthood (18-30), recently identified by evolutionary psychologists as having its
own particular characteristics (Guichard, 2013). The concept of emerging adulthood,
coined by Arnett (2000), means a lengthening of the exploratory stage of life, a stage
previously linked to adolescence but which nowadays appears to extend beyond
youth. This new perspective allows us to understand some key facts. Thus the
strategies with which young adults confront life and their options will clearly differ
from those of previous generations. Their early plans will be considered on a
different basis and they will have other keys to finding their places in the
professional and social world.
Career planning processes are constantly under review from this paradigm,
possibly because the inputs resulting from their multiple life experiences make it
possible to discover new interests (in line with Savickas, 2013). The emerging adult
plans more for the short term, exploring possibilities, discarding and redefining
plans (about work, personal decisions, relationships) with a speed that makes older
generations dizzy. In some roles they assume a degree of independence, but not in
others.
They place more value on free time and their other identities have a similar
weight to their professional identity. The transition to university is just one of the
different transitions in which they construct multiple identities. Inviting these
students to narrate their passage through university may help us to understand their
academic and life histories in the frame of reference of emerging adulthood.
METHODOLOGY
This paper presents an analysis of the first phase of the transition stage as related in
interviews by students of Education. We focus on one specific academic context, the
Education degree, and this enables us to capture the specificities of the context so as
to attribute meaning to the students’ life trajectories. We also analyse their
trajectories at a specific moment in time, marked by the significant institutional and
academic changes brought about by the implementation of the Bologna Process.
Selecting people to interview (sample) is one of the trickiest tasks in the field
of narrative research. Gudmundsdottir (1996) advises that those with higher
narrative competence should be chosen because this makes interviewing easier and
results in a better told story. Generally speaking, however, those selected tend to be
those who are willing to participate and motivated to speak about their life at
university. In our case, we asked for volunteers to represent the enrolled students as
a whole. Some students came forward on their own initiative.
A total of 15 cases were selected that included graduates in Education and in
Business Administration and Management, a mix of successful trajectories
(completing their studies in the expected time) and delayed trajectories (taking longer
27
than the theoretical time). In the case of Education, a total of seven students (5
women and 2 men) participated. Two of the women gained admission after taking a
CFGS (higher vocational training certificate). Of the others, who came straight from
secondary school (bachillerato), two people were late in finishing their secondary
studies and one changed courses after making a wrong first choice. Of the group as
a whole, five finished in four years.
The interview had two main objectives. The first was to discover and
understand how the students lived and experienced their passage through university,
while the second was to understand and analyse the development of university
student identity and the professional self. In this regard, the interview aimed to be a
narrative of professional identity and in particular its initial construction, thereby
bringing us closer to the concept of narrative identity described by McAdams &
Guo (2014). Two autobiographical interviews were carried out. In the first, each
interviewee was asked to bring an object that represented their experience as a
student. The second interview was used to complete, qualify and check the findings
of the first.
The narrative is arranged in chronological order from start to finish because
the aim of the research is to observe the evolution of life experienced as a university
student. Apart from the chronological and temporal aspect, the interview script was
based on key moments from the academic trajectory linked to context (situations or
events relevant to the university context) that the students experienced before
finishing their studies. The essential elements of the interview script therefore
focused on general biographical details, the meaning and significance of the object
brought to the interview, chapters in the life of the student, key points from the
chapters and a narrative of a future chapter.
The interviews were analysed by devising categories along the lines of Patton
& McMahon’s (2006) systems theory framework of career development
accompanied by a procedural analysis (outlining the stages/chapters identified in the
narratives).
RESULTS
28
having to study something unrelated to their vocational interest. This comes across
clearly in the cases of Daniel and Neus. Daniel came from an environment that
places a high value on a university education, as experienced by his father (a teaching
degree). For Neus, there was never a possibility of other educational options because
they were seen as being of a lower level, having less prestige and not providing what
she deserved as a good student. This view of university does not even allow for the
possibility of doing a higher vocational training certificate (Vocational Education
and Training courses) as the first step on an educational pathway ultimately leading
to a teaching degree. With hindsight, Neus acknowledges that this could have been
an alternative.
“It was go to university or get working and try again the following
year” (Daniel).
“I’d already made a huge effort. I’d always been very good
academically and I looked on CFGSs as being beneath me, not much
of a qualification” (Neus).
“If I’d done a one-year course I’d have had a qualification and I
could have gone to university the following year instead of beginning
a degree course that didn’t actually teach me much” (Neus).
“The experience I had at university, you can get that in other ways.
University, a training course or any other course can mean the same
thing. Being in a social environment, I used it to develop a project in
a youth club, to apply all the techniques I’d learnt, but I think that a
higher or intermediate vocational training course or a basic
professional qualification program would have been just as valid as
university. Would I recommend university? As much as I’d
recommend other academic or training options, whether training
courses or private courses somewhere else” (Biel).
A factor present in some of the choices and also linked to the idea of having
new experiences is related to the exploration of new contexts, accepting the
uncertainty and the fears that that involves. This is Irina’s experience. The reason
she gives is that the qualifying mark for gaining admission to university in the city
where she finished the higher vocational training certificate was very high. The way
29
she saw the situation, it was not about the possibilities that universities in other cities
she considered could offer but more a process of self-reflection.
“I could have done some other course that would have helped me to
develop more on a personal level, but I chose without really knowing
what I wanted to do and in the end I decided to finish it (…). For me
it is very satisfying to have the qualification. You feel secure, and
that’s not because of what I’ve learnt but because I’ve got a
qualification that gives me a wider choice of possible employment.
That’s also useful. It’s practical” (Gisela).
30
This concern is also at the root of vocational interest reorientation. Although
Neus’s initial choice was to take a degree in Teaching, she decided to stay in
Education because she discovered it gave her the chance to find an answer to a
distressing situation she experienced as a student at school.
We also come across cases like Ivana, who throughout the interview avoids
commenting on her interests. She studied Education without asking herself what
meaning it had for her, saying that, “I’d be happier if I were a hairdresser because I’d
be working”. This lack of self-exploration led her to keep exploring different study
options (CFGS in Administration) and jobs. She showed a certain interest in
occupations that involve helping people (Physiotherapy was her first choice). For
her, university was just a way of getting a “better job”, a view she picked up from
her family.
Finally we have the case of Montse, who says she made the wrong choice
because of a lack of information and a belief in myths which, once she started the
degree, began to disappear. Nevertheless, she refused to change trajectory because
that would have meant abandoning what she started and, the way she sees it, that
would mean “failure”.
Contact with Education and interaction with the life experiences of those
interviewed opens up new fields of vocational exploration. Gisela, for example, took
Education without being very sure what it could bring her. After being in contact
with one of the first-year teachers and reading Summerhill, she discovered she was
interested in changing education, and this became more obvious after she became
involved with the 15M (anti-austerity) movement. However, she became
demotivated when she saw that the Faculty of Education itself did not match her
31
idealized view of education, and this led her to become annoyed and then to seek
alternatives such as meditation outside the university.
Neus’s professional interest is being built around experience, which enables
her to explore options other than those she initially thought were her most genuine
vocation. Indeed, although she considered transferring from the Education degree
to Teacher in Primary Education, she decided to stay when she discovered she was
interested in areas other than teaching.
“In the first and second years I didn’t even consider anything that
wasn’t teaching. I didn’t look and I wasn’t interested in anything
else… until something I thought of changed everything. You see the
possibilities that Education opens up, you see other areas, you think
about it and end up wondering if teacher training is what you want or
not, or whether it was just a game that you enjoyed when you were
little but isn’t what you really want to do” (Neus).
“Part of the experiences that I find with these life experiences, with
the youth club dynamic based on participation, self-management,
personal involvement, when I go to university I look for this kind of
place where there’s participation and I find myself with the student
representatives” (Biel).
“(the educationalist) can work in lots of places, and while it’s true
that the labour market might not provide places for everyone who
graduates in a year, if you keep working at it you can find a job doing
what you want. It depends on the person, on the level of
performance and competencies, both transversal and technical…”
(Daniel).
32
Trajectory markers
We see in all cases how the different perceptions the interviewees have about
themselves and the reality they live, with all its margins for error, mark their
decisions and trajectories both consciously and unconsciously. The object chosen by
each student to bring to the interview is in each case highly representative of the
place of their personal identity and the markers that guide their perception of reality.
Neus’s chosen object is her photocopier card. It alludes to when she joined
the Education degree after giving up other university studies. It represents her need
to feel protected and accompanied by her group of fellow students and friends as a
safeguard against the insecurity her own self-imposed standards generate in her – the
need to keep up the role of “good student”. Neus experiences all the times that she
cannot live up to this role of good student as distressing personal failures. Her
inability to accept mistakes as part of life’s experience generates feelings of guilt and
shame that she hides from her fellow students and from herself (she preferred not to
speak about it). She sees her family as an important emotional support but also the
reason behind her feelings of guilt and shame and for her academic “failures”. Even
today it is difficult for her to accept what she perceives as a mistake, something she
has still not come to terms with.
“(You didn’t like talking about it)… No, I didn’t… personal failure.
The thought that your fellow students were starting the courses they
wanted and you weren’t, that you’d failed as a student at the vital
moment, that you were going to finish your studies a year late instead
of following your path as it had been laid out… That’s what was
unbearable for me at the time” (Neus).
For that reason she needs a lot of support and emotional protection that she
finds in her family and her group of friends (and hence the object).
Also quick to validate her identity as a good student is Montse, who takes how
she compares to her fellow students as her yardstick. Her chosen object is the
Education degree sash she was given on graduation day. She sees her passage
through university as a success because she graduated in the expected four years and
she feels proud when she compares herself to others who have still not finished their
studies. Deep down we see the idea of persistence at any price, even at the cost of
her own feelings of stress. This crops up a number of times in the course of the
interview. The object she brings also shows the value she places on her fellow
students, who serve to spur her on and successfully finish her studies (with a
competitive edge).
33
For me, having finished is satisfying because there are others who
still haven’t. In the end I did it in four years, which is what I
expected, and that was great” (Montse).
This same sense of pride and the need to validate identity through the
recognition of others can be seen in Daniel. The object he chooses is his class
graduation photograph. He tries to convey an image of security, of seeing his failures
as positive experiences, of facing challenges... but there are moments in his discourse
when he reveals his fears and frustrations (“I’m positive and I approach things
willingly, but if something isn’t clear and I don’t think it’ll be very good, I tend to
think it’ll end in failure”). It is only when he is able to affirm that his trajectory has
been positive that he looks back to reconcile himself with that Daniel who “wasn’t
up to scratch” and feels proud of having overcome all the obstacles he came up
against in his academic trajectory. He continued to study Education despite being
frustrated by the degree’s lack of prestige compared to others because he is
“someone who finishes what they start”. He looks for reasons that will convince
himself and others that he has a clear academic and professional plan and that the
decisions he made were the right ones.
Irina’s object is a packet of cigarettes whereby she wants to represent her
strength of character and the social relationships she established during her
university trajectory. She is driven by the perception that it is her duty to overcome
challenges and that she grows when challenged by others, especially her family (“I’ve
based my whole life on challenges. Coming to Barcelona was a challenge, getting my
degree in four years was a challenge”). Thus she decided to study in a different city,
somewhere she had to find a place to live, establish new relationships, learn a
language, find work to pay expenses… Her vocational interest lies in attention to
diversity and she herself chose to move to study in a context in which she felt
different. Validating this difference, at first it was hard to feel integrated with her
fellow students and she even felt rejected in her surroundings, but then she found a
group of friends with whom she felt protected.
“A lot of people in my family said, ‘you’ll only last two days there
what with the distance and the language and everything’ … and that
was also something that made me say, ‘I’ll do it if it kills me” (Irina).
In Biel’s case too we see that the need to prove to his family that he has the
capacity to successfully finish his studies carries much weight. His actions are also
marked by the need for social recognition and the search for survival strategies
(contact networks, opportunities for learning, for work …), and this leads him to get
involved in a multitude of activities to the point of saturation. The object he brings
is a T-shirt commemorating the 20th anniversary of the Casal de Joves where he
34
volunteers. The slogan reads “I’m young and modest”, a phrase he identifies with.
The T-shirt represents not only his interest in the volunteer sector but also the fact
that, once he had started working with the youth club after abandoning his studies,
he began to discover his own interests, which according to him meant “the start of
my academic and personal life”. Having dropped out while doing his Bachillerato, he
decided to go back to his studies and took it as a challenge to prove to his family
that he was capable of finishing them successfully and that “there’s more to me than
you think”. His personal experience of “failure” led him to take up volunteering and
education as a form of “activism”. It was then that he brought into play all the
resources available to him through his “go-getting” character, his survival skills, in
order to overcome the obstacles in his path. His need to survive drove him to
become involved in extracurricular activities that would enable him to widen his
network of contacts and open up opportunities for work. Indeed it is precisely this
type of activity, which he combines with volunteering, that he values most about
university.
In other cases we see that the need to be in control is what marks people’s
movements, either as actions or as reactions when it is not possible to exercise
control. This is the situation in which we find Gisela. The object she brings is a diary
that represents both her need for control and the stress she felt during her passage
through university (precisely because of that desire to control what might actually be
uncontrollable). The diary was also of use in enabling her to assess her controlling
attitude towards life. When perceiving reality, Gisela judges how far it corresponds
with her own beliefs, ideals and values. This means she experiences frustration,
anger and annoyance when reality does not develop as she perceives it should. She is
therefore neglectful of her involvement on an academic level, although she seeks
strategies to get by with a minimum response, and she commits herself to social
movements like 15M in her search to find a substitute for what she feels she lacks.
As part of this process she stopped participating in 15M and got involved in
activities in search of inner peace (meditation).
35
emotions. Let’s breathe, let’s be calm, let’s spread peace and not
conflict’. I couldn’t understand so much artifice in the intellectual
field” (Gisela).
The object brought by Ivana is a pen, and the reason she gives (“I thought it
was funny”) highlights her lack of concern about university studies and about asking
herself what it means to be doing them. Her interest is in the most basic level of
survival, to “be better prepared”, although this seems to be more of a family aspiration
than her own. She says that what matters to her is simply to “have a job”, which she
believes she can access without the need for university studies. Her priority is work,
and this becomes clear when she says: “I enrolled for the 60 credits, but later I
reduced it to half because it was a lot of work and I wanted to have a social life and I
wanted to work and I took it all more calmly”. To feel comfortable in the university
context, she looked for fellow students with characteristics similar to hers (living
outside Barcelona, mixing studies with work…).
“They’re people more like me. They live and work nearer me. When
you work with people from Barcelona they always want to meet in
Barcelona or the university, or in the morning and not in the
afternoon. Obviously with this group we didn’t have to go that far
and that means a lot. I felt very comfortable” (Ivana).
CONCLUSIONS
We are now in the final stage of analyzing the results, which indicate the importance
of narration as an element for making us aware of the factors that have an effect on
the ups and downs of university students’ academic and life trajectories. We can also
see the importance of developing one’s own identity as a student and how one’s
actions remain faithful to this identity, which acts to motivate and restrict at the
same time. The results point to elements that can be used in careers guidance in the
university area, including narrative procedures. Along with Alheit (2009), we believe
that observing and becoming aware of how people manage and negotiate their
different transitions could encourage people to find the meaning of their career
biographies. Narrative here can act as a “transition bridge”, as suggested by Ashforth
(2001).
Before we present our conclusions, we would like to make it clear that the
explorations referred to by the concept of emerging adulthood that we have used in
our study are influenced by limitations in educational and occupational opportunities
(Arnett, 2000) and cannot therefore be generalized.
36
Some of the conclusions reached on the basis of the first analysis carried out
involve the aspects summarized below.
! The importance of the value placed on going to university by the social and
family environment, sometimes to the point where it blocks consideration of
other possible learning pathways more appropriate to and consistent with
the actual vocation. In earlier studies, students explained how important
going to university was for their personal and professional development
(Figuera, Torrado, Freixa & Dorio, 2015; Freixa & Dorio, 2015). For some it
was a personal achievement, while for others it meant continuity in their
education. It was also established that the process of academic and social
adaptation and integration into the university context was not experienced in
the same way by all students, especially non-conventional students.
! How difficult it is for people to explore and accept their own vocational
interests. We even see people “running away” from this through fear of
giving shape to something that does not fit the social or personal template
assumed.
37
! Among the people interviewed, we identify how in this stage, as Arnett
(2000) points out, educational choices explore the different possibilities that
will prepare them for different types of work in the future and how this
exploration continues until at least one’s mid-twenties.
! To summarize the results obtained as regards the factors marking the career
development process in the emerging adult, we observe in the people
interviewed the places occupied by markers such as the need for survival, for
protection, for comparison-competition and for the search for what is
missing outside the configuration of the trajectories
! The perceptions people have of their own identity, the need for social
recognition (family, friendships, people in the immediate surroundings…),
the difficulty in accepting mistakes as part of life, the need to “form part”,
the need to control even the uncontrollable… these are just some of the
subjects that appear in the narratives analysed.
Working on these subjects through the use of narrative can, as Brown &
Bimrose (2015:252) maintain, be “an opportunity to elicit messages and meanings
with a fresh slant on their current position”.
REFERENCES
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Savickas, M.L. (2011). Career counseling. Washington, DC: American Psychological
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39
AFFILIATIONS
Soledad Romero-Rodríguez
[email protected]
Faculty of Education,
University of Seville
Pilar Figuera-Gazo
[email protected]
Faculty of Education,
University of Barcelona
Montserrat Freixa-Niella
[email protected]
Faculty of Education,
University of Barcelona
40
RODRIGO MATOS DE SOUZA
RAFAEL M. HERNÁNDEZ CARRERA
3
REPRESENTAÇÕES DE PERCURSOS FORMATIVOS DE
LEITORES UNIVERSITÁRIOS
Quem é realmente o leitor?
INTRODUÇÃO
1 Região do sul da França. Aqui a expressão é tomada de Sá (1996), que a usa em relação ao
lugar de onde se originaram as discussões mais atuais na perspectiva da abordagem estrutural
sobre Representações Sociais.
41
seu alcance como instrumento. O que interessa nas representações é a sua
complexidade, pois os processos de constituição de uma representação nunca se dão
em ambientes nem em situações completamente idênticas, por isso seu produto será
sempre múltiplo (Sá, 1996).
Por seu turno, a História Cultural, que toma o conceito de representação da
tradição filosófica, parece não ter tantos problemas em propor sua definição, já que
não pretende que a representação delimite o seu campo de atuação – o que ocorre
com o campo das Representações Sociais, oriundo da Psicologia Social, que toma o
conceito como a base para os sistemas que constrói, ao mesmo tempo em que este
conceito nomeia a abordagem proposta por este grupo (Sá, 1996) – nem parece ver
problema em sua relação com o conceito de imagem, propondo-o como conjuntos
de imagens que dão significado ao presente (Chartier, 1990). O que não é
propriamente uma definição, aproximando-se muito mais de um conceito.
A constituição deste trabalho percorreu esta cena dupla sobre representação,
que por um lado, alinha-se com a História Cultural, com as devidas adaptações que
respondem ao objetivo proposto para este estudo, já que este campo trata do
conceito de Representação das Práticas Culturais de Leitura, representações estas
produzidas num tempo passado. O que nos propomos a estudar aqui está no
presente, com um grupo de pessoas que estão vivas e cujo pensamento não está
cristalizado num espaço-tempo passado, estando impresso por dinâmicas e conjunto
de fatores atuais e que foram colhidos in loco. A Psicologia Social, neste trabalho,
apareceu como uma tentativa de responder a esta contemporaneidade, pensar a
Representação não como um processo a ser restabelecido, mas a ser encontrado na
dinâmica das relações sociais que se imprimem atualmente. Mais abaixo aponto
como compreendemos esta conceituação e como ela deve ser entendida na leitura
deste artigo.
A representação enquanto instrumento conceitual filosófico2 remonta à
escolástica, momento em que este conceito emerge das discussões acerca do que
seria representar alguma coisa, ou seja, como produzir um elemento que contivesse a
semelhança de algo que existe ou que pode existir e, também, dos acontecimentos.
Tal entendimento suscitou três noções distintas de representação.
Na primeira noção, representar significa o meio pelo qual se conhece
determinada coisa ou fenômeno. Neste sentido, representar seria o mesmo que
produzir conhecimento; a segunda noção representaria o modo pelo qual se conhece
a imagem daquilo que se pretende conhecer; na terceira noção, a representação e o
objeto não se distinguem, o conhecimento que a representação produz é o mesmo
que o objeto. Foi partir de Descartes que este conceito tomou força dentro da
2 Aqui, neste ponto, não estamos tratando dos conceitos de idéia, imagem ou conceito que
aparecem de maneira recorrente como sinônimos de representação, mas guardam suas
especificidades e usos próprios, além de remontarem a períodos históricos mais antigos em
suas origens.
42
filosofia, com a noção de representação enquanto imagem da coisa, que foi
problematizado por Leibniz como a mônada3. Mas foi Kant que se ocupou mais
deste conceito, “considerando-o gênero de todos os atos ou manifestações
cognitivas, independentemente de sua natureza de quadro ou semelhança”
(Abbagnano, 2003, p. 853) e com essa roupagem o termo passou a ser amplamente
usado em filosofia.
De certa forma, e imerso num momento mais complexo da história da
racionalidade ocidental – que é o quadro que se imprime na contemporaneidade, o
da crise do paradigma científico, na qual problemas e conceituações tidos como
estabelecidos são retomados e problematizados à luz e necessidades dos tempos
hodiernos4 – a Psicologia Social questiona a compreensão kantiana de representação,
ora vendo-a como um conjunto de proposições e explicações originárias da vida
comum, ora uma forma de conhecimento elaborada e compartilhada socialmente e,
também, como o produto de uma atividade mental com a qual o indivíduo significa
o real tal como este se lhe apresenta (Sá, 1996).
Nas ciências humanas, de uma maneira geral, o que ocorre com este conceito
não é uma proposição exclusivista, de propriedade mesmo, que aponta um único
tipo de abordagem desta noção. O que acontece é muito mais próprio da dinâmica
que se imprime na contemporaneidade, que é a da multiplicidade de usos, onde cada
campo, diante da necessidade, lança mão de uma maneira de se operar uma
determinada conceituação.
É nessa maneira de operar o conceito que se observa a diferença do
entendimento proposto pela História Cultural, mais especificamente na
compreensão de Roger Chartier acerca do conceito de Representação em associação
com o conceito de Prática Cultural de Leitura, que, com as devidas adaptações, pois
este não é um artigo do campo da História, ajudaram-nos a compor este estudo. Dos
trabalhos de Roger Chartier emergem três perspectivas de abordagem das práticas de
leitura, que, em certa medida, caracterizam e delimitam o campo de estudos.
A primeira perspectiva, de natureza essencialmente histórica, propõe-se a
levantar as maneiras de ler que já não ocorrem no presente, construindo assim um
apanhado de atitudes ancestrais não mais em uso, que se prefiguraram em um
tempo, estabelecendo as marcas de leitura que diluíram no espaço-tempo da história
(Chartier, 2001). Chartier propõe que se busque nos textos elementos estáveis, que
evidenciem o modus operandi de quem os produziu. Para isso, deve-se procurar
investigar, com base nos vestígios deixados pelos autores, os protocolos de leitura,
divididos em dois tipos. O primeiro protocolo diz respeito às intenções de condução
3 Para Leibniz toda mônada é uma representação de um ponto de vista sobre o mundo, a
totalidade das mônadas forma o universo. Este ponto de vista é desprovido de partes, mas
contém infinitos graus de clareza e distinção.
4 Neste sentido ver Santos, 1998; Duarte JR, 1997; Derrida, Jacques. 2005; Deleuze, 2000;
43
da leitura pelo autor do texto. O segundo diz respeito à organização editorial e
tipográfica do livro, cujas opções determinarão o tipo de público que o texto poderá
atingir (Chartier, 2001).
A segunda perspectiva trata das apropriações que determinado leitor faz de
suas leituras. A noção de apropriação tem um lugar particular e elucidador dentro da
“sistemática” chartieriana, caracterizando-se de uma forma distinta do pensamento
de Foucault, que a situa numa alusão à educação como grande plano de apropriações
sociais do discurso, mecanismo que garantiria aos sujeitos travarem conhecimento
de toda forma de discursos (Foucault, 2002); e da hermenêutica, que compreende a
apropriação (Aneignung), como momento pelo qual, em contato com o texto,
compreendemos a nós mesmos, momento em que a obra cria para seus leitores um
vis-à-vis subjetivo (Ricoeur, 1977). Distinguindo-se destas noções Chartier afirma que:
44
Leitura. As representações, para ele, são percepções da realidade produzidas num
determinado espaço-tempo, refletindo os valores de um dado grupo social. São
esquemas intelectuais incorporados pelos sujeitos, que criam figuras para significar o
presente, permitindo a compreensão do outro e do mundo (Chartier, 1990). As
representações do mundo social assim construídas, embora aspirem a universalidade
de um diagnóstico fundado na razão, são sempre determinadas pelos interesses dos
grupos que as forjam. Daí, para cada caso, o necessário relacionamento dos
discursos proferidos com a posição de quem os utiliza (Chartier, 1990, p. 17).
Estas percepções não são de modo algum construções discursivas neutras,
estão imersas em contextos sociais, cujas dinâmicas próprias de poder determinam o
modo como se construirão as representações. Por isso esta investigação sobre as
representações supõe-nas como estando sempre colocadas num campo de
concorrências e de competições cujos desafios se enunciam em termos de poder e
dominação.
Dessa forma, tais representações aparecem como matrizes do discurso
constituído por um grupo, refletindo seus hábitos e sua “utensilhagem mental”,
incorporado sob a forma de categorias cognitivas. São as representações que
informam as diferentes formas de apreensão do real: os signos linguísticos, os
saberes mitológicos e os conceitos científicos e são estas formas simbólicas que
constituem o mundo como representação.
A cada civilização, a sua utensilhagem mental; mais ainda, a cada época de uma
mesma civilização, a cada progresso (quer das técnicas, quer das ciências) que a
caracteriza – uma utensilhagem renovada, um pouco mais desenvolvida para certas
utilizações, um pouco menos para outras. Uma utensilhagem mental que essa
civilização, que essa época, não está segura da capacidade de transmitir,
integralmente, às civilizações, às épocas que lhe vão suceder, podendo conhecer
mutilações, retrocessos, deformações importantes. Ou, pelo contrário, progressos,
enriquecimentos, novas complicações. A utensilhagem vale pela civilização que
soube forjá-la; vale pela época que a utiliza; não vale pela eternidade, nem pela
humanidade: nem sequer pelo curso restrito de uma evolução interna de uma
civilização (Febvre in Chartier, 1990, p.36).
O que significa dizer que não existem categorias universais de pensamento.
Que mesmo os conceitos utilizados em uma determinada época não guardam a
mesma significação que nos é própria no século XXI. Por exemplo, a dialética para
um pré-socrático não é a mesma coisa que para Hegel, que difere totalmente da
interpretação de um marxista em nosso século. Os conceitos, da mesma maneira que
aqueles que os produzem e ressignificam, têm seu próprio devir e devem ser
compreendidos levando em consideração a maneira de pensar de cada época.
Esta mudança no modo de operar conceitualmente está amparada pelo
desenvolvimento técnico e científico, nas reinvenções históricas das formas de
organização da prática humana e das construções discursivas produzidas em
45
determinado momento histórico. Dito de outra maneira, a forma de pensar de uma
época depende do diálogo entre o fazer humano e a produção intelectual de um
determinado tempo. Além disso, seria necessário romper com a idéia de que “existe
um progresso contínuo e necessário (definido como uma passagem do simples para
o mais complexo) na sucessão das diferentes utensilhagens mentais” (Chartier, 1990,
p.37).
Cabe ao pesquisador que faz uso dessa ferramenta conceitual procurar
estabelecer como um sujeito em determinado tempo histórico pode ser
compreendido pelos seus contemporâneos.
Há, também, neste estudo, o trabalho com a noção de percurso. O percurso
pensado como devir, o desenvolvimento do sujeito diante do tempo e do lugar a que
está referenciado. Mais especificamente, é compreendida como um processo de
significação utilizado pelo sujeito para compreender o mundo que o cerca, processo
este ao qual atribui sentidos e imprime valores.
Sintetizando, mais uma vez, nossas aproximações. Compreendemos como
representação do percurso de formação do leitor literário toda produção, seja em
nível simbólico, conceitual, propositivo, explicativo ou imagético, originada da vida
cotidiana, numa tentativa do sujeito de significar um tipo de realidade social
compartilhada, que, neste caso, é a da leitura literária.
Mais abaixo, a partir das narrativas dos sujeitos sobre suas trajetórias de
formação como leitores, discutiremos os sentidos e as possibilidades que tais
constructos carregam e permitem, na medida em que são potências, uma reflexão
sobre os modos como nos relacionamos com as práticas culturais de leitura.
SOBRE A PESQUISA
Para a apresentação dos trechos das narrativas desta pesquisa, escolheu-se não
nomear os sujeitos por seus verdadeiros nomes, informando suas narrativas a partir
de pseudônimos (Benedita, Justina Bojuda, Manon Lescault, Mavis, Penélope e
Raskolnikov). Os seis entrevistados, de idades variando entre 60 e 19 anos, não
foram objeto de seleção, muito menos podemos dizer que houve um critério muito
claro de escolha dos colaboradores. Foram estes e unicamente estes que se
dispuseram responder as entrevistas. Todos eles foram estudantes da Universidade
do Estado da Bahia, entre 2006 e 2012 e participaram de um mesmo projeto de
formação de leitores, o Rodapalavra5. Apesar de oriundos de um mesmo projeto de
46
formação de leitores, o Rodapalavra, os sujeitos, no entanto, não reduziram as
narrativas de suas trajetórias constitutivas como leitores literários ao universo deste
grupo, problematizaram seus devires como leitores, considerando os fatores outras
possibilidades de trânsito e formação, inscrevendo a leitura como experiência
(Larrosa, 2015), ou silenciando-se sobre eles, além de outros, muito particulares, que
não responderiam ao objetivo deste estudo.
Estabelecemos um questionamento final, comum a todas as entrevistas, que
funcionou como síntese das questões e problemas levantados pelos sujeitos em suas
narrativas. O último desses questionamentos dizia sobre a forma como esses
sujeitos, diante das considerações construídas acerca de suas trajetórias, acreditavam
que tinham se constituído como leitores literários. As respostas a essa proposição
tentaram reconstruir toda uma vida de contato com a leitura, apresentando
conjecturas autobiográficas dos leitores em questão. Para que estas formas de narrar
não se reduzissem a fragmentos pouco representativos, todos as repostas aparecem
na íntegra, sem recortes, exceto quando estes fazem parte das narrativas.
projeto Rodapalavra já foi objeto de estudo de Cordeiro (2005) e Souza (2008) e Cordeiro,
Gonçalves e Magalhães (2010).
6 A Escola Parque é um projeto de Anísio Teixeira, educador e teórico da educação
brasileiro, colaborador de John Dewey que, nos anos de 1940, quando era Secretário de
Educação do Estado da Bahia (Brasil) concebeu uma escola que atuasse como centros de
formação popular ofertando, além da educação regular, formação em arte, prática esportiva,
formação profissional e alimentação, funcionando em turno integral (o termo educação
47
“Eu acho que foi justamente pela questão da imaginação, da
necessidade de ter um momento de prazer, de aproveitar o que não
parecia ser um ócio, mas que para mim acabava por ser um ócio.
Teve esses momentos na escola Parque na minha iniciação como
estudante e como leitora, porque foi lá que eu descobri o mundo dos
livros, das palavras, da poesia, da imaginação, da criatividade. Então,
é nesse momento em que eu descubro o colorido, as cores e as
texturas das palavras” (Benedita).
Ela utiliza metáforas para representar aquilo que vivenciou de maneira muito
intensa no ambiente escolar: a arte como experiência – proposto pelos
escolanovistas7 –, que não aparecia para o aluno como um dado, ou um artifício
didático que proporcionasse um melhor aprendizado de uma determinada matéria. A
arte, incluída a literatura, era um espaço a ser vivido, uma experiência irredutível às
outras pelas quais passavam os alunos no ambiente escolar.
Na experiência artística, vivemos algo que diz respeito a nós mesmos, a
sociedade e aos acontecimentos dos quais somos protagonistas, coadjuvantes,
figurantes ou espectadores. A arte nos coloca em várias posições, em contato com
outros pontos de vista, nos desloca geograficamente, provocando novas formas de
perceber o mundo, de ver o outro, quando experimentamos o que é fazer e ter
experiência no mundo. A experiência estética proporciona um espaço de jogo frente
ao vivido (Innerarity, 2002), onde o sujeito brinca com a potencialidade da
existência.
Experimentar a literatura despida do processo didático do ensino de língua
materna, marcou sua experiência com a leitura literária, a ponto de servir como
marco para sua constituição como leitora. Viver a arte, no sentido proposto pelos
discípulos de Anísio Teixeira, é aprender algo sobre nós mesmo e o sobre o universo
que nos cerca. Para ela isso inseria algo que estava para além do aprendizado, era o
refúgio, um momento de prazer, em que cessavam os rigores da educação cristã de
seu pai.
Para Benedita, a sua constituição como leitora literária deu-se no espaço
escolar, e ela não leva em consideração outros fatores que aparecem em sua
entrevista: a proibição da leitura literária por parte de seu pai (a proibição como fator
de sedução para o jovem), as leituras bíblicas (numa compreensão do livro sagrado
integral, no Brasil, significa, em termos práticos, que a criança entra na escola no início da
manhã e fica na escola até o turno da tarde – entre as 07h a.m e as 5 p.m).
7
Escola Nova é um dos nomes dados a um movimento de renovação do ensino que foi
especialmente forte na Europa, na América e no Brasil, na primeira metade do século XX,
também conhecido como Escola Progressista ou Escola Ativa. O grande nome internacional
do movimento foi o filósofo pragmático estado-unidense John Dewey.
48
cristão como objeto literário) ou os seus hábitos de consumo livreiro (ela afirma ter
uma relação muito íntima com os espaços de consumo do livro. Sempre que tem um
problema ou alguma demanda, corre às livrarias), como dados a serem considerados
em sua história como leitora.
Para ela, talvez, devido a sua formação em Pedagogia e sua atuação como
professora, o constituir-se leitor, sobretudo, de literatura, estaria ligado ao universo
da escola, mesmo, que fora de sala de aula, o que a faz desconsiderar outros
trânsitos, outros espaços e vivências de leitura literária.
Já Penélope, mesmo não se considerando uma leitora literária, por não atender
a exigências que ela acredita serem necessárias para a obtenção desse “status”,
constrói uma atenta narrativa, rememorando espaços, lugares, personagens que
contribuíram em seu processo de constituição.
“Isso... eu... pela resposta que eu dei de que o leitor é aquele que lê as
coisas do ambiente, eu não sei dar uma resposta pra isso, talvez por
ser introspectiva e olhar para o mundo, para o meu ambiente, eu
acho que isto estimula você ser mais investigador, ter um olhar mais
clínico das coisas [...] Mas, meu percurso como leitora parte primeiro
da... eu sempre fui uma boa filha, o que me “tendenciou” a ser uma
boa aluna, em querer sempre corresponder às expectativas de meus
pais. Eu sempre tive muito claro que era muito importante estudar,
não estudar por obrigação ou para ter boa notas nem nada. Sempre,
meu pai e a minha mãe alimentaram isso em mim, “você tem de
estudar pra ser alguém na vida e ter uma condição melhor”, partiu
disso, d’eu tanto querer ser boa aluna e gostar de estudar surgiu a
leitura, a vontade de querer ler, sempre fui muito boa no português,
talvez por ser uma leitora do português. Meus livros viam juntos,
gramática e literatura, eram um livro só e a professora articulava
literatura com a aula de gramática, mas eu achava que era tudo muito
junto, não sei se era porque os livros que eles escolhiam tinham este
perfil. Tinham texto de página. Você pode dizer que texto de livrinho
de escola é muito pequeno, mas este tinha textos enormes e todo
mundo se queixava pra ler, mas eu era a primeira a ler em voz alta.
Eu acho que foi esta fome mesmo de estudar, de estudar, por eu ser
ótima em português e gostar de português, principalmente, mas eu
acho que foi a partir daí, comecei ler a partir dos próprios estudos.
Hoje é que eu já tenho uma outra visão de me constituir em um
outro tipo de leitor, por saber que isto vai acrescentar à minha vida.
Não uma coisa do tipo só leio por causa disso, eu sei que isso tem
uma importância X. A constituição se deu ao natural, na vida escolar
e acadêmica” (Penélope).
49
Daí se depreende que a leitora considera o processo de ensino-aprendizagem
da disciplina Português determinante para a sua assunção como leitora num sentido
mais amplo, como espaço onde se percebe lendo, diferenciando-se dos colegas nesta
prática. Lia, o que se oferecia de literatura nos livros didáticos: alguns fragmentos de
romances, pequenos contos, poemas ou textos encomendados pelas editoras.
Porém, mesmo exercitando este tipo de leitura, sua visão do leitor literário está longe
de se reduzir a este universo dos fragmentos didáticos.
Para ela, o leitor literário é uma figura que não apenas lê o texto, mas tem
uma vivência no ambiente literário, alguém que vê necessidade em conhecer os
pormenores da vida, obra, contexto cultural e histórico dos autores. Por não se
interessar por estes detalhes, ou melhor, por ter um interesse recente por estes
dispositivos que compõem o livro, ela não se vê como uma leitora de literatura, uma
categoria que implica um modelo de leitor ideal, um erudito, cujo capital cultural ela
ainda não logrou alcançar (Cordeiro, 2006).
O paradoxo de sua resposta aponta, justamente, o conflito entre a
autoimagem como não-leitora e o processo iniciado após sua entrada no grupo de
formação de leitores literários, onde os aspectos de sua constituição como leitora
foram levados em conta, sem a preocupação com o tipo de leitura que faz, quando
teve de historiar seus hábitos de leitura para uma atividade do grupo8, nesta
produção, e no contato com outras trajetórias leitoras, muito provavelmente, suas
preconcepções foram portas em xeque. O preconceito que parecia desconsiderar
todo o contato com livros e literatura em sua vida – lembramos que ela tem uma
biblioteca em casa e sempre teve contato com livros desde a mais tenra infância –
começou a ser questionado, tendo em vista uma concepção de leitor mais ampla, que
contemple outras formas de ler, além das canonizadas pela academia.
Neste mesmo sentido, desqualificando-se como leitora literária, aparece
Justina Bojuda, que se apresenta como uma leitora de hábitos poucos frequentes,
apesar de se confessar uma leitora de literatura infantil.
“Não vou dizer que eu estou lendo com muita frequência, até porque
estou numa confusão de final de curso e tal, então, continuo me
qualificando como uma leitora não tão frequente. Agora se você me
perguntar no que diz respeito a literatura infantil, focar nesta área da
literatura infantil, eu vou dizer que sou muito freqüente sim, eu sou
fominha mesmo, eu leio, eu procuro, eu pesquiso, eu gosto, eu
compro, mas as grandes obras, os grandes clássicos eu ainda não me
considero uma leitora literária ainda neste sentido” (Justina Bojuda).
50
Tal atitude mostra um certo constrangimento, ser leitor literário é uma
condição de quem lê as obras canônicas, acredita. O pronunciamento do hábito de
leitura de livros infantis aparece com ressalvas e, quando perguntada sobre se o
status de leitor literário só é devido aos leitores de grandes obras, ela diz que não,
que basta ler literatura para sê-lo, mas, ao tornar a falar de si, e mesmo
desenvolvendo leituras e tendo hábitos de consumo de um tipo de literatura, não se
vê como uma leitora literária.
A literatura dita infantil não é um tipo de leitura aceito pela inteligentzia, os
intelectuais, eruditos e/ou acadêmicos, cujos gostos determinam o que deve ser tido
e lido como literatura, ou ganhar o carimbo de clássico. Justina Bojuda divide-se
entre os seus hábitos como leitora e o receio da não-aceitação expresso na frase:
“não sei se eu estou respondendo ou estou fazendo besteira” (Justina Bojuda, divide-
se, também, -tomando emprestado o trabalho de Abreu (2006) com as listas dos dez
melhores livros - entre o gosto pessoal e o gosto pronunciável, que determina aquilo
que deve ser lido e comentado, e, sobretudo, as leituras que não devem ser feitas,
mas que, no entanto, se o forem, não devem ser declaradas.
Mesmo sendo uma leitora voraz de literatura infantil, tendo lido muitos –
numa qualificação expressa por ela – textos teatrais no período em que fez parte de
uma companhia, Justina Bojuda não se vê como uma leitora plena, cujo processo de
constituição como leitora literária fosse falho por não atender à imagem senso
comum do leitor como um sujeito que pratica leituras inacessíveis ao demais
mortais.
De uma forma diferente se vê Mavis, para quem a condição de leitor, seja este de
literatura ou de outros tipos de texto, é um estado de desenvolvimento do sujeito
que busca o conhecimento.
51
Ela é a mais jovem do grupo de entrevistados, apenas dezenove anos, e
ressalta esta condição, que, para além dos conflitos e incertezas que marcam o início
da vida adulta, é um estado de descobertas, onde tudo pode despertar uma
inquietação, um momento onde não há certeza, exceto, talvez, a da própria
contradição do ser jovem, que tenta compreender e se adaptar ao mundo em que
vive. É assim que ela pensa que se forma um leitor literário, um sujeito que quer
saber,
52
turma, bem como, pessoas que faziam parte de diversos grupos,
inclusive o RODAPALAVRA, o grupo do movimento estudantil [...]
A primeira coisa que eu acho, foi quando eu entrei na universidade.
Isto foi antes de entrar no RODAPALAVRA, ter contato com
pessoas que tinham uma cultura maior que a minha, um
conhecimento maior sobre a literatura, uma vivência maior nesse
sentido, isso abriu os meus olhos em relação as possibilidades,
sempre a questão toda é estar em momento e situações que lhe
apontem possibilidades. E, credito uma outra parte, aí já no sentido
da literatura mais especificamente, ao RODAPALAVRA. Isto vem
assim, ao mesmo tempo que é um ponto... é um ponto de
continuação, ele marca, mas não define, ele não marca o início da
coisa porque tem um movimento que o precede, mas esta
participação no RODAPALAVRA trouxe talvez conhecimento
sobre... não tanto sobre a literatura, mas talvez sobre os leitores,
sobre o que é ler, sobre o prazer. A questão toda talvez seja essa, de
ver como certas pessoas, particularmente, algumas pessoas dentro do
grupo tinham um prazer grande de ler e demonstravam isso, então,
dentro do RODAPALAVRA, esta questão do prazer ficou mais
claro, talvez antes tivesse um interesse, um prazer de ordem mais
intelectual, do conhecer as coisas, do descobrir e, no
RODAPALAVRA, eu descobri a coisa do prazer em si, diria lúdica,
do ler por ler, sem compromisso” (Raskolnikov).
53
apontando toda uma sorte de referências, onde se incluem livros, jornais, revistas e
gibis, numa tentativa de significar sua trajetória como leitora literária.
54
procurar os autores, a gente leu muita coisa infantil e coisas que eram
tão interessantes” (Manon Lescault).
O diálogo com o impresso é tão marcante que define todas os seus espaços de
vivência. Ela se vê como leitora literária no contato com o objeto literário, todos os
sujeitos e situações que assomam de sua narrativa, aparecem associados a um
elemento de cultura literária, o que mostra também a visão mais ampla que a leitora
têm do que é literatura, já que sob o conceito de leitura literária, é contemplado por
ela desde Turma da Mônica e livros de literatura infantil, passando por autores de
Best-sellers como Paulo Coelho, até poetas e prosadores de grande penetração no
universo erudito brasileiro, como Vinícius de Moraes e Gabriel Gárcia Márquez.
Tal visão mostra a consciência de sua trajetória como leitora literária,
principalmente, a percepção de que tal condição se produziu no diálogo com o
universo literário, e que não adianta ter incentivos para leitura sem o contato com os
objetos impressos, e, agora, contemporaneamente, também, com as formas de
leitura digital. Um leitor se produz socialmente, referenciando-se em construções de
uma cultura. Não existe um leitor sem objeto de leitura, seja este livro, jornal, página
da internet, rede social ou mesmo uma outra pessoa que lhe conte uma história.
CONCLUSÕES
55
Leituras é, também, um momento de crítica, resultando em reelaborações acerca das
situações do cotidiano e dos objetos estéticos, à luz da ficção.
Os colaboradores desta pesquisa apontaram como a atividade dos Círculos de
Leitura9 resultou ou está operando alguma mudança nas concepções que o sujeito
tinha construído acerca do que é ser leitor literário, até o momento de seu ingresso
no Rodapalavra, onde, seja pelo contato com outros leitores, ou pelo próprio ato de
produzir leituras, fomenta-se o hábito de discutir o que se lê, onde se afirma a
diversidade de vozes, onde um não-leitor se descobre leitor, e àquele que se crê leitor
voraz percebe-se como mais um.
Neste ponto, já podemos afirmar que numa atividade como a desenvolvida
nos Círculos de Leitura não reduz as experiências leitoras nem tem o papel de
uniformizar o discurso dos indivíduos que por lá passam, mas o de ressaltar as
diferenças e acolher as diferentes trajetórias em um espaço de discussão, onde mais
importante do que ler é viver a literatura.
Na experiência de nossos respondentes há o entrecruzamento dessas
trajetórias, onde se reafirmam suas maneiras de lidar com o mundo e com a
literatura. A complexidade de tais narrativas nos mostram como as leituras podem se
dar de várias formas, tantas, quantos sujeitos existirem. Agora, essas histórias de
leitura existem coletivamente, como experiências irredutíveis umas às outras, que se
interpenetram no espaço deste texto.
REFERÊNCIAS
9
Sobre os significados dos Círculos de Leitura, bem como sobre sua natureza e
especificidade, ver Yunes (1999), Souza (2012; 2014)
56
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Yunes, E. (1999). Círculos de Leitura: teorizando a prática. In: Leitura: teoria &
prática, nº. 33. Porto Alegre: Mercado Aberto; Campinas: ALB.
AFFILIATIONS
58
ANTONIO CORONADO-HIJÓN
CRISTINA GINEL CAMPOS
4
PROFILES OF ADULT STUDENTS IN BASIC VOCATIONAL
TRAINING IN THE PROVINCE OF SEVILLE (SPAIN):
SELF-EXPECTATIONS OF ACHIEVEMENT AND GENDER
INTRODUCTION
59
75% of the population; regarding education, that at least 40% of the people of 30-34
years of age will have tertiary level studies, and with regard to the fight against
poverty and social exclusion, will reduce at least 20 million people who are
experiencing or are at risk of poverty and social exclusion in the EU.
Referring to social exclusion, gender discrimination in the labor and social
field, they have led the adult female population, a decrease of resources and greater
difficulty in accessing the labor market, in a significant number of women. It’s
because of that, the women in the Spanish Administration are considered "collective
at risk and/or social exclusion", being preferred collective to attend specific training
programs such as the "Employment Workshop" program (EW).
The EW program developed by Decree 282/1999, on February 22, emerges
as one of the active employment policy measures to improve the employability and
employability of the unemployed under the National Action Plan for Employment
the Kingdom of Spain (1999) which was developed under the guidelines for creating
jobs and increasing the quality marked in 1997 by the Heads of State and
Government at the European Summit in Luxembourg.
These training projects EW combine actions of training and employment
which led the group of unemployed twenty-five or more years, especially those
groups with special difficulties in relation to new sources of employment in general
and social interest and are promoted by public entities or private nonprofit entities.
In them the learning and the skills alternate with productive work in public activities,
social or craft work interest which enables the insertion through the
professionalization and acquisition experience. In addition specific compensatory
education programs for students who have not achieved the objectives of
compulsory secondary education, in order to help them overcome the qualification
as evidence of compulsory secondary education and / or access to training courses
provide grade intermediate and advanced.
Employment Workshops (EW) have duration of minimum six months and
maximum one year, which are divided into six-month periods. For projects with
duration of less than one year the anterior sponsor entities request before the end of
the initial period may be extended up to one year duration. Have a modular
organization of training and regardless of the professional qualification to which it is
intended the workshop is mandatory teaching of the following modules:
- Module computer literacy, which will last at least 30 hours unless the content
of the project requires a shorter duration.
- Module prevention of occupational hazards, which will last 30 or 50 hours,
- Module environmental awareness, which will last 10 hours.
- Module for promoting entrepreneurial activity of 10 hours duration.
- Module gender equality of 10 hours duration.
- Module equality for disadvantaged groups of 10 hours duration.
60
Once the EW is finished, the students with viable projects to become self-
employed workers will be a priority group in relation to the aid to strengthen the
autonomous or self-work, sets the Administration.
Throughout the training process, students will receive guidance and
counseling for job search, career and professional information and business training
to improve employability.
In addition, once it’s finished, for six months, the sponsor entity of
Employment Workshop project will be responsible for providing technical
assistance to the student worker, aiming at finding employment for others and also
for entrepreneurship and for self-employment.
Meta-analytic studies have pointed out how personality variables may play an
important role in the processes involving professional entrepreneurship and its
subsequent success (Zhao, Seibert and Lumpkin, 2010). In relation to empowerment
for entrepreneurship, relevant research to identify personal characteristics related to
the development of entrepreneurial skills, showed that among these attributes, are
the need for achievement and locus of control (Cromie, 2000), the efficacy
entrepreneurial the variable that showed greater predictive power (Salazar-Carvajal
Herrera-Sánchez, Wheel-Mendez, and Leon-Rubio, 2014).
In the theories of Social Learning of Bandura (1986), it’s distinguished
between: expectations of achievement, when it refers to an estimate of the person
about their ability to perform a required behavior to produce a result and involving a
judgment on their own ability to achieve a certain level of performance; and
secondly, action-outcome expectations, based on the conviction that a person to
successfully perform the necessary activities to get a result, taking into account the
consequences that occur quite possible that implementation.
Self-efficacy as defined by Bandura (1989), is the belief that one is able to
organize and execute courses of action required of achievement and management of
specific situations or tasks. Bandura (1997) states that self-efficacy is constructed
judgments about their own abilities. The hypothesis Bandura (1986) is that self-
efficacy beliefs are acquired and modified through four pathways or sources. First,
there are success stories, which are own experiences. Replays on specific tasks
successfully increase self-efficacy, moreover repeated experiences of failure
decreases self-efficacy. Second vicarious experiences, which are observations of the
achievements of others, increase the beliefs of the observer. The third source of self-
efficacy is the verbal persuasion or social persuasion, these positive evaluations and
vocal criticism and encouragement, which increase self-efficacy. The fourth and final
sources of self-efficacy are the somatic and emotional states, defined as the way
people interpret the emotional and somatic states. Positive emotions increase people
perceived self-efficacy and decrease the negative emotions.
Causal attributions refer primarily to three dimensions (Weiner, 1986).
61
The first one is the internal-external or locus of control dimension. The term
locus of control comes from Rotter (1975) and emphasizes the subject stands where
the causes of a particular outcome. Thus, while ability and effort are internal factors,
the difficulty of the activity and luck or chance is considered external factors.
The second dimension is described by Weiner the stability – instability. It
refers to the perception that the subject has, that the causes of performance is more
or less unchanged or constant over time. This dimension is often correlated with
expectations of success.
The third dimension refers to the perception that a cause can be controllable
or uncontrollable. The degree of control that the student is assigned to a task is
related to the amount of effort and perseverance that he or she spends on the
learning activity.
Beliefs about oneself, about the personal productions and achievements, greatly
influence the feelings of the learner, on the goals, the perseverance and ultimately,
the learning outcomes (Coronado-Hijón, 2004).
In relation to those self-expectations, differences have been found in recent
findings with regard to the self-expectations of achievement and gender (Angulo and
Conde, 2015). These differences translate into gender inequalities that may have a
significant negative impact on the professional development of women (Saletti-
Cuesta, Delgado Ortiz-Gómez & López-Fernández, 2013).
METHODOLOGY
SUBJECTS
The total number of participants is 115 unemployed adults (26 men and 89 women),
students of the Employment Workshops in the province of Seville (Spain). The
sample consists of clusters of 20 people Workshop A "Empléate" belonging to the
Sierra Norte geographical area; 30 people, workshop B of the geographical area set
Environment Doñana, 19 subjects in the "Dynamic Workshop" (workshop C)
students and 12 people Workshop D "Rice Island"; Area Bajo Guadalquivir two
workshops job, "Ayday" (workshop E) and "To the table" workshop F, with 22
people each and Aljarafe also represented by 20 students from the workshop G
surveyed, "Sustainable Gines".
The ages of the people who form the sample pool present an average age of
38'15 years old and a rate of 8.605 (Table 1) deviations.
62
INSTRUMENTS
63
60. La mala suerte que tengo para muchas cosas ha hecho con frecuencia que no
consiguiese unas calificaciones aceptables.
67. La casualidad ha sido la principal causa de que a veces haya tenido
puntuaciones bajas.
32. Algunas veces, cuando mis puntuaciones son bajas, pienso que lo único que
ocurre es que no he tenido suerte.
54. La suerte es, con frecuencia, el principal factor responsable de mi éxito en los
estudios.
48. Es posible que algunas de mis notas se deban a la mala suerte, a haberme
examinado de lo que no debía cuando no debía.
24. Creo que algunas de mis buenas notas dependen, en buena medida, de
factores casuales tales como que me hayan caído en un examen precisamente las
preguntas que me sabía.
16. Me parece que algunas de mis notas más bajas se han debido parcialmente a
meteduras de pata casuales.
40. Pienso que algunas veces debo considerarme afortunado por haber sacado
buenas notas.
8. Algunas veces mi éxito en los exámenes depende de haber tenido un poco de
suerte.
64
9. En mi caso, sacar buenas notas es siempre fruto directo de mi propio
esfuerzo.
25. Siempre que obtengo buenas notas es porque he estudiado con intensidad.
52. Normalmente, cuando he trabajado de firme he conseguido tener éxito en los
estudios.
For the data collection of the subjects, collaboration from the offices of
reference of the Andalusian Employment Service of each employment workshop
(EW) were requested, from there they made contact with the various workshops and
were the ones who provided it could make the first contact via e-mail and telephone
with the Directors / EW corresponding ace.
Due to the characteristics in terms of infrastructure, the specifics of the
actual work and training days of each EW was agreed with each director about an
appropriate time to pass the data collection instruments. These instruments were
applied collectively, with a maximum duration for completion of 60 minutes.
Previously the subjects of the study were asked for the informed consent.
The results were processed with statistical software SPSS 22.
RESULTS
Sex: shown in Table 2 of the 115 people in the sample pool, 26 are men and 89 are
women.
65
Table 2. Distribution of frequencies for the gender variable
Figure 1 shows the percentages for each gender are specified, women being
77% of the sample pool and men being 23.
Man Woman
22,6
77,4
66
Table 4. Professional contingency preference and gender
Gender Total
Male Female
100
80
60
40 26,9 22,5
20
0
Man Woman
Work Self-empoyment
Study level reached (Table 6) 38.5% of men have primary education, 26.9%
secondary school education, 15.5% and 19.3% baccalaureate higher vocational
training. While women have 25.9% with primary education, 33.8% secondary school
education, 14.6% high school, 8.9% intermediate vocational training, the training
courses 14.6% degree and 2% college.
67
Table 6. Contingency table level and gender studies
Man Woman
Cases % Cases %
College 0 0 2 2,2
Atención a la 1 5 19 95 20 100
infancia
Animación 4 40 6 60 10 100
68
sociocultural
Cocina 7 70 3 30 10 100
Camarero 3 25 9 75 12 100
Atención 3 30 7 70 10 100
sociosanitaria
Atención 1 10 9 90 10 100
socioeducativa a
menores
Ayuda a 2 20 8 80 10 100
domicilio
Area of
Standard
academic N Minimum Maximum Mean Median Mode
deviation
achivement
69
E2. 26 1,00 3,11 1,9231 ,42370 2,00 2,11ª
Atribución
del éxito y
fracaso a
causas
aleatorias.
N valid 26
70
Table 8. Descriptive analysis of the first-order factors Area of academic achievement
EMA-II sample of women
Area of
Standard
academic N Minimum Maximum Mean Median Mode
deviation
achivement
E1. 89 1,00 4,33 2,0581 ,72304 2,00 2,00a
Atribución
del fracaso a
personas
con poder
E2. 89 1,00 3,67 2,0674 ,50852 2,00 2,11
Atribución
del éxito y
fracaso a
causas
aleatorias.
E3. 89 1,00 3,67 2,1030 ,55420 2,00 2,00
Atribución
del éxito a
causas
internas.
E4. 89 1,00 5,00 2,9513 ,97124 3,33 3,00
Atribución
del fracaso a
la falta de
esfuerzo
E5. 89 2,00 5,00 3,8951 ,92877 3,33 3,00a
Atribución
del éxito al
esfuerzo.
E6. 89 1,00 4,33 1,8801 ,70576 2,00 2,00
Atribución
del fracaso a
la falta de
habilidad.
E7. 89 1,33 5,00 3,1348 ,78128 3,00 2,67a
Atribución
del éxito a la
habilidad.
N valid 89
71
CONCLUSIONS AND PROSPECTS
The basic vocational training for the group of unemployed adults, conducted by the
Employment Workshop (EW) programs in the province of Seville (Spain), is
performed mostly by women: 77% versus 23% of men.
The group of women having an array of further education is 40%, while in
the group of men is 34.8%, so a higher percentage of unemployment further
education of women in the sample shown.
The training areas shown with the highest rates of female participation are
those traditionally associated with the role of women, such as domestic assistance,
child care, rehabilitative care to the children and the home support. Only in the
training specialty kitchen we find a greater number of males than females, showing
an important professional occupational gender bias. We find, in line with other
studies, that the occupations most "feminized" have a number of features that are
fairly consistent with the stereotypes that exist in society against women, such as his
"delicacy and sensitivity” and its "ability to engage in caregiving "(Iglesias &
Llorente, 2010).
Regarding the perspective of entrepreneurship into the future, the percentage
of students with an interest in self-employment is much higher in men than in
women. These data are consistent with those obtained in other studies in larger
samples and nationally in Spain, as offered by the Report "Global Entrepreneurship
Monitor (GEM) Spain 2014". This report, which is made from data obtained
through the methodology for survey of more than 25,000 population subjects,
conducted by 15 research teams from across the country, the main characteristics of
entrepreneurial dynamics in Spain.
With regard to the attributional profile of the students and adult learners to
the EW, we find that there are similarities and differences in the perception of
achievement while not as significant as in other studies if stand a greater tendency
for women attributing failure to people with power and success and failure to
random causes.
We believe that it’s important to progress in the future research focused on
differences in expectations between men and women regarding professional
development (Cortés, Olivencia & Mesa, 2012) that could help develop and improve
programs Basic Training and Orientation entrepreneurship from interventions to
improve them (Bandura, 2006). In this direction studies such as Movahedi &
Yaghoubi-Farani (2012) on skills for entrepreneurship from a gender perspective,
encourage the inclusion of training for entrepreneurship in the curricula within the
same training programs.
The proposed research study presents the limitations of having a sample
limited to the province of Seville (Spain) subjects, although the coincidence with
72
other studies with larger populations will provide a degree of matching relevant
validity.
Studies and research about the expectations and perceptions are in a state of
incipient creation and all results and findings indicate the importance of expectations
towards empowerment and improving the quality of teaching-learning process.
Finally we quote Bandura (1997), regarding "the most important goal of
formal education should be to provide students with intellectual tools, efficacy
beliefs and intrinsic interest needed to educate yourself on a variety of occupations
throughout his life. "And in this direction it suggests that students who develop a
strong sense of self-efficacy are well trained to form themselves when they have to
depend on their own initiative.
The field of research initiated by theorists efficacy is promising and proven
applicable to the practice of orientation and psych pedagogical intervention.
BIBLIOGRAPHIC REFERENCES
73
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profesional de la mujer universitaria. Revista de Educación, 355, 187-212.
Garrido, L. (2012). Para un diagnóstico sobre la formación y el empleo de los
jóvenes. Cuadernos, 2, (Empleo Juvenil, Círculo Cívico de Opinión).
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (2015). Informe GEM España 2014. Santander:
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Jiménez, Leiva y Castilla, (2012. Evaluación de propuestas innovadoras que integran
la orientación hacia el emprendimiento en la formación universitaria:
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Congreso virtual Internacional sobre Innovación Pedagógica y Praxis Educaiva. Innovagogía
2012. Libro de actas 21, 22 y 23 de noviembre de 2012.
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ficheros/garantiajuvenil/documentos/EEEJ_Documento.pdf
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for the development of rural women's entrepreneurship. International Journal of
Entrepreneurship and Small Business. 15 (4), 469-487.
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M. (2014). El efecto de la conservación de recursos sobre la intención
emprendedora en el contexto de crisis económica: el rol moderador de la
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Saletti-Cuesta, L., Delgado, A., Ortiz-Gómez, T., & López-Fernández, L. A. (2013).
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74
AFFILIATIONS
75
ROSA MALENA CARVALHO
5
EDUCACIÓN FÍSICA EN EL DIÁLOGO Y LA FORMACIÓN
CON LA EDUCACIÓN DE JÓVENES Y DE ADULTOS
10 (...) El derecho a pesar de lo profano / del mundo ser siempre más humano / Demasiada
perfección / Me agita los instintos / Quien se cree muy perfecto / Probablemente
encontró una manera insulsa / Por no ser de carne y hueso / Por no ser de carne y hueso
/ (fragmento de la canción Carne y Hueso, de Zélia Duncan) [nuestra traducción]
76
actividades propuestas ... Cuando consideramos la anatomía y la fisiología con las
relaciones de las condiciones sociales e históricas hablamos de corporeidad, que va
11 “(...) más allá de las similitudes físicas o diferencias, [por] un conjunto de significados que
cada empresa escribe en los cuerpos de los miembros a través del tiempo, lo que significa
que ellos definen lo que el cuerpo de varias maneras” [nuestra traducción]
12 “(...) la actual organización global de la economía capitalista se basa, entre otras cosas, en la
77
nos acercamos a los marcados por la heterogeneidad, conflictos, contradicciones,
rupturas – que contienen posibilidades de invenciones y cambios. Gallo (2003), al
invitar a pensar en la “educación de la diferencia” por la diversidad y no por la
unidad, también sugiere pensar los que están ante nosotros, por los encuentros. Pero
para entender a los estudiantes por lo que dicen, y las formas en que el diálogo con
las historias y las condiciones que forman - no por lo que se les dice - es una tarea
compleja. Además de entender las prácticas pedagógicas como constituyentes de
espacios potenciales para reuniones alegres, movilizadoras e incentivadoras de los
adultos a aprendizajes diferentes - especialmente los jóvenes y adultos que no
forman parte de los grupos hegemónicos, lo que les permite desafiar las
desigualdades de la vida en sociedad, el tema central de este evento académico
organizado por ESREA.
Al considerar esta necesidad en el contexto heterogéneo y complejo de la
educación de jóvenes y adultos (EJA), recorremos el camino de entender cuerpo y
educación como multiplicidad, diferencia, particularidad - y no como universal. Sin
olvidar que nuestra capacidad singularización requiere mirar con aproximación y
extrañamiento a la realidad que nos forma y que nosotros formamos, pues
78
que afectan también las formas y significados atribuidos al cuerpo y a las prácticas
corporales. Este entendimiento ha permitido la educación física contextualizar lo que
se realiza en los entornos escolares - dirección llamada, en Brasil, de la cultura del
cuerpo (Soares et al, 1992).
¿Cuál educación física está presente en la formación de los jóvenes y adultos
que se inician y reinician su proceso de escolarización? ¿Cómo estos jóvenes y
adultos están presentes en las escuelas? La Constitución de Brasil (Brasil, 1988), en el
artículo 205, establece que la educación “es un derecho de todos y deber del Estado
y de la familia (...)”, y en el artículo 208, que ‘la educación primaria es obligatoria y
gratuita, con su oferta garantizada para todos los que no tienen acceso a la edad
adecuada”. Pero, ¿qué significa la garantía del derecho a la educación de los jóvenes,
adultos o ancianos, considerarlo que es una obligación impuesta por la ley, porque
“el tiempo de aprendizaje ha pasado”?
Cuándo ha diálogo con las características específicas de la Educación de
Jóvenes y Adultos (EJA), consideramos que es esencial escuchar las historias de vida,
el conocimiento de los que entran en las escuelas (Freire, 1971) y, también, las
funciones identificadas por el poder del gobierno - ayudarnos para entender cómo
hoy la escuela está organizada para recibir y atender al público adulto. En Brasil,
después de un largo período de la descalificación y la opresión de la población
económicamente desfavorecidos, tenemos un 9% de la población compuesta, en el
siglo 21, de analfabetos absolutos - lo que significa casi 20 millones de personas, en
un universo de 205 millones de habitantes (IBGE, 2015). Al mismo tiempo, la lucha
de los docentes para que esta población sea asistida de manera cualificada - siendo
esa lucha señalada por las Directrices Curriculares Nacionales para la EJA (Brasil,
2000) como el objetivo principal, superando el compensatoria la EJA e invitando a
pensar en la educación continua y en la creación de una sociedad solidaria y
heterogéneo. Así,
14 “(…) los términos “jóvenes” y “adultos” indican que en todas las edades y en todas las
épocas de la vida, es posible formar, desarrollar y constituir conocimientos, habilidades,
competencias y valores que trascienden los espacios formales de la educación y conducir a
la autorrealización y el reconocimiento del otro como sujeto” [nuestra traducción]
79
iniciación a la docencia, los profesores recién titulados pueden trabajar con estas
clases, con la inserción sin “adaptación” o un acompañamiento inicial. Lo que
significa que estos profesores, al realizaren actividades en esta modalidad de la
educación, ponen en acción lo que esté arraigada en sus formaciones. Pero, ¿lo que
es ejercido, na formación, que le permite desarrollar la práctica pedagógica en
beneficio de este estudiante y el objeto de estudio que los unen?
Es reciente la comprensión de la educación de adultos como una forma de la
educación básica - que significa la promoción del acceso de todos los estudiantes al
conocimiento producido socialmente, que incluye el universo de las prácticas
corporales. Aún más reciente la aproximación entre la Educación Física y la
Educación de Jóvenes y Adultos (EJA) - en este movimiento, es importante
contribución de la Universidad en la formación permanente de los profesores de
Educación Básica. En ese sentido, organizamos el curso que se presenta aquí.
15 “Otro saber que no puedo dudar ni un momento en mi práctica educativa y crítica es que,
como una experiencia específicamente humana, la educación es una forma de intervención
en el mundo. Intervención que además de los conocimientos de los contenidos bien o mal
enseñado y/o aprendidos implica tanto el esfuerzo de la reproducción de la ideología
dominante y su desenmascaramiento” [nuestra traducción]
16 “lo que nos pasa, o lo que nos sucede, o lo que nos toca. No lo que pasa, o lo que sucede,
80
2004, p. 154) son poco consideradas como producción humana e importante en el
proceso escolar. En el diálogo entre el cuerpo y las prácticas corporales en la
formación continua de los profesores que trabajan en la educación de adultos,
identificamos prácticas docentes descontextualizadas próximo a lo que podríamos
llamar sentido común pedagógico (Luckesi, 1994), en la medida en que los contenidos se
fragmentan, distanciados del contexto en el que los alumnos se encuentran.
Evidenciando una perspectiva que no incluye las contradicciones presentes en la
práctica social de educar y/o el ejercicio de la praxis pedagógica. Por lo tanto, se
contribuye poco para una identidad profesional docente que posibilite diálogo crítico
con el conjunto de la sociedad.
En contrapartida, también encontramos profesores movilizados para hacer
cambios en la educación, así como comunidades escolares en que la discusión de los
problemas educacionales, las reflexiones en relación con las prácticas pedagógicas
son temas presentes. Los profesores buscan, de esta manera, relacionar su práctica
educativa con el contexto en general, posibilitando calidad humana y social en los
procesos de construcción y reconstrucción del conocimiento. Este es un
movimiento continuo de investigación que sitúa la práctica pedagógica, la identidad
profesional, los distintos saberes y las transformaciones sociales como objetos de
estudio.
Al analizar la teoría de la Educación Brasileña - desde el punto de vista de la
historia y la filosofía - Moacir Gadotti (2004) concluye que podemos agrupar las
principales ideas producidas sobre la escolarización en dos grandes grupos: el
primero ve la educación como un proceso uniforme, continuo, sin conflictos, o sea,
conservador de la situación. Pero el otro grupo comprende la educación como un
proceso heterogéneo, lleno de conflictos, con rupturas, o sea, con la posibilidad de la
emancipación, la reflexión y el cambio. Con este segundo grupo nos identificamos y
aproximamos a él nuestra actuación profesional
El joven curso de la Licenciatura en Educación Física de la UFF, trabaja con el
objetivo de fomentar la creación y recreación de los conceptos en esta área del
conocimiento (cuya base es la inclusión) y, al colocar la necesidad de nuevas
producciones teóricas y metodológicas relacionadas con las solicitudes escolares para
fortalecer la enseñanza y el aprendizaje, cumple con los principios antes
mencionados. En este flujo, se materializa la importancia y el papel de las
universidades públicas en la aproximación con a Educación Básica17, en conjunto
con la docencia, investigación y extensión. El Instituto del Educación Física (IEF) da
UFF tiene una historia de promoción de la democratización de la cultura corporal,
81
ofreciendo y fortaleciendo las actividades deportivas, recreativas y de ocio como una
producción socio-histórico.
En este escenario, el “Curso de Extensión: Educación Física y Educación de
Jóvenes y Adultos (EJA)” se convierte en lugar de encuentro, con el intercambio de
experiencias y producción con los profesores de educación física que trabajan en la
educación de jóvenes y adultos. Al mismo tiempo, local en el cual los estudiantes de
graduación (como becarios en lo curso de extensión, proyectos de investigación y
proyectos de enseñanza) tienen acceso directo a los que trabajan en la modalidad
EJA.
Con el objetivo de discutir el elemento curricular educación física en toda la
organización escolar, y en lo diálogo con los Profesores de las Redes públicas de
Enseñanza - que son los Cursillistas y hacen la Educación de Jóvenes y de Adultos
acontecer. Esto representa, además, cooperación y vínculos más estrechos entre la
educación básica y la educación superior, lo que permite la extensión y la
investigación que se lleva a cabo dentro de la Universidad.
De este modo, al contribuir con la formación permanente de los profesores de
la Educación Básica, fortaleciendo la importancia de la problematización, la
planificación y los registros en la organización de las prácticas de enseñanza,
afirmamos la EJA como Modalidad de la Educación Básica y, entendemos la
Educación Física como un componente curricular, integrante del proyecto político y
pedagógico de cada unidad escolar.
Como evaluación diagnóstica y para el diálogo en el proceso, empezamos con
algunas preguntas desencadenadoras: ¿qué es la Educación Física escolar? ¿Cómo la
educación física ha constituido en la educación básica, en particular en la educación
de jóvenes y adultos? ¿Cómo la educación física se relaciona con los otros
componentes curriculares y con el proyecto político pedagógico?
A partir de ellas, en el desarrollo del curso abordamos el siguiente contenido:
caracterización de la educación física como una práctica pedagógica; concepciones
de EJA como una modalidad da la educación y; identificación de las propuestas
pedagógicas que los docentes hacen diariamente y las redes a las que pertenecen.
En la reunión mensual realizamos discusiones de grupo; lecturas de
textos/imágenes; cuestionamos la rutina de la escuela; intentamos hacer el diálogo
diario con las concepciones de la educación física; impartimos talleres y realizamos
visitas. De cada encuentro, los profesores dejan la tarea de visitar un local (centro
cultural, museo, seminario - libre elección, con el fin de que puedan ampliar su
universo cultural) y una tarea (lectura y registro) para ser ejecutada hasta la próxima
reunión. La evaluación es procesal (a lo largo del curso, a través de la participación,
lecturas, debates, registros y visitas a los espacios/eventos acordados).
Todo el proceso requiere la comprensión de los significados atribuidos al
cuerpo y las prácticas corporales en todas las situaciones de la vida en la sociedad –
lo que exige la formación permanente, vivida como búsqueda y asociación constante.
82
Así, al realizar este debate con los profesores del curso de extensión, nos damos
cuenta de cómo iniciativas como este proyecto estrechan relaciones de la escuela con
la universidad; hacen con que los estudiantes de graduación se vean a sí mismos
como profesores/investigadores desde el inicio de su formación y, otro factor que se
ha demostrado que es importante es cómo los docentes que trabajan en esta
modalidad, de los distintos sistemas de escuelas públicas, solicitan espacios de
intercambio y formación continua.
18 Mi tamiz no es solo mía / Pertenece a todos nosotros / La melodía principal que / Guía
es la primera voz / Para bailar tamiz / Hay que unir mano con mano / Y formar una
rueda / Cantar una canción. (Mi Tamiz, música de Lia Itamaracá) [nuestra traducción]
83
Corporeidades) y a lo que está articulado a el: los elementos curriculares “Juegos y
juguetes” y “Lenguaje y ritmo corporal” (que ofrece la Licenciatura en Educación
Física de la Universidad Federal Fluminense (UFF)); el elemento curricular
“Corporeidades y los procesos escolares" (integrado en el plan de estudios de
Especialización en Educación Física de la Universidad); la investigación articuladora
del grupo (“Enfoques entre la Educación Física y la EJA”) y con otros dos proyectos
de extensión (“Cine debate: CineMarx” y “CirandEJAs”). Lo que ayuda a
materializar el principio de la interacción de la extensión con la enseñanza y la
investigación – objetivo del trabajo de la UFF y de la unidad directamente implicada
(Instituto del Educación Física). Y, de esta manera, el acercamiento entre la
Universidad, la educación básica, el contexto social.
Todos los involucrados en el curso ponen de realce la necesidad de
comprender mejor quiénes son los estudiantes de la educación de adultos, con miras
a superar la idea de que “ha pasado la etapa de aprendizaje” - ya que esto es negar lo
que sabe el alumno y desmotivarlo para estar en la escuela. Lo que no es fácil en una
sociedad que, en general, percibe el tiempo como una suma lineal del pasado,
presente y futuro. Pero, el tiempo abordado como relación, intensa, hace pensar en
las prácticas sociales (que incluye pedagógica) que están estrechamente vinculadas a
los tiempos fijos, inmóviles. Cuestionar eso es provocar fracturarse en algunas ideas
dominantes y en ese proceso crear nuevas posibilidades, la apertura de nuevos
comienzos, infancias de los acontecimientos (Kohan, 2007).
La experiencia con los profesores que trabajan en la educación de adultos, a
través del Curso de Extensión, señalan las dificultades de los tiempos, los espacios y
las ideas fijas. En varias ocasiones, el contexto escolar exige el llamado “cuadrado
mágico” (los cuatro modos dominantes en las clases de educación física: voleibol,
fútbol, baloncesto y balonmano). No sólo por lo que son del área de la educación
física, pero por los propios estudiantes o profesores de otras áreas, refuerzan la
lógica dominante, reconociendo (a menudo presionando) la existencia de estas
prácticas físicas como únicas y en su forma “esportivizada” (competitiva, exclusivo,
con gestos estandarizados).
Esta forma de pensar y actuar ayuda a negar los procesos creativos y
creadores, entretenimiento y otras prácticas pedagógicas que fortalezcan la
educación física que contextualiza las prácticas corporales; donde la planificación
pueda ampliar el contenido y resaltar las historias y marcas corporales de los
alumnos; clases predominantemente incluido, en el que las singularidades de
expresión, en su diferencia y la diversidad, pueden ocurrir.
El proceso no es sencillo, pero movido por la idea de pensar en la infancia /
inicios de la educación, la educación física puede ser parte de esta oportunidad, a
cuestionar la lógica de los cuerpos “fuertes”, el deseo de “eterna juventud”, los
movimientos y los gestos “perfectos”.
84
Haciendo parte del grupo que cuestiona esa lógica, los profesores del Curso,
junto con los estudiantes de Educación Física, identifican la formación de los
profesores - la inicial y permanente -, como un lugar privilegiado para contribuir a
cambiar esta realidad.
Esto significa mucho trabajo, dentro y fuera de la Universidad. En nuestro
grado, por ejemplo, no hay ningún elemento curricular dirigido a la EJA, el
desarrollo del curso, que se inició en 2015, ha puesto de relieve la discusión de la
relación entre las generaciones - una de las principales preocupaciones de muchos
profesores en la educación de adultos. Las diferencias de edad tuvieron un notable
aumento en las clases y debido a esto, los maestros tienen dificultades para llevar a
cabo actividades colectivas e inclusivas. Lo que se encuentra con la educación por la
y con la diferencia.
Por este y otros desarrollos, enviar este artículo, dialogando con los
diferentes profesores e investigadores en el ESREA Access, Learning Careers and
Identities Network, en la Universidad de Sevilla / España en noviembre de 2015,
mucho ayudará, porque los diversos problemas que se presentan aquí tienen sus
singularidades en el contexto brasileño, pero no son exclusivos de esta realidad
social.
REFERENCIAS BIBLIOGRÁFICAS
.
Brasil (1998). Constituição da República Federativa do Brasil.
Brasil (2000). Diretrizes Curriculares Nacionais para a EJA. Brasília: CNE/CEB, Parecer
11/2000.
Carvalho, Rosa Malena (2008). Corporeidades e Educação de Jovens e Adultos. Rio de
Janeiro: Anais do V Seminário Internacional as redes do conhecimento e as
tecnologias – o outro como legitimo outro. UERJ, junho de 2008.
Carvalho, Rosa Malena (2009). Corporeidades e experiências potencializando a Educação de
Jovens e Adultos (EJA) In Sampaio, Marisa e Souza, Rosilene. Práticas da
Educação de Jovens e Adultos – complexidades, desafios e propostas. Belo
Horizonte: Autêntica, p 115 - 134.
Carvalho, Rosa Malena (Org., 2011) Educação Física Escolar na Educação de Jovens e
Adultos. Curitiba, PR: CRV.
Carvalho, Rosa Malena (2015) Curso de Extensão Educação Física e Educação de Jovens e
Adultos. Projeto apresentada à Pró-reitora de Extensão da Universidade
Federal Fluminense, Niterói, fevereiro de 2015.
Certeau, Michel (2002). A Invenção do Cotidiano. Petrópolis: Vozes.
Daolio, Jocimar (1995). Da Cultura do Corpo. Campinas: Papirus.
Freire, Paulo (1971). Pedagogia do oprimido. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra.
85
Freire, Paulo (2011) Pedagogia da autonomia - saberes necessários à prática
educativa. 43ª ed., São Paulo: Paz e Terra.
Gadotti, Moacir (2004). Pensamento Pedagógico Brasileiro. 8ª ed. São Paulo: Ática..
Gallo, Sílvio (2008). Eu, o outro e tantos outros: educação, alteridade e filosofia da diferença. In:
Anais do II Congresso Internacional Cotidiano: Diálogos sobre Diálogos. Rio de Janeiro:
Universidade Federal Fluminense, Faculdade de Educação.
Gallo, Sílvio (2003). Deleuze & a Educação. Belo Horizonte: Autêntica.
Geertz, C. (1989). A Interpretação das Culturas. Rio de Janeiro: Guanabara.
IBGE (2015). Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística. http://www.ibge.gov.br/
(acessado em 10 de outubro de 2015).
Kohan, Walter (2007). Infância, estrangeiridade e educação – Ensaios da filosofia e educação.
Belo Horizonte: Autêntica.
Larrosa, Jorge (2004). Linguagem e Educação depois de Babel. Belo Horizonte: Autêntica.
Luckesi, Cipriano Carlos (1994). Filosofia da Educação. 14ª ed. São Paulo: Cortez.
Santos, Boaventura (2001). A crítica da razão indolente. 3ª ed. São Paulo: Cortez.
Soares, Carmen et all (1992). Metodologia do Ensino da Educação Física. São Paulo:
Cortez.
Soares, Carmen (1998). Imagens da educação no corpo – estudo a partir da ginástica francesa
do século XIX. Campinas, SP: Autores Associados.
Soares, Leôncio (2002). Educação de Jovens e Adultos. Rio de Janeiro: DP&A.
AFILIACIONES
86
MICAELA CASTIGLIONI
6
WHAT KIND OF ADULT EDUCATION IS REQUIRED IN
THE RISK SOCIETY?
INTRODUCTION
And all of this across the various affiliations of adult life, both in the
workplace and outside of it, as well as in the increasingly widespread settings of
unemployment or casual, temporary work, etc... I have chosen to open this paper
with a series of questions posed by Sennett (2007) that can guide us in exploring, at
least briefly and partially, the complexity and problematic riskiness19 of the post-modern
society we live in.
It is against such an anthropological-cultural, political-institutional and socio-
economic background, which represents one of the key themes of this conference,
that I set out to reflect on the “state of the art” in education and training, and in
particular, the education and training of today’s adults and young adults. Today,
adult education is no longer associated with a given age group or life stage, due to
the social and societal liquidity, as Bauman (1999; 2003) calls it, in which we are all
immersed. From this perspective, we cannot avoid addressing the issue of adult
education, which emerges as an urgent priority, in Italy at any rate, especially in
relation to the political-educational decision-making and strategies of the relevant
institutional actors.
It seems that a possible, or rather, an objective and realistic direction for adult
education to take is that leading to the delivery and implementation, on a vast scale,
of adult education practices that might be viewed as excessively oriented towards
adapting adults to existing circumstances, while losing sight of key dimensions such as
contemporary adults’ relationship with knowledge (Alberici,1993) and of the meaning that
87
they attribute to their own autobiographical journeys, characterised by continuity
and dis-continuity, including in the educational/training sphere itself.
A model of education that is essentially and excessively based on the
transmission of knowledge is clearly in tune with overall political, economic and
institutional needs, but, conversely, is at odds with the autobiographical paths of
individual adults which, as a consequence of constant uncertainty, insecurity and
feelings of inadequacy (Bauman, 1999; Beck, 1992, p.62), are increasingly on the
brink of becoming what Beck defines as “risk biographies”, or even, “danger
biographies” (1992, p.67). This suggests the potential value of a renewed emphasis
on adult education offerings based on the “learning to think”, or even, “re-learning
to think” first advocated by Donata Fabbri (1994, pp.127-134). Specifically, at this
juncture in adult education, I make the case for adopting narrative-self-reflective-
autobiographical educational dispositives.
88
although this is not the only factor coming into play. Also at risk of being pushed to
the margins are women and men whose educational and professional careers have
been “adequately successful” (Alberici, 1999).
“Managerial” and organizational cultures, of various kinds, do not set out to
form adult subjects in light of their complex and problematic nature, their daily
grappling with a profound need for meaning, and attempts to emotionally sustain
their fragmentary and fragmented life experience. On the contrary, such cultures are
concerned with obtaining, “[…] a work force that is functional to corporate needs
[…], despite the fact that official statements place [the needs] of the person at the
centre” (Tramma, 2011).
If in practice “the adult person were at the centre” this would imply, as Pavan has
observed, “[…] demanding higher coefficients of subjectivity for individuals and
society […] going beyond the languages that we adopt to speak about the human
factor in terms of human resources and human capital, which tend to represent the
human person as a means and an instrument for attaining pre-determined types of
performance and objectives” (2001, p.33).
Against this backdrop, I propose a form of adult education and adult
educational practices that rediscover an educational way of thinking and acting that
is not solely based on “taught learning” – to use the definition of Jarvis (1987) –
which paradoxically risks becoming a permanent stockpile of knowledge, techniques
and competences that need to be updated and replaced within a very short time span
due to the unrelenting dynamism of our life contexts and experience in every sphere,
professional and otherwise; but is also founded on “experiential learning” (ibidem), or
(self) reflective learning, which is organized around a narrative, and in part also
autobiographical, paradigm and thought.
I believe that today’s adults, caught up in the struggle with life, learning,
educational and work-related trajectories that are un-certain, in-determinate, dis-
continuous, and generally in a constant state of flux, need educational time during
which to reflect narratively and autobiographically on their own learning, including
at the existential level, and on their own personal ways of constructing knowledge
and competences.
They need to re-elaborate that which they “already are, know and do”, and
the trajectory that has led them, more or less intentionally, to reach – in a succession
of movements and standstills, arrivals and new beginnings – that which they “are, or
are not, or are not yet, but could become”; “that which they think, or do not yet
allow themselves to think, or that which they think in too monotonous a fashion”;
“that which they do, or do not do, but might allow themselves to do”.
89
In my view, this educational approach has the potential to complete, enrich
and problematize learning: helping individuals to interiorize, manage, trans-form,
and so on, their own learning in light of their personal and autobiographic
experience and priorities of meaning.
This is where the narrative-autobiographical paradigm comes into play as an
“alternative” and “innovative” gaze on education for adults with respect to
traditional educational methods.
90
of individual adults engaged in recognizing, comprehending, naming, re-elaborating
and validating the experiential learning they have acquired in the course of complex,
shifting and problematic daily lives, and which demands to be integrated with new
knowledge, by means of a deep, multifaceted and refined process of interiorization20.
20Boutinet, J.P “Vie adulte et formation permanent: de la notion au concept” in Carrè, P &
Caspar, P (eds.), 2004, Traitè des sciences et des techniques de la formation, Paris, Dunod.
91
to cater for the needs of the “institution” and the “instituted”, with “self-reflexive
learning”, viewed from a narrative-autobiographical perspective as more helpful to
adults in their daily efforts to maintain “emotional and existential sustainability” in
the workplace and in general.
This type of educational/formative dispositive, understood as a dispositive
of thinking, creativity and imagination (Quaglino, 2011) – dimensions that recur in some
of the more crucial skills – and structured around the paradigm of narrativity and
narrative (which also draw on transversal abilities and attitudes), offers a dimension
of hope that is crucial to education in general and particularly crucial in the context of
a contemporary adulthood characterized by continuous, diverse and shifting forms
of discontinuity.
We might then hypothesize an adult education that forms subjects “in” and
“through” the soft skills, becoming a practice that fosters the development of a
mobile, agile, etc. perspective on the self, others, and the world. This in turn will
enable adult subjects to construct a worldview that is open to hope, a hope that should
not be confused with the permanent stringing out of illusions that may ultimately
lead to a loss of hope.
“Working on” and “through” our reasons for hope appears to be a theme of
crucial interest for pedagogical discourse and reflection on adult
education/formation, all the more so if we take into account the tendency at many
different levels and in many different areas of contemporary lives to latently, and
dangerously, educate or (mis-educate) to the loss of hope.
Educating/forming to hope means, in my view, cultivating and/or reinforcing, in the
places of adult education, a soft way of thinking that is less weighed down and
oppressed by an indefinitely prolonged state of waiting, and capable of ‘(…) freely looking
far ahead into the experiential space opening up before us (…)’ (Borgna, 2014, p.33).
Adopting such an approach will mean coming to view lifelong learning as an
experience that helps us to address the fragility of contemporary adulthood, a fragility
that needs to be thought, named and narrated with a sense of hope – as defined
above – if it is not to become adult vulnerability requiring therapeutic and no longer
solely educational attention.
92
REFERENCES
Alberici A., (1999), Imparare sempre nella società conoscitiva, Dall’educazione degli adulti
all’apprendimento durante il corso della vita , [Going on learning in the knowledge society.
From adult education to lifelong learning] Paravia, Torino, 1999.
B J.P.Boutinet, “Vie adulte et formation permanent: de la notion au concept” [Adult
lives and lifelong learning: from notions to concepts], in Traitè des sciences et des
techiniques de la formation, P.Carrè, P.Caspar (éds), Paris, Dunod, 2004.
Borgna E., (2014), La fragilità che è in noi [The Fragility Within Us], Einaudi, Torino.
Castiglioni M., a cura di, (2011), L’educazione degli adulti tra crisi e ricerca di senso [Adult
education in a context of crisis and searching for meaning], Unicopli, Milano.
Formenti L., La formazione autobiografica [Autobiographical Education], Guerini, Milano,
1998.
Jarvis P., (1996), Adult and Continuing education, London and New York, Routledge.
Marescotti E., (2011), “Per un’autentica educazione degli adulti tra istanze
epistemologiche e pressioni politico-economiche”, [For an authentic adult
education between epistemological instances and political-economin
pressures] in M.Castiglioni, (a cura di), L’educazione degli adulti tra crisi e
ricerca di senso [Adult education in a context of crisis and searching for meaning],
Unicopli, Milano.
A.Pavan, La rivoluzione culturale della formazione continua [The cultural revolution of ongoing
education], Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, 2001.
Quaglino G.P., (2011), La scuola della vita. Manifesto della terza formazione [The school of
life. Manifesto for the third sector of education], Raffaello Cortina Editore, Milano.
Toriello F., (2011), “Legislazione nel e per l’Educazione degli adulti: è il momento
per rifletteere e agire” [ ], in M.Castiglioni, (a cura di), L’educazione degli adulti
tra crisi e ricerca di senso [Adult education in a context of crisis and searching for meaning],
Unicopli, Milano.
S.Tramma, (2011), “L’educazione degli adulti al bivio” [A crossroads for adult
education], in M.Castiglioni, (a cura di), L’educazione degli adulti tra crisi e ricerca di
senso [Adult education in a context of crisis and searching for meaning], Unicopli,
Milano.
AFFILIATION
Micaela Castiglioni
[email protected]
University Bicocca of Milan (Italy)
93
SECTION 2
PERSPECTIVES FROM COMMUNITY
AND SOCIAL EDUCATION
94
DAVID HERRERA PASTOR
LORENA MOLINA CUESTA
JESÚS JUÁREZ PÉREZ CEA
7
LA HISTORIA DE JUANA.
LA EDUCACIÓN DE ADULTOS EN ASPERONES
(UN BARRIO CON MUCHAS DIFICULTADES)
INTRODUCCIÓN
21Como dicen Waller y Simmons (2009) los relatos biográficos deben permitir la visión de la
realidad sujeta a estudio y, al mismo tiempo, mantener la panorámica del contexto en el que
se encuentra inserta dicha realidad, de manera que ésta pueda ser comprendida de manera
contextualizada.
95
que cursó nuestra protagonista. Y, por otro lado, a Laura, educadora de la asociación
INCIDE, que participa en la implementación de la Educación Secundaria de
Adultos (ESA). Los educadores y las educadoras de ambas vías trabajan de manera
coordinada en todo momento. Además, se ha entrevistado a Paco, el director del
colegio de Primaria de la zona, que es el centro educativo que vertebra prácticamente
toda la labor sociopedagógica que se lleva a cabo en el barrio. Además, él es una de
las personas que lideran la dinamización de toda esa labor.
Esta comunicación se presenta siguiendo la lógica y complejidad de los
datos, por eso se presenta en formato biográfico, porque como dice Ferrarotti (véase
Cortés y Medrano, 2007) a través de una experiencia vital se pueden apreciar
elementos generales de la sociedad. Ése es uno de los objetivos de este trabajo,
visibilizar y dar a conocer la realidad sujeta a estudio y generar reflexiones que nos
puedan ayudar a seguir profundizando y analizando al respecto.
ASPERONES
96
muchos casos deriva en economía sumergida22.
Tras el paso de dos décadas, se inició el esperado proceso de
desmantelamiento del barrio y reubicación de las familias, lo que supuso la
incorporación de una serie de entidades a la barriada que empezó, muy despacio, a
transformar la vida de sus vecinos: AVRA (Agencia de Vivienda y Rehabilitación de
Andalucía), INCIDE (Inclusión, Ciudadanía, Diversidad y Educación) MIES
(Misioneros de la Esperanza), Cáritas y ACCEM (Asociación Comisión Católica de
Migraciones) trabajan con las familias para prepararlas para su inclusión en su nuevo
destino. Para ello se constituyó una mesa de coordinación en la que participaban esas
entidades y algunas otras que contribuyeron al desarrollo de una intervención
sociopedagógica en red (por ejemplo el CEIP María de la ‘O’, Programa Caixa Pro-
Infancia de la Obra Social La Caixa). El problema fue que la crisis económica que
tuvo lugar poco después de poner en marcha esa iniciativa paralizó todo el proceso.
Algún tiempo más tarde empezó a reactivarse mínimamente. Desde entonces las
diferentes entidades han continuado trabajando en la socialización del conjunto de la
población, pero también tratando de introducir nuevas oportunidades para mejorar
las vidas de sus vecinos, especialmente, las de los/as más pequeños/as.
LA HISTORIA DE JUANA
Juana es una mujer de 32 años que nació y se crió en el seno de una familia humilde.
Es la tercera de cuatro hermanos (la única mujer entre ellos). Creció en un barrio de
clase obrera, muy poblado donde vive gente con unos recursos económicos muy
limitados. No es un barrio marginal ni excluido, pero no tuvo una infancia ni una
adolescencia fácil. A los 17 años conoció a su actual pareja y decidió escaparse para
irse a vivir con él. Desde entonces, hace más de 15 años, reside en Asperones, lugar
de procedencia de él.
Tuvo su primer hijo recién cumplido los 19. En la actualidad su primogénito
tiene 13 años y cursa 1º de ESO en un Instituto de Secundaria fuera del barrio.
Además tiene otro hijo de 10 años que se encuentra cursando primaria en la escuela
del lugar. Desde entonces se ha dedicado, fundamentalmente, a la crianza de los
niños y las tareas domésticas, aunque siempre que ha podido ha buscado trabajo o
ha realizado cursos de formación. Los trabajos que, generalmente, ha desempeñado
han sido no cualificados. En la actualidad trabaja como monitora en el colegio de
primaria en el que cursa sus estudios su hijo pequeño. Su marido tampoco tiene un
trabajo estable, pero también es una persona trabajadora e inquieta laboralmente. Ha
97
trabajado en la obra, recogiendo limones,… y ahora está, en condiciones precarias,
en un taller de reparación de coches.
Ella estudió hasta 3º de Secundaria, donde sacaba malas notas y abandonó
sin culminar la etapa obligatoria y, por tanto, sin obtener el diploma de estudios
básicos o Graduado Escolar. Sin embargo, decidió volver a estudiar hace
aproximadamente 5 años. Uno de los hechos cruciales de la historia de Juana fue que
ella sola realizó aquella demanda. Y es que “el adulto necesitado de formación pide
oportunidad de acceso, porque encuentra ahí el origen y la fuente de sus
limitaciones” (García Carrasco, 1997: 4). Los motivos principales que la animaron:
Que ese certificado “es necesario para todo, es que ya te piden el Graduado para
todo. Y además que es que es bueno saber23” (Juana, 02’32”). Además, se daba la
circunstancia de que había empezado a trabajar de monitora en el comedor del
colegio del barrio y se le requería cierta formación para poder trabajar también en las
actividades extraescolares y la escuela de verano. “Entonces, si ella quería crecer
laboralmente era necesario tener una pequeña titulación” (Paco, 01’45”). Es decir,
que el deseo de ampliar la carga laboral fue lo que la impulsó a sacarse el Graduado,
porque obteniéndolo podía obtener más trabajo y ganaba en estabilidad. Hay quienes
sacan el Graduado para obtener un trabajo y hay quien poseyendo un trabajo sacan
el Graduado para mejorar su situación laboral, económica, personal, familiar. Ése fue
el caso de Juana.
Aproximadamente, cuando su hijo menor cumplió un lustro de vida se
dieron unas mejores circunstancias para poder retomar los estudios: sus hijos ya
estaban en el colegio y ella disponía de más tiempo libre. Entonces recurrió a un
grupo de educadores y educadoras que actuaba en el barrio y que, entre otras cosas,
se encargaban de formar a personas adultas para que pudiesen obtener la
mencionada titulación.
En Asperones la Educación de Adultos se articula, fundamentalmente, a través de
dos vías: 1) la Educación Secundaria de Adultos (ESA) y 2) Radio ECCA. Juana fue
inscrita en esta segunda modalidad. ¿Qué es Radio ECCA?
Radio ECCA es una emisora de radio de la isla de Gran Canaria (España)
que desempeña una labor formativa a través de la radio. Comenzó su labor a
mediados de los años 60 (s. XX) con el propósito de alfabetizar a numerosas
personas que no tenían posibilidad de acceder al sistema educativo formal a través
de otros medios. “La alfabetización de adultos por radio es un paso importante en el
camino hacia un mundo más justo y equitativo” (Rodríguez Fuenzalida, 1992: 55).
Medio siglo después ha diversificado su oferta formativa, pero sigue manteniendo su
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esencia: enseñar cultura general básica y tratar de facilitar el acceso a una actividad
profesional a muchos ciudadanos.
Como es obvio, Radio ECCA es, por encima de todo, un sistema oficial de
formación a distancia, que articula su sistema de enseñanza de manera no presencial.
El título de Graduado Escolar que se obtiene a través de ella “es exactamente el
mismo el tuyo que el de la Juana, lo único que el tuyo pone Málaga y el suyo pone
Canarias” (José, 02’44”). Curricularmente se articula igual que la formación que se
lleva a cabo en la escuela. Se trata de asignaturas que se dividen por temas, que el
alumnado debe ir estudiando y superando. “Hoy día con el tema de internet es
mucho más factible. Tú te apuntas a un curso de Radio ECCA, te mandan los
audios, tú en tu casa los escuchas por internet y después haces los exámenes” (José,
01’27”).
Existe cierto grado de autogestión, ya que es el alumno/a quien participa en la
elección de sus módulos, la gestión y matriculación de estos, etc. Es por ello que esta
forma de aprendizaje tiene bastante éxito en Asperones, y es que tal y como nos
plantea Brockett y Hiemstra “la mayoría de los adultos prefieren asumir una
considerable responsabilidad en su propio aprendizaje si se les da la oportunidad y el
apoyo adecuados” (Brockett y Hiemstra, 1993: 131).
Ella contó con el apoyo de dos educadoras de Cáritas para poder afrontar
aquel reto. La primera de ellas era, se puede decir que, su tutora y maestra, y la
segunda prestaba ayuda cuando era necesario.
Al principio le resultó difícil, entre otras cosas, porque habían pasado
muchos años (alrededor de una década) desde que abandonara el sistema educativo
ordinario. “Cuesta, y más lo que es de memorizar y acordarte cómo estudiar. Yo ya
no me acordaba de cómo se estudiaba” (Juana, 04’45”). Además se le había olvidado
mucho del contenido que se supone que había aprendido en su momento (por
ejemplo, las divisiones de dos cifras, analizar una frase, etc.). Entonces tenía que
refrescar ciertos contenidos y volver a aprender otros. En sus propias palabras, tuvo
que “volver a aprender a estudiar” (Juana, 05’15”). Afortunadamente, poco a poco,
se fue familiarizando con toda aquella situación y cada vez le resultaba más accesible.
“Cuando los niños estaban en el colegio iba a la parroquia a estudiar” y después “los
ejercicios y eso los hacía en mi casa” (Juana, 05’33”). A veces coincidía haciendo los
deberes con sus hijos, es decir, madre e hijos realizaban las tareas escolares al mismo
tiempo, lo que contribuía al desarrollo de un clima de estudio favorable en casa. Sus
hijos apreciaban que su madre estaba estudiando temas de mayor complejidad que
ellos.
La calificación de las distintas pruebas que tenía que afrontar no supuso un
obstáculo, todo lo contrario: “A mí los exámenes se me daban bien, sacaba buenas
notas” (Juana, 06’18”).
Algunas personas de su entorno no daban mucho valor a que ella hubiese
decidido volver a la escuela. En aquella época había un porcentaje altísimo de
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personas sin el Graduado Escolar en el barrio (más del 99%) y no era común
retomar los estudios. Muchos de ellos “pensaban que era una tontería” (Juana,
06’34”). Sin embargo, su pareja nunca la desanimó al respecto, todo lo contrario,
siempre la ha apoyado. De hecho, “él quiere ahora estudiar también” (Juana, 07’15”).
El problema que tiene él es que no tiene tiempo para estudiar porque pasa todo el
día trabajando. Él piensa que si consiguiese el Graduado Escolar podría tener
mayores posibilidades laborales.
Durante muchos años ha habido tanta falta de fe y tanto desapego hacia el
sistema educativo formal, que se han creado falsos mitos al respecto. Uno de ellos
fue que obtener el Graduado Escolar habilitaba para conducir el coche de manera
legal. De hecho, el hijo pequeño de Juana fue lo que destacó cuando fue consciente
de que su madre había obtenido dicho certificado, que podía utilizar el coche.
Allí obtener el carnet de conducir es una motivación social importante,
téngase en cuenta que, aunque geográficamente se encuentran a poca distancia de
otras zonas urbanas, existe cierta distancia, sobre todo, psicosocial con el resto de la
ciudad. De alguna manera, en Asperones hay cierta sensación de aislamiento. El
carnet de conducir es un medio que proporciona cierta libertad a quienes lo poseen.
Por eso es algo tan valorado entre su población.
Más allá del carnet, Juana intenta inculcar a sus hijos que deben estudiar,
entre otras cosas, porque los estudios proporcionan mayores posibilidades de
obtener un trabajo. Y cuanto mayor sea el grado académico que se posea mayor
podrá ser el salario que se puede obtener: “Contra más estudio más posibilidades de
trabajo y mejores trabajos” (Juana, 10’25”).
Le gustaría que sus hijos estudiasen una Carrera Universitaria o Formación
Profesional. Y que tuvieran “su casa y su coche y sus cosas en condiciones, como no
tengo yo” (Juana, 11’16”). También que crearan una familia, pero en otro ambiente,
fuera del barrio, para que “puedan ver otras cosas, que no sea todo: el barrio” (Juana,
11’28”), porque el barrio tiene cosas buenas, pero también “muchas cosas malas”
(Juana, 11’40”).
A Juana obtener el Graduado Escolar le ha posibilitado ampliar sus
posibilidades laborales. Si no lo hubiese obtenido “no estaría trabajando en las
[actividades] extraescolares” (Juana, 13’10”). También le ha permitido trabajar en la
escuela de verano. Hay que decir que, además ha realizado distintos cursos
específicos que se adecuaban a las demandas de esas ofertas laborales. Por otro lado,
también resalta que poseer el diploma de estudios básicos le da la posibilidad de
buscar trabajo en otros lugares.
A ella le gustaría seguir estudiando cuando se diesen las circunstancias
oportunas. Ahora mismo con los niños, la casa y el trabajo le resultaría muy difícil,
pero está pensando en Bachillerato o un ciclo de Formación Profesional de
Enfermería, esto último es lo que a ella le gusta.
Haber estudiado le ha hecho
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“no ser una analfabeta, de saber que cuando una persona me explica una
cosa, entenderlo. De si tengo que rellenar unos papeles, saber rellenarlos,
de si tengo que hablar con los maestros, saber de qué me están hablando.
Que es verdad que hay mucha gente aquí que no saben, que tienen que
rellenar un papel y van al colegio o van a la oficina a que se lo rellenen.
Yo no, yo sé hacer esas cosas” (Juana, 16’35”).
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de ellas se han obtenido a través de vías alternativas al Sistema Educativo Ordinario,
es decir, a través de “la Educación Secundaria de Adultos (ESA) y Radio ECCA”
(Laura, 16’30”).
La mayoría de las estrellas del mural son de “gente que abandonó los
estudios y volvió a incorporarse, no es de gente que triunfó en el sistema” (Paco,
06’03”). Parece evidente que el Sistema de Enseñanza Secundaria Ordinario no se
adapta a las necesidades de estos muchachos y muchachas. ¿Por qué? En la etapa
obligatoria ¿no deberían estar todos los centros de enseñanza obligados a satisfacer
las necesidades de todo el alumnado?
Algunos educadores y educadoras del barrio piensan que el trabajo que se
lleva a cabo en algunos Institutos de Secundaria no atiende las características y
necesidades reales de los adolescentes que provienen de Asperones, siendo éste uno
de los principales motivos de abandono. “«No comprendo el temario, no
comprendo cuando el profesor explica las cosas, levanto la mano y no me da toda la
ayuda que yo necesito…». Se han venido abajo y lo han abandonado” (Laura,
18’35”).
Por eso, “el mural de las estrellas también habla del mural de los estrellados,
que son todos los que no están” (José, 44’55”). Todos los huecos de esa pared son
las ausencias de las personas que también deberían tener el Graduado Escolar. Esos
huecos reflejan, por tanto, el fracaso educativo del sistema, pero también el de la
comunidad. “Estamos fracasando todos” (José, 45’46”).
Y por otro lado, la mayoría del resto de estrellas del mural han sido
conseguidas a través de Centros de Secundaria de Compensatoria. En otras palabras,
casi todos los títulos de Graduado Escolar que se consiguieron a través del Sistema
Ordinario, fueron a través de institutos en los que se compensaban las desventajas
que tenían de partida. Mirándolo por el lado positivo, eso quiere decir que teniendo
en cuenta las necesidades del alumnado y proporcionando las atenciones pertinentes
se pueden obtener mejores resultados. Sin embargo, deja en entredicho la capacidad
para atender la diversidad del sistema de enseñanza que se sigue en los centros de
secundaria que no son de compensatoria.
1.- Que las vías alternativas no se conviertan en el medio ordinario para obtener el
Graduado. Los datos evidencian que las vías alternativas están proporcionando
mejores resultados que el sistema ordinario. Las personas de Asperones están
empezando a ser conscientes de que a través del sistema ordinario poseen muy pocas
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posibilidades de alcanzar el objetivo académico perseguido y que, por el contrario, si
abandonan la Secundaria Obligatoria y después se incorporan a una de las vías
alternativas mencionadas, tendrán muchas más posibilidades de conseguirlo sin tener
que realizar el esfuerzo y sufrir el desgaste que supone el instituto de secundaria.
“Pablo un niño de 6º [de Primaria] de los más inteligentes, que tiene unas
Altas Capacidades en Matemáticas espectaculares (…), dice: «Yo, yo no
estudio y luego hago como mi Papa, me voy con el ‘Donut’ [(apodo de
un Educador)], hago dos o tres cosas y me saco el título»“(Paco, 07’25”).
Hay un hecho que alarma en ese sentido: en la actualidad existe una demanda
para formarse a través de estas vías alternativas que supera en un porcentaje muy
alto las posibilidades formativas que se pueden llevar a cabo por parte de las
entidades que lo desarrollan.
Los/as educadores/as que trabajan en Radio ECCA y ESA se encuentran
preocupados por dicha situación y consideran que se debe revertir, para que dichas
vías alternativas sigan siendo extraordinarias y no se conviertan en el camino al que
la mayoría de personas de Asperones recurra para poder obtener la titulación que
certifica el grado básico de cultura general. “Tenemos que intentar que el sistema
ordinario sea lo potente” (José, 44’18”).
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3.- El Graduado Escolar no puede ser la meta final. Las entidades encargadas de
trabajar sociopedagógicamente en el barrio no se conforman con que las personas de
Asperones hayan empezado a obtener el Graduado Escolar y ya están pensando que
esa titulación no puede ser el techo de la cualificación académica a la que la mayoría
de su población pueda aspirar. Quienes obtienen dicho Graduado deben tener
posibilidades reales de continuar adelante, ya sea estudiando o dando el salto al
mercado laboral.
La cuestión es que se están dando casos de chicos y chicas que, tras haber
conseguido el título se encuentran un abismo: hay muy pocas opciones. Y se
preguntan: “¿Tú obtienes el Graduado para qué?” (Laura, 39’44”). Esa situación
puede reforzar el mensaje completamente opuesto, sobre todo, cuando ven a
personas de su entorno que no han estudiado porque decidieron dedicarse, por
ejemplo, a la venta de drogas y poseen una situación económica más favorable. “Al
final come y duerme en una casa buena el que está cometiendo un delito y el que se
ha sacado el Graduado sigue siendo un pobre desgraciado” (Paco, 14’25”). Hay
gente que realiza verdaderos esfuerzos por seguir el cauce de la legalidad y después
no obtiene ningún fruto. Y ven como otros deciden realizar su vida fuera de dichos
cauces y poseen una situación más acomodada. Por eso, el Graduado debe ser un
punto y seguido, no un punto y final.
Algunos educadores y educadoras ya están pensando en diversas iniciativas
para enmendar esa situación: a) Poner en marcha un servicio de Orientación, b)
Desarrollar programas relacionados con el empleo. En cualquier caso, “tiene que ser
algo tangible” (Laura, 41’34’) y realista que, verdaderamente, pueda proporcionar
una salida a estas personas.
REFERENCIAS
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Rodriguez Fuenzalida, E. (1992). Alfabetización y Postalfabetización por radio. Madrid:
Editorial Popular.
Waller, R. y Simmons, J. (2009). Vidas a través de la lente de un ojo de buitre:
Interpretando cuentos de aprendices. En J.I. Rivas Flores y D. Herrera Pastor
(coords.). Voz y educación. La narrativa como enfoque de interpretación de la realidad
(55-74). Barcelona: Octaedro.
AFILIACIONES
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SHARON BAINBRIDGE
8
FROM FIBRE TO FABRIC
CREATING INNOVATIVE LEARNING PERSPECTIVES ON
YORKSHIRE’S WOOL HERITAGE THROUGH COLLABORATIVE
PRACTICE
INTRODUCTION
“We could see that at every house there was a tenter, and almost on every
tenter a piece of cloth, or kersey, or shalloon, for they are the three
articles of that country’s labour…We could see through the glades
almost every way round us, yet look which way we would, high to the
tops, and low to the bottoms, it was all the same; innumerable houses
and tenters, and a white piece upon every tenter…” (Gregory, 1982).
In 1711 the First White Cloth Hall opened in Leeds, a place of trade for un-
dyed cloth; other local towns had their own trade halls. The Piece Hall in Halifax
still stands in its original form. The shift from domestic manufacture to the
industrialisation that we have remnants of in today’s landscape was gradual.
During the Eighteenth Century clothiers had developed into collaborative groups
so that cloth production could be greater. There were 3,500 broadcloth
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manufacturers in West Yorkshire. (Hudson, 1986) By the end of the century 60% of
national cloth output in England was from Yorkshire. (Deane, 1957) The first
introduction of machines was Hargreaves’ Spinning Jenny, adapted for wool,
(Reckendrees, 2006) this was utilised as part of domestic manufacture. The move
to greater industrialisation occurred as the ability to harness power increased.
The landscape of West Yorkshire changed rapidly; villages such as Bradford had an
influx of new wool and worsted manufacturers and the people to do the work. There
were high levels of migration from local areas and from other wool districts within
England such as Suffolk and Gloucestershire. This furore of new factories and new
patents and inventions confirmed West Yorkshire as a vital hub in the industrial
successes of Great Britain. Larger than life characters such as Titus Salt, Samuel
Cunliffe Lister and Jacob Behrens made enough money to retire many times over,
creating legacies that we see in today’s landscape with the World Heritage site of
Salts Mill and the majesty of Manningham Mill Chimney that can be glimpsed from
all over Bradford. These great entrepreneurs traded throughout the world.
Local academic institutions in Leeds, Huddersfield and Bradford started as a
means to educate the future textile workers and leaders. Leeds University still bears
this heritage with the Cloth Workers Guild Hall and the buildings commemorating
Edward Baines a renowned textiles academic and dignitary.
The Twentieth Century brought many changes to the Yorkshire Woollen
manufacturing industry. Wool wasn’t in such demand with the advent of post war
synthetic fabrics, better heating in homes and improved transport. The early stages
of wool processing moved overseas to Australasia and South America where the
wool was produced. (Smith & Howarth, 2006) The larger worsted manufacturers
survived a little longer as they supplied big high street companies such as Burton’s
and Marks & Spencer. With the advent of shareholders and the desire for cheaper
more affordable cloth and clothing, manufacturers went east. Local manufacturers
closed and their
Hattersley looms and other equipment were shipped overseas to new
manufacturing sites.
Any ideas that the majesty of Yorkshire’s Textile Industry could be returned are
unrealistic, when in forty years combing mills have declined from over 60 companies
to just one (Smith & Howarth, 2006) yet there are opportunities to promote niche
products and welcome new creativity.
Campaign for Wool began in 2010 as an initiative developed by HRH, the
Prince of Wales to raise awareness amongst consumers of the use of wool and its
sustainable benefits. The project has seen collaboration internationally between
wool growers, fashion & interior designers, retailers and educators and has
been instrumental through its Wool Week and other related projects in highlighting
the versatility of wool for the twenty first century.
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Whilst textile manufacturing in West Yorkshire has declined significantly in
size since the 19th and early 20th centuries, today’s industry is still respected around
the world and the region is seen as the birthplace of fine woollen and worsted
manufacturing. The businesses of West Yorkshire, and indeed SIL brands such as
Charles Clayton, John Foster, William Halstead, Reid & Taylor and Joshua Ellis, are
recognised as producing the finest cloths for the suits, jackets and coats by some of
the world’s finest fashion houses and designers. The current climate of industry
returning to the UK and the shift in consumer behaviour to artisan and bespoke
goods away from the world of fast fashion seems the perfect juncture to once again
promote the cloth and yarn of Yorkshire
THE PROJECT
The Wool Yorkshire project was initiated by SIL Holdings Ltd, as a means of
promoting the importance and continued success of the wool textile industry in
West Yorkshire. With a breadth of textile interests in worsted manufacture, fibre
trading, yarn trading, woollen upholstery fabric manufacture and weaving, dyeing
and finishing, the SIL Holdings group uses the phrase ‘Textile Excellence’ to
communicate the skills, heritage and experience their businesses possess. Jenni
Nickson from SIL Holdings upholstery business, Abbotsford, proposed that the
group be involved with the Campaign for Wool’s Wool Week and the idea for Wool
Yorkshire was born.
LCA alumni and employee of SIL Holdings, Sara Duxbury contacted Sharon
Bainbridge, her former tutor, to discuss the idea of the collaborative project. The
proposal was to invite students to not only exhibit work but to be involved in the
creation and curation of the event. After several after work meetings, a brief was
created, to present to students. A formal briefing occurred at the College in April
2013 presenting Communication and Exhibition briefs. In hindsight the timing was
not ideal as students were nearing their final deadlines and the project was an
extracurricular project. Important considerations for future collaborative projects.
The Briefing
The aim of the project was for students to create innovative pieces of work that
would engage the public and illustrate that ‘Textiles in West Yorkshire is alive and
well’. The initial briefing attracted 100 students; further briefings were conducted by
Sharon Bainbridge to specific student groups.
The briefing and supporting documents gave the history of SIL Holdings, an
integrated group of textile related businesses spanning the whole spectrum of
production from raw fibre to finished fabric. Located in West Yorkshire, the cradle
of fine woollen and worsted fabric production, the group started in the 1970s.
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SIL Holdings is the modern face of textiles with group companies trading
fibre and yarn as well as weaving, finishing and marketing woollen cloth to every
corner of the globe. The fibre division businesses combine as one of the largest
speciality fibre merchants in the world, supplying cashmere, mohair, camel hair,
angora, alpaca and silk to a diverse customer base. MBA Yarns is one of Europe’s
leading stockists of woollen and worsted yarn for apparel and upholstery. Fine
woollen, wool/cashmere and 100% cashmere cloths for jacketing, coating and
scarves are created in Batley by Joshua Ellis (SIL Brochure: 2012).
These businesses are supported by a range of other operations delivering
fibre processing, spinning, weaving, dyeing and finishing. The opportunity for
students to access so many different areas of regional manufacturing and gain and
understanding of industry as opposed to artisan craft was invaluable.
Student Interest
Expressions of student interest were requested. Students had the opportunity to visit
the factories within the group to assist in their research and design process. A range of
group visits were organised. In the Luxury Fabrics factory a tour was given by
Managing Director, David Gallimore, whose grandfather was John Foster of Back
Dyke Mills. Students were given a tour and the opportunity to speak to employees
at Abbotsford, the Furnishings Fabric division in Keighley. A small group of
students visited the fibre mill in Bradford. SIL provided samples for students to
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examine the nature of materials and set up a remote file with all collateral
information and logos to support the communication brief. Participants were given
a site plan of the VQ and Harvey Nichols window and invited to visit to assess the
viability of the space.
Students submitted an A4 written proposal with supporting diagrams or
photographs to the LCA and SIL panel. They were then invited to pitch their ideas in
person, in 20 minute presentations, to the four leads on the project. The panel were
impressed with the quality of the presentations and ideas, most pitches were
exhibition installation pieces with just two presentations for the communication
aspect. The process was an excellent opportunity for all students; many had never
completed a proposal or pitched an idea. This developed skills to interact with an
external body and time manage a project. The students selected were asked to
complete an assessment of their materials needed and submit this to SIL. They had
six weeks over the summer holiday to complete work with a deadline for
photography of pieces in September.
Student Work
Several students used this work as a summer project that would feed into their
Professional Practice module for the following year; others used it as a testing
ground for dissertation ideas or preparation work for their Masters Studies. Those
who had just graduated saw this as an ideal process to ease them into being
independent artists and help them generate PR for their future ventures. Whilst
completing the installation pieces, students were also involved in the project
planning of the installation of the exhibition. Attending meetings in the factory and
health and safety briefings at VQ, helped the group understand the complexity of
putting on such a project and issues they would need to consider if they were to
undertake similar projects in the future.
All exhibition pieces were to be photographed in the LCA studio in
September, to enable the Communications team to use them for marketing, the blog
and information stands for the exhibition. Most of these were completed on time, but
with students having left and living away from Yorkshire this posed certain problems
as did a student who had changed their work drastically from their original
submission. This confirmed how important the continued communication with
students was, as it was vacation and a project away from the curriculum checking
points were more problematic. Future projects would need a Project Manager
appointed and ground rules clarified.
At this junction we realised that there were some problems with the
communication package that had been promised by the students who had taken this
on. There was little completed that would meet the plan and there was only four
weeks left to the deadline. This confirmed the point noted above that when a project
is external to the curriculum and without the constraints of grading, managing the
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work output can be more problematic. Jenni from SIL was happy to take on aspects
of the work and we were able to source two Graphic Design students to complete
the brochure, this was all being done whilst we were undertaking our normal ‘day’
jobs, so there was a lot of extra work to make the project the success it was.
Installation
The VQ is a very grand Victorian shopping mall with high ceilings and a high
footfall of visitors throughout the day and night. The group had planned all locations
and we had been fortunate to be offered the VQ’s installation team to assist on the
Sunday evening prior to wool week. Considerations had been made for health and
safety and to ensure that theft of objects would be diminished considering the
openness to the general public. Installation began at 5pm and was completed at
3am. Students in the main were really helpful and we would have not been able to
complete without the cherry picker and advice and help with lighting and floating of
objects on wire structures down the corridor etc. from the installation team.
The Opening
The opening event on Monday 14th October was supported through financial help
from Campaign for Wool and Harvey Nichols. The PR activity was also
supplemented financially by Campaign for Wool. SIL and LCA also conducted PR
and promotion of the event. The event secured radio and television coverage. Having
a small flock of sheep on the main shopping area leading to the exhibition generated
a great deal of interest. There was local, national and international press interest and
a high degree of social media coverage at the opening and for the week of the
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exhibition. The opening had over 150 in attendance of textile industry personnel,
members from SIL and LCA and the students and guests. The response to the work
produced was highly complementary and there was a degree of surprise that the
work was accessible, innovative and engaging.
As wool week is just a week, all pieces then had to be taken down the
following Sunday, this was a little more problematic to get support from students
and staff to remove all parts. This was shorter than installation and flagged up the
importance of project planning all aspects and creating designated installation and take
down teams.
Bolaji
Bolaji was approaching his final year on the BA Fashion programme, he was a
student who needed a degree of support and assistance in developing autonomy in
his practice. His first ideas were to deliver a collection of garments reflecting the
landscape surrounding Leeds and Bradford. Initially within the project he lacked
professionalism being late for deadlines and being unaware of how best to
communicate with external parties. Through the project he developed the skills to
push his work further, be consistent in his approach, request guidance and advice
in an appropriate manner. His initial manufacturing skills lacked the ability to
manifest his vision, so it was a great learning curve to understand where he would
need help and how to increase his own skills.
Bolaji’s final three garments used the materials from the furnishing company
Abbotsford, as these best reflected his colour palette. The elements that made his
work so distinctive were the experimentation with the waste selvedge that inspired
many of the students. Through laborious stitching he created a fake fur like material
from the waste, which was used as an accent on garments.
Two of the final garments were featured in the Harvey Nichols, Campaign for
Wool window in the Leeds store. His other was worn during the open evening to
great acclaim. The process greatly improved Bolaji’s confidence and awareness of
industry and his own strengths and weaknesses. The garments were used in a film by
his fellow final year Fashion Communication student Britt Lloyd, with a student
modelling them, animal like amongst the moors. He also received sponsorship
from SIL for his final collection. Bolaji’s tutors confirmed the positive impact the
project had had on his work ethic and approach and the confidence that the
experience had brought.
112
Dita
Dita was a mature student from the Czech Republic; she was in her first year on BA
Interdisciplinary Art & Design course when she submitted her proposal
At the beginning of the project I had so many ideas except the one of the
actual outcome. It was a process of dynamic development and a few turning points.
Sharon’s positive approach and not giving up, has helped make the project what it
became. As we met as a group several times for factory visits and exhibition
planning we became a strong collaborative group, friendships and encouragement a
really positive experience. As the work I was doing meant I spent the summer in the
fashion workshop I made new links which have helped my progression in my
degree and helped me see how other disciplines work. Meeting the SIL people was
a lovely new and positive experience and as a student cohort we had a lovely spirit
of excitement and very interesting opportunity to represent the woollen industry
and link it to our range of practices.
My two different installations had similarities as they were mobile in nature
and worked with pieces from the factory. The piece in Harvey Nichols window
‘reflecting on past traditions’ had bobbins and spools suspended over mirrored
Perspex, with cloth and fibre integrated into the work. The second piece a large
mobile installation hanging from the ceiling at VQ, celebrated the colours and
vibrancy of the industry and reflected the glass colours in the ceiling at VQ, and
became integrated in the building. As a site specific piece it has become as one with
its environment.
I was possibly expecting some new opportunities after the work was
exhibited and this hasn’t happened, however in an indirect way this project has fed
into my practice. My experimentation with textile shapes and forms in the Wool
Week work has fed into a project looking at lost umbrellas, an installation at the Corn
Exchange, Leeds for ‘Le Tour’ and my sustainable design work. I have begun to
explore negative space from this work and experimenting so much for the project
has given me confidence to push boundaries in my work. The project was great and
although time consuming, I really enjoyed it and was very happy to be part of that
team, I learnt a lot from it and would look for similar projects in the future. (Student
evaluation)
Dita grew professionally through this project. Her design ideas occasionally
seemed unrealistic, her affinity with engaging an audience and natural curiosity
around the wool production generated innovative, humorous work. In a similar way
to the outdoor art company Artichoke who produce Lumiere and have the mission
to invade public spaces with extraordinary and ambitious art.
Karen
Karen was a second year mature student on the BA Photography programme, she
already worked in a voluntary capacity for local children’s’ charities. Her skills and
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approach definitely brought the project together in a cohesive manner as she was able
to engage with all involved, at all times highly professional and organised.
Wool Yorkshire was a speculative bid to provide documentary photography
for a cross college project, but resulted in much wider photography brief involving
studio fashion and event photography. My responsibilities included documentary
photographs of the textile environment and of fellow students creating their art work
using textile materials. I also became involved in studio photography for student
portfolios, press releases and event photography of the launch night. My
photographs appeared in print and online publications, websites and the media. In
addition to specific photographic skills across the genres, I also developed
professional skills in dealing with clients and agencies and had to consider the
professional side of my work in terms of legal and copyright issues. Contacts I had
made with the textile industry through the Wool Yorkshire collaboration, provided
me with an invaluable basis for my final year project, and the resulting
photographs were selected to feature in a regional exhibition ‘One’s to Watch’. My
completed final year project was also featured in the Guardian’s Graduate selection
of 2014. More recently, I submitted the photographs I had taken in the textile
factory to a national print competition and was successful in being awarded a £750
print bursary. Awareness of my photography via the project, also led to further
professional photographic work with the College’s marketing department. When I
made the initial proposal to the project team, I could not have imagined that the
project would provide me with so many different professional and vocational
opportunities, in addition to developing project management, communication,
presentation, team work, legal and financial skills. (Student evaluation).
Karen brought direction and openness to take calculated risks to the project
with her photography work. Showing the importance of shared collaboration and
giving autonomy to students and practitioners.
Sarah a BA Interdisciplinary Art & Design student, had previously completed her
Access course at the college; she was a first year student when applying for the
project.
I took on the Wool Week project mainly to stay match fit over the summer
and to put what I’d learned in the first year into practice. It was a big chunk of
work that went towards PPP (Professional practice) but more importantly it was the
insight into my practice that has been useful. I learned a lot from the project in ways
that I didn’t expect. I expected to gain in experience from working on a live
brief and a public exhibition, which I did but I also learned about myself and my
practice. How I think about what I do and how other people see what I do and how
different those points of view can be. Specifically, I saw the hat s as a conceptual art
piece, the overwhelming majority of feedback I received was hugely positive, but
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saw the work as a fashion/accessory, as something commercial, saleable. I saw
connections between material, place and history – other people saw nice hats. I
think with hindsight it made me feel a bit misunderstood, and that has made me
explore questions surrounding how work is put before an audience, how meaning
can be developed through display, to think more deeply about what the conceptual
content of my work means to me and how that is presented to an audience.
Sarah’s installation piece also featured at Sunny Bank Mills’ Ones to Watch
exhibition 2014.
I’m starting to think now about what happens after college and it is frankly
terrifying, but I feel much better prepared to take on those challenges, having been
involved with live projects like Wool Week while I still have the support of College.
Jess
Jess had graduated from BA Printed Textile, about to embark on the MA Textiles
at Manchester Metropolitan University. Her final collection work examined the
skyline and built environment in Yorkshire so the Wool Yorkshire project created
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an opportunity to take this further. Her four metre lengths were hung from the
balconies at the cross roads in VQ.
Wool Yorkshire was a project which, for me, worked as a catalyst within my
practice of textile design to encourage the pursuit of further collaborative ventures
with working textile mills and museums. Throughout my degree I developed a keen
interest in textile heritage and my studies is Yorkshire led me to explore the woollen
industry specifically. When the opportunity came up to be involved in a project
with a mill still producing woollen goods I could see the potential it had to work
alongside my studies in a very exciting way.
The project came about at the time I was spending between finishing my
printed textile degree and beginning my textile practice Masters so it was a stepping
stone between the two. On completion of the project it gave me the confidence to
approach other companies and heritage institutions with design proposals.
Following Wool Yorkshire I knew that there was a place within heritage for textile
design and have made it the aim of my MA studies to continue exploring how. I am
currently in the final stages of a print design project with a Textile Museum in
Lancashire and am hoping to participate in another one with a different museum at
the end of this year.
Keeping our textile heritage alive and continuing it through future generations
is growing in importance and contemporary textile design is just one way in which we
can engage this generation with it. Heritage and the Arts are both experiencing cuts
at present, but so is education. This seems to open the door to possibilities which
connect all these aspects of culture. Getting artists, makers and designers involved in
projects which publicise and celebrate our heritage and using it to teach younger
generations the value of its continuation.
Networking museums and working mills in a way which allows them to
support and encourage each other.
We have such a wealth of heritage available to us and I believe the arts are an
avenue which could make it accessible to all. (student evaluation)
Lilli
Lilli was a graduating Fine Art student, had experimented with yarn bombing and
similar installation pieces in her own practice. The Wool Yorkshire Project
developed this further with more illustrative pieces using the yarns manufactured by
SIL.
Wool week was the first exhibition I exhibited in after my degree in fine art.
My artwork in my final year of my degree predominantly involved using wool. I
thoroughly enjoyed being able to work with people in the local community, use
locally sourced materials and have my work shown in the town centre. Out of the
people in the exhibition it was great to see how one media could be used in so many
different ways. In the future I definitely would want to get involved in making art
116
work in the local community. This work has helped on my PGCE course as well
over the last twelve months.
CONCLUSION
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would also need to consider stronger support from line management whilst still
retaining the opportunity to work laterally, between the lines.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Deane, P. (1957). The Output of the British Woolen Industry in the Eighteenth
Century. The Journal of Economic History, 17, pp 207-223. Gregory, D.
(1982). Regional Transformation and Industrial Revolution A geography of
the Yorkshire Woollen Industry. London: The Macmillan Press.
Hudson, P. (1986). The Genesis of Industrial Capital: A Study of the West Riding
Wool Textile Industry c. 1750-1850 T. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
Reckendrees, A. (2006). Diverse Paths to Factory Production 1780s-1840s. Reading:
EHS- Conference Reading.
Smith, T., & Howarth, O. (2006). Textile Voices A century of Mill Life. Bradford:
The Amadeus Press.
Wenger, E. (1998). Communities of Practice learning, Meaning and Identity. New
York: Cambridge University Press.
AFFILIATION
Sharon Bainbridge
Professional and External Engagement, Leeds College of Art
[email protected]
118
VAIDA JURGILĖ
ILONA TANDZEGOLSKIENĖ
ELENA TREPULĖ
9
MODELLING THE NEEDS OF YOUNG FAMILIES
IN RECONCILING CAREER AND FAMILY
INTRODUCTION
Literature survey on the topic of parenthood revealed an idea of role sharing among
the parents. Research in Lithuania has shown that different families have different
role divisions where some families are more man-dominated and some – more
woman-dominated (Uzdila, 2012). However, the aspects of responsibility, family
planning, career design, problem solving related to returning to work, foreseing
possibilities for flexible schedule and professional development are analyzed by both
partners together. Shared and conscious responsibility and role adjustment is defined
as parenthood – father‘s and mother‘s presence in the family, their unity and
cooperation in performing social roles. Contemporary individuals tend to take on
many roles and responsibilities related to their family life and career, and that is
leading to family and work conflict. Young adults are eager to intensively improve in
their professional life whereas some are confronted by challenges and contradictions
forcing them to modify their career of even change their vocation. The intention of
the research was to analyze: the possibilities to reconcile family and career
requirements for young families with children (under 12); ability to solve problems
related to family needs; role tensions related to solving problems and possiblities for
their reconciliation.
The goal of this paper is to present a family and career reconciliation model
for young families, based on theoretical findings and qualitative research data
(narratives). The object of the research is reconciliation of career and family.
The data was received from narratives of 15 young families 29-36 years old
(with children up to 12 years) who participated in the research. The children did not
participate in the research. Families were selected from different cities and towns in
Lithuania and had 1-3 children. Families are encoded with the age of family
members (father‘s and mother‘s age, children in the family and their age). The
research is based on the analysis of the narratives (Søderberg, 2006) i.e. the retold
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life episodes connected with children upbringing, work and family reconciliation
opportunities and changes in career. The article presents a theoretical discussion and
moves on to the presentation of the narrative data based on the paradigmatic
analysis of the data (Virgilaite-Meckauskaite & Mazeikiene, 2012) by distributing
them into categories prepared in the process of the theoretical analysis.
There are different theories that are being used to analyze the relationship of work
and family. The most dominant is a conflict theory (Parasuraman&Greenhouse, 2002).
Due to the fact that time and human energy resources are limited, the conflict is
inevitable (Hill, 2005). According to Coser (1974) concept, family and work are
greedy institutions, seeking for unconditional and undivided loyalty from individuals.
Working parents are facing conflicts in different situations, e.g., a working parent has
to work late, so may miss his/her son’s sports game or performance. If he/she is not
able to stay late at work because of his/her child’s game, the parent may feel like
he/she is letting down his/her employer. Recent research has conceptualized that
work-family conflict means a multidimensional construct with opportunities of
work-family and family-work conflict theory (Micheal et al, 2009).
A theory of gender roles explains the difference between socially and culturally
predicted roles that males and females are expected to perform in implementing
their activities in different realms. In the context of our research, gender roles
predict a range of responsibilities that men and women are expected to perform as
professionals at work and in the family. As Parsons (Brockhouse, 2008) developed a
nuclear family model in 1955, he presented and compared a traditional and non-
traditional view of gender roles. He believed that women were bound for more
expressive roles as emotional ties between family members and child bearing,
whereas, men were to fulfill more external and instrumental roles at work related to
career achievements and financial provision. The Parsons model was used to
illustrate the extreme expectations on gender roles. It is more socially acceptable that
a woman is taking more responsibility for the children needs and house-keeping
duties possibly on the cost of smaller working hours and less responsibilities at work
and consequently lower career possibilities, while for a man it is more socially
acceptable to undertake an active role in his working life, with longer working hours,
bigger responsibilities and higher career possibilities.
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FACILITATION THEORY
Family Career
Dual-career couple/one-career couple
Double-earner couple/single-earner couple
Work Family
RECONCILIATION
In the face of the analyzed three strains of conflict, facilitation and roles the
dynamics of families dealing with career and family reconciliation situations, families
are also effected by a set of internal and external factors that model the intensity of
their situations. This forms a theoretical model of family and work reconciliation
that may be related to dual-career of one-career couples as well as double earner or
single earner couples that have no career intentions, but are financially oriented.
121
CAREER AND FAMILY LIFE
122
RESULTS OF THE NARRATIVES
The major topic that was revealed in analyzing the reconcilliation of family and
career in the narratives was “Experiences of manifold conflict” that includes the
following topics: “family influence on worklife, mother‘s inner conflict, searching for
ballance between work and family, difficulties of time planning, challenges of
coordinating different activities”.
Families that participated in the narrative notice tension between family and
work when family needs are to be combined with work challenges (P12):
“There is tension to adjust work and family life due to constant burden
of commuting kids to and from school and their after-school activities
[...] if you could give yourself to work and not think about the fact that it
is 12.00 now and I fly to drive my kid home. At our age – being 30+ you
are not able to express yourself to your maximum – to do career or to
devote yourself to work if you like it” (Family P 12: husband 32 yrs.,
wife 32 yrs., daughter 9 yrs., daughter 6 yrs.).
“First, it is your job where you spend the most of your time - 50%, after
work you give your evening time to your child – preparing homeworks
and what he wants – reading a book, doing some crafts – it is about
30%, where as 20% is communication with a child, doing household
chores and maybe reading a book in the evening when children are
asleep” (Family P6: husband 33 yrs., wife 34 yrs., son 5 yrs., daughter 3
yrs.).
123
achieve at work as well as to cater all the family members to make them
all feel good. You sacrifice your own personal time to improve and to
learn in order to contribute to the family welfare” (Family P13: husband
32 yrs., wife 32 yrs., son 6 yrs., son 3yrs., daughter 4 mnths.).
An example of family P2 may illustrate that mothers who decide to have their
children and study or work, experience inner conflict of multiple parralel roles of
being a mother, a student or an employee. Several mothers articulate their doubts of
such earlier decissions and when analyzing their experiences conclude that maybe
they better had to say „no“ and devote more time to the family:
There also is a problem of time planning when one has to consider not only
adequate time planning for work and family as such but also planning one‘s attention
to family members and yourself as a person (P6):
Families also meet situations where they have to combine different activities
and perform their roles. Sometimes a solution is a temporary withdrawal (P14):
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The other important trend that is analyzed in this paper is related to the topic
“Adjustment of family needs to avoid conflict”. This topic relates to six subtopics:
purposeful family planning, symbiosis of relationships and agreement, extended family support, value
of partner‘s support, increasing responsibility in the family, search for compromises.
Purposeful planning related to family life and family planning is mentioned as
an important component trying to avoid conflict (P6):
“In our case we were planning our family – having one child after the
other. This made family and career reconcilliation purposeful and also
quite simple. It came out naturally that the first child was born and the
mother stayed, the father continued working, he probably did not even
question that even though he had really helped a lot, but his work did
not suffer. When the second child was born, nothing really changed for
both of us” (FamilyP6: husband 33 yrs., wife 34 yrs., son 5 yrs., daughter
3 yrs.).
“We prioritized that it is important to stay with the child in his second
year as well. We truly support each other, encourage improving, learning
and trying new activities, etc. However, at the moment we are engaged in
the most important and major activity – preparation of a new person for
life. It is important that life goals of both would coinside, because if one
would only care about his career and the other – only about the family, it
would really be very” (Family P8: husband 28 yrs., wife 29 yrs., daughter
6 mnths.).
“In our case the most complicated part is when children get sick, and it
is really very convenient when someone from the family may take care of
them. However, our parents still have many years till they get retired. So
if their work would change and they could not help us, and we would he
to hire a nanny, we could not afford staying that long on a sickness
leave” (Family P13: husband 32 yrs., wife 32 yrs., son 6 yrs., son 3yrs.,
daughter 4 mnths.).
125
Husband‘s support is identified as one of the most important factors for
reconcilliation when career and family needs‘ planning as well as trust and harmony
is considered (P8):
“My idea is that in the very beginning the mother is the most important,
while the father‘s role increases as the child grows. I, as a man may give
my kids the things that their mother may not in our case. Both our
children are girls but I may also contribute to their development in
sports – bikes, swimming, games – I start their development and my role
is increasing” (Family P 12: husband 32 yrs., wife 32 yrs., daughter 9
yrs., daughter 6 yrs.).
Seeking to agree and solve the situations families also mention compromises.
Family 7 husband mentions that previously he used to devote his family only the
weekend as he was working on the week days, while his wife used to take more
responsibilities during the week:
“For me my studies did not interfare – I simply had to use the efforts to
reconcile my studies and the family. I refused my free time for at least
two years. So it was work, my textboos and family as much as it was
possible. My wife had to take more load of child care, while I tried to
spend more time with the family on the weekends” (Family P7: husband
31yrs., wife 32yrs., daughter 3 yrs.).
The third topic is more oriented towards designing and changes in career that
are related to changes in the family. The main topic “Individual and dual career
design in the family” includes the subtopics: purposefull career planning, one family member
career planning for one-career couples, career design for dual-career couples, work activity of two
persons not seeking for career - double-earner couples, motives for postponed career, reasons for
suspended career, searching personal ID in the vocational context.
126
Agreements and support are important for families with small children when
they are planning their careers. As family 12 mentions, it is important to seek for
compromises and decide up to the given situation which parent should be more
active in career planning:
Parents emphasize that it is important to think not only about one‘s career,
but also to take into consideration the needs of the children and family. The
daughter in the family P8 is very small but when planning their careers the parents
feel a need to stay with their daughter as long as she needs. They also emphasize the
importance of parents having the same attitudes on the child raising and their career.
“We made a decission [wife], that I will take care of our daughter as the
baby needs me, and husband will take care of her for the second year. I
[husband]have also wanted to contribute to growing our daughter and I
am happy that there is a possibility for the parents to exchange places in
those two first years24 ” (Family P8: husband 28 yrs., wife 29 yrs.,
daughter 6 mnths.).
There are also several different career planning trends – these are dual-earner
couples, one-career couples, double-earner couples. Family P9 husband has pointed out that
thinking of the financial stability influence one of the parents to take more
responsibility and to plan one‘s career for higher position that is related to higher
wages:
“Better wages was really felt, we talk, discuss and search for solutions
related to work a lot. However, when it is not so tight financially, wife is
also not upset even if I work more [...] I started looking for additional
jobs exactly due to this „However“, because when you have two
children, expenses rocket, besides we have a mortgage, so I really had to
do something to improve the living conditions to all of us” (Family P 9:
husband 33 yrs.,wife 34 yrs., daughter 6 yrs., daughter 4 yrs.).
24In Lithuania one of the parents may take a maternity/paternity leave for a maximum of 2
years with partial salary compensated.
127
As family P14 indicates, they did not consider dual career, but tried not to
restrict each other as well as to relate their career plans to family needs and values:
“Our mutual contribution are children and cherishing the family, keeping
traditions and values, supporting each other and going on. And of
course, I think, we feel responsibility that you have to keep going and
going forward. It is a good question if we are seeking for career or have
goals. Well, you just see that your partner would be happy and help him
a bit” (Family P14: husband 30 yrs., wife 29 yrs., son 6 yrs., daughter 4
yrs.).
Family P8 indicates that they are not „careerists“ and family needs have always
been more important.
The analysis of family narratives has revealed a very strong motive for a
postponed career (P12). In such a case one partner is adjusting to the partner‘s needs
and meanwhile is thinking about partner‘s welfare and a possibility to realize himself
once the situation changes:
“When the baby is small you really refuse many things. We do have roles
and his position is more responsible. His career [...] in our family is more
important. For example, I had an opportunity go abroad with my family
and have a job with good wages, but I refused as who he would be there,
what his career would be worth? Financially perhaps it would have been
easier, but he would not realize himself” (Family P 12: husband 32 yrs.,
wife 32 yrs., daughter 9 yrs., daughter 6 yrs.).
There are also cases of suspended career (P5). It is usually related to studies
that are also meant for further steps up in the career ladder, where as getting to
know about pregrancy, leads to refuse the idea:
128
wanted to give myself fully to him [...] ” (Family P5: husband 34 yrs.,
wife 33 yrs., daughter 6 yrs, daughter 4 yrs.
There are mothers who return after maternal leave and get actively involved
into the professional career. However, when their children grow they start feeling a
need to try themselves in other areas and get established in their activity:
“I really have ideas to change my direction. I think that even when your
children grow older, if the job is taking too much of your free time, you
need to look for other solutions. I am doing my best to change my work
direction. [...] there always is your career and your child” (Family P2:
husband 36 yrs., wife 34 yrs., daughter 7 yrs.).
Empirical data (narrative) analysis has allowed to expand the elements of the
theoretical model by revealing internal and external factors as well as specifying the
system of facilitation, emphasizing the aspects that are more contributing or more
interfering with the reconciliation of career and family. The model was suplemented
with the factors of career designing and maturity of family relations. The factor of
family maturity is analyzed through the elements contributing to the reconciliation
(deliberate and timely family planning, carrying family burdens and responsibilities,
symbiosis of relations and self-realization, etc.) and elements generating tension in
the process of family and career reconciliation (a family model of a man bread-
bearer, who is responsible for the monetary provision, different partner attitudes
towards career and self-realization needs, etc.).
129
Several new tendencies have revealed themselves and contributed as well as
partly modified a theoretical model of young families‘ career and family
reconciliation model. The major block relates to the work-family/family-work
conflict (Carlso et al, 2000; Ahman, 2008) and to role conflict, personal inner
conflict and family activity adjustment conflict. Besides, it has been noticed that
young parents quite often think about changing their work place, however, due to an
inner conflict related fear of temporary loosing financial family stability, they
postpone changing their workplace for the future when their children are older.
Therefore, the research has revealed the importance of career designing and the fact
whether a family is single or dual career family. At this point the change of roles
comes out, when parents have to continue with the regular duties and also perform
their new parental responsibilities, what requires rigid planning and discipline.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The financial support provided by the Research Council of Lithuania for the
research is gratefully acknowledged (Project Reg. No. MIP-075/2014).
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AFFILIATIONS
Ilona Tandzegolskienė
Department of Education
Vytautas Magnus University
[email protected]
Vaida Jurgilė
Department of Education
Vytautas Magnus University
[email protected]
Elena Trepulė
Department of Education
Vytautas Magnus University
[email protected]
132
ILONA TANDZEGOLSKIENĖ
VAIDA JURGILĖ
10
THE ATTITUDE OF EMPLOYERS TO PARENTHOOD
AND WORK RECONCILIATION OPPORTUNITIES
AND RELEVANT MEANS IN RESPECT OF YOUNG FAMILIES
INTRODUCTION
133
OPPORTUNITIES FOR PARENTHOOD AND WORK RECONCILIATION:
EMPLOYER‘S APPROACH
Moen (2003) is analysing the issue of outdated attitude to working hours, workweeks
and career paths in the light of the fact that in the contemporary society both
spouses are members of the labour market and still have to meet the needs of their
growing children. For dual-earner households time is always an issue – with two
jobs, two commutes, long work hours, high job demands, business travel, several
cars, children, ailing parents, time is built into jobs and make a continuous full-time,
what raises a necessity to re-imagine and reconfigure work hours or workweeks and
occupational career paths and working modes (telecommuting could be among the
options) to address the widening gaps between the time needs of employees and
their families. Parents who have their professional and family life are using their
potential, creativity and excellence in professional, social and personal domains, but
dual-income couples have less time together, their schedules are complex to the
limits and that reduces marriage satisfaction and levels of happiness.
Woman/man (in case of paternal leave) returns to her work full-time or part
time after the designated paid parental leave is over. In this case the family will
function on dual career regime and enjoy the advantage of two salaries in the family
and parent’s minor professional and career absenteeism, need for professional re-
skilling and upgrading. However, this will also increase stress levels for the mother
and the whole family in terms of early morning routines, time spent for commuting
to/from care centres and parents work in terms of very little time left to spend with
the children, tiredness, lack of sleep, dealing with emergencies like children’s
sickness, attending day-care or school events. When trying to decrease this tension
some women choose to gradually transfer into self-employed career path (Hewlet,
2007).
Another alternative is transferring into self-employed business thus making
more possibilities to reconcile their active career, level of income and caring for
children as well as providing them with more educational activities outside school,
like sports, arts, etc. In this pathway it is suggested (Brown, 2013) to transfer to self-
employment gradually, possibly starting from part-time employment and entering
independent business or freelance career and later getting fully on your own. This
option reconciles work/family conflict but is not eliminating one. There remains
tension between the self-employed woman’s time management in terms of work,
child care and after school activities. The boundary between work and parenthood
responsibilities gets void and it is important to set certain rules and priorities in
order to succeed in both. A self-employed parent combining own business or
freelance career and children care has to adopt a work and family pattern that is
acceptable to them, e.g., individual work pace, time of day when she is the most
productive and the most creative, physical place to work, etc., in other words it is
134
important to create a unique working culture that helps to make the best of the time
and resources available for a given person.
The state policy is oriented towards the employment system encouraging
individuals, men and women, regardless of their family obligations to work by
developing family friendly workplaces, expanding the application of flexible work
organisation forms, stimulating the dialogue between social partners, reducing the
gap between salaries for men and women and nurturing the Lithuanian human
capital that supports the competitiveness of our state. All over the EU employers
on their own accord can provide support for employees that would offer
opportunities to reconcile professional and family life effectively. These could be
family holidays, maternity, paternal or foster care leaves and allowances, as well as
unpaid holidays with the right to continue career and holidays in unexpected cases,
for example the illness of the child.
According to the research (Hill, 2005), support at work is associated with less
work family conflict and higher work, family and individual well-being. Family-
friendly workplace practices are offering flexibility and emergency on-site
nurseries/crèches in cases of unexpected childcare emergencies or „care gaps“ or
on-site day camps for school holidays, job-sharing schemes, subsidies for childcare,
entitlement to work from home, possibilities to change to part-time, etc. Different
economic data and research confirm that creative and open-minded companies that
adapt family-friendly workplace practices gain in terms of performance (Vermeulen,
2011). It may be argued that these companies are generally well-doing in any case,
but it is also true that part of their success is due to the supportive attitude to their
employees, who pay back in terms of loyalty and contribute to the financial success
of the company.
A survey conducted with 450 manufacturing firms in Germany, France, UK
and US (Bloom et al, 2010) made in-depth investigation of family-friendly workplace
practices (FFWP) and relation to company productivity. The FFWP is considered as
options for the workers to choose less working hours, offering child-care in the
premises, child-care subsidies, working from home in normal working hours in case
of unexpected illness emergency, etc. Bloom et al (2010) also found that firms with a
higher proportion of female managers and more skilled workers and also firms that
implement quality management procedures tend to implement more FFWP.
Implementation of FFWP bears considerable expenses for the company, but it may
improve employee retention and morale. This is especially to be said to the fact that
some high skilled and company-specific employees may be retained from choosing
other alternatives. Implementation of FFWP in companies with higher proportion
of female managers is explained by the assumption that women take more family
caring duties and may demand more FFWPs and being managers they are in a better
position to implement these practices beneficial for their own interests.
135
The research has found positive correlation between firm productivity and
FFWP, but also indicated that this positive correlation disappears when variables
such as quality management measures are taken into consideration – in other words,
companies that implement FFWP also tend to have quality management measures
and it makes less clear which aspect is making more influence on the companies
productivity. However, despite the fact that strategic management is looking for
financial results increase of the company, introduction of FFWP has a positive
impact on a company’s employee well-being psychological and physical, which
definitely has a positive influence on the productivity and achievements of the
organization as well. As correlation of implementing FFWP and company’s financial
increase may be questionable when controlling the variable of quality management
practices (Bloom et al, 2010), it is clear that FFWPs are relate to an endeavour not to
lose key skilled employees and also resonates with recent works on corporate social
responsibility (Brammer and Millington, 2008).
The challenges of family-friendly policy in the process of work and family
reconciliation depend on the legal basis of the country, for example on decisions of
state institutions, work culture and most often on the relationship between
employees and employers (Kempe and Otonkorpi-Lehtoranta, 2006). Allowances
provided by employers, based on flexible work organization forms like shorter work
days and sliding schedules, favourable approach to maternity leave and problem
solving with the employee who is raising a child have the greatest impact on the
reconciliation family and work.
METHODOLOGY
The article presents the data of the research “Parenthood and work reconciliation
opportunities and relevant means for young families” based on the interview with
employers. The research was carried out in February-April of 2015. 14 employers
(see Table 1) from different institutions and counties took part in the research. The
sample was created with the help of targeted selection method in non-probability
sampling when the list of research participants includes organisations with different
activity status.
136
Table 1. The characteristics of the interview participants
137
PRESENTATION OF RESULTS
The analysis of research results accentuated one of the central themes – “Creation of
work environment favourable for young families” covering two categories “Creation
of work environment favourable for young families and forms of support” and
“Creation of work schedule suitable for young families”.
The first category “Creation of work environment favourable for young
families and forms of support” encompasses four subcategories emphasising
information conveyance and introduction of valid legal documents, provision of
allowances for young families in work places, indication of favourable means and
forms of support and opportunities for carer planning (Fig.1).
Employers most often discuss the issues related to allowances and validation
of the needs of young families with the personnel office. Employers (E8, E9, E10,
E13) state that they know the main aspects of giving allowances and additional days
to young parents (mother’s day and father’s day) and coordinate these issues with
their employees. They are trying to determine the needs of their employees and
constantly inform them about the changes in the law system. One of the employers
- E9 noted:
Employers actively support the idea of maternity and paternal leaves and are
especially in favour of men who choose paternal leaves. Employers themselves try to
adapt to emerging changes when in the case of maternity or paternal leaves they
have to look for substitution. Employer E14 maintains that it takes a lot of effort to
adjust to new situations in organisations where consistent planning and compliance
with schedules are exceptionally important:
“There is a law now allowing men to take one month of paternal leave –
it would be silly not to use it, as it is very useful for the father and the
child to spend a month together and is helpful for the wife, as well. But
there rehearsals, planned performances and you can’t do anything. You
have to change plans, make adjustments with the director and the
creative group. Of course, it does not happen often, but we had such
cases and we had to adapt”.
Young parents with small children are given the opportunity to take a day –
off once a month and use it for purposes of the family. Such days are determined in
138
advance in discussions with the employer, therefore they do not cause significant
inconveniences for the employees of the company and work results. Employer E10
maintains that today parents raising small children know their rights and are using
them and that is only natural. It is very important that employees would be informed
about the changes and new state decrees in this area.
Figure 1.
The tendencies of creation of work environment favourable for young families and forms of support.
139
period of the project implementation. After it was over in 2012, the kindergarten still
continued its activity with the support and funds of the company. It is obvious that
realisation of this idea is not an easy task, but quite many employers are thinking
about it. The head of the state institution working in the art sphere (E14) also
mentions a possibility to establish a kindergarten near the work place. The head of
the policlinics department (E13) speaks about her plans to set up a room for
children:
The deputy director of the pro-gymnasium (E5) notes that the school
attempted to rejuvenate the staff and at present 13 new employees raising small
children are working there. She emphasises the importance of goodwill and positive
attitude:
140
chooses to commit to the family and small children, the employer backs up this
decision, as well.
The second category “Creation of work schedule suitable for young families”
covers five subcategories emphasising flexible work schedule, employer’s goodwill in
discussing the schedule, opportunity to speak about the employees’ needs, ways of
resolving problems and job specificity that does not allow to adjust the work
schedule (Fig.2).
When looking into the opportunities of flexible work schedule, employers
say that such issues as employee’s wishes and needs in connection to work schedules
and future work results are discussed in the workplace. The school director (E5)
states that they are trying not to plan morning classes when preparing the timetable
or “to make some day of the week free, i.e. methodical day”. It is also notable that
employers are willing to use various ICT tools in order to facilitate the employees’
situation when adjustments are to be made in the case of family problems related to
the child’s illness (E10). Such way of working especially suits the employees who
work with projects. This idea is also supported by the interview participant E8:
This idea is supported by the head of the higher school department (E3) and
the school director (E1):
141
has to work longer, we change the work hours so that it would be more
convenient for the family to deal with their problems”.
The employers also say that opportunities are created for young parents who
have pre-school children to work part of the day.
Figure 2.
Creation of flexible schedule for a young family and the goodwill of the employer.
142
(E12) remarks that she does not use additional means as she simply knows who of
her employees need and additional free day and tries to find a compromise. The
head of the policlinics department (E13) says that there are different situations at
work, children have high temperature, they have to go to the doctor so it is natural
that employees sometimes ask to let them leave for a couple of hours or sometimes
they even take a sick leave. In such cases they make some changes in everyday
routine activities and this is only a situation at work that has to be solved.
The school director (E5) confirms that problems are tackled flexibly and
they look for a teacher who could substitute for the colleague whose children are ill.
If unexpected situations happen in the family, as employer (E7) maintains, they
always react promptly and coordinate their activities with the employee. The owner
of the photo service enterprise (E11) notes that: “if there is no urgent work in the
company and the employee has some days when the workload is smaller, we allow
him/her to leave work”. It is also maintained that work results are more important
than the fact that they are achieved in the workplace (E10).
It is noted that some working environments are complex and not favourable
for flexible work schedule, e.g. the department of social workers in the hospital. The
head of this department (E13) says that there are strict rules in this institution, time
accounting statements are to be filled in and the work character is not so favourable
for flexible work schedule as it is a budget institution working from 8.00 to 17.00.
Still it is noted that there are efforts to coordinate the situation with the employees
and give them an opportunity to leave work for a couple of hours or for a half of the
day for serious reasons. The owner of the private limited company (E12) states that
there is no possibility to compensate for the hours out of work, because the
company is in the centre of the town and it is also impossible to work on weekends
as there will be too much noise. This company simply makes changes in the daily
routine if one of the workers does not come. It is also important that this company
employs specialists who are experts in their field and, therefore, they are difficult to
be substituted for.
Employers say that they always try to hear the needs of employees and make
possible adjustments following their requests for holidays and days-off. The
employees can distribute their workload in accordance with family needs. Interview
participant E8 says that he always tries to ensure that employees would have
comfortable working environment, that they would have an opportunity to openly
speak about their problems, special needs and troubles in the family if there are
such. A suitable solution, satisfying all the parties concerned can be found in
discussion.
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DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
When pursuing family and work reconciliation, it is important that family members
would actively participate in the dialogue with the employer and would take part in
the processes of family and work reconciliation which include understanding of state
regulated documents about allowances for families raising small children, discussion
of work schedule and alternatives for work rescheduling, ability to speak about
personal needs in the organisation and development of the dialogue with the
employer and colleagues. The stereotypical approach that a woman stays at home
with a child and the man goes to work has been moved to the background and is no
longer popular. At present both parents are actively involved in reconciliation of
working activity and parenthood when the roles of both mother and father have
assimilated in the economic sense, i.e. they are both equally responsible for the
planning of the family budget and reconciling of professional activity with family
needs. It is significant that discussions lead to a conclusion about the necessity to
create conditions and opportunities for a family to develop abilities to solve
problems, build contacts and make commitments. The present research shows that
employers are positive about young families; they want to develop a dialogue with
employees and support them. Employers could show initiative in organising
consultations to employees how to reconcile family and work and seminars on the
issues of work and family needs adjustment. They could turn to experts for help and
employ other means enabling staff members in an organisation, as well as their
families to successfully adapt to the changed life conditions or to cope with
temporary difficulties or those of the transitional period.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The financial support provided by the Research Council of Lithuania for the
research and proof-reading of English language is gratefully acknowledged (Project
Reg. No. MIP-075/2014).
REFERENCES
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AFFILIATION
Ilona Tandzegolskienė
Department of Education
Vytautas Magnus University
[email protected]
Vaida Jurgilė
Department of Education
Vytautas Magnus University
[email protected]
145
NOELIA RODRIGUES PEREIRA REGO
11
TRAJETÓRIAS MAMBEMBES E GRADIENTES,
PERCURSOS DESCONTÍNUOS: TRABALHO X ESCOLA
O DUELO QUE RONDA AS JUVENTUDES
DAS CLASSES POPULARES
146
Atrelando o conceito de juventude gradiente a uma das vertentes da cidadania,
que é a educação, o jovem, abarcado pelas políticas sociais e de expansão da escola
fica numa pressão gradiente de querer se envolver com os vários elementos
cognitivos que lhe são ofertados, porém sem as bases necessárias que lhe confiram a
legitimidade e as possíveis possibilidades para tanto. Cobrado em casa pela família
que, em muitas vezes, não possui o capital educacional, social e econômico para dar
o devido incentivo aos estudos dos filhos, acabam por reproduzir o que também
tiveram de seus pais: o valor ao trabalho em detrimento dos estudos (uma vez que o
primeiro se faz mais emergencial dado o contexto econômico em que vivem). Esse
jovem, então pressionado em casa, não terá muita escolha e tenderá a assumir um
papel muita das vezes contrário àquele que sua vontade lhe seduz. Como resultado,
terá de “dar conta” de seu papel social para responder às demandas de seu universo
familiar, de modo que, em sua maioria, vai cair naquela velha conhecida trajetória,
que não tardou em aparecer também em nossos estudos:
Assim, como num pêndulo, numa gradiência, num caleidoscópio, esse jovem
alterna ora na luta contra sua vitimização, ora na luta contra uma espécie de
endeusamento, que o faz vítima e/ou vilão na trama social e que o impede, muita das
vezes, de assumir sua própria identidade. Contudo, para este conceito, oscilações de
outras ordens se tornam mais pertinentes. É como quando ser jovem e estudante ou
ser jovem-estudante-trabalhador25, tendo de abandonar os estudos por conta do trabalho
ou do cuidado com os filhos, se tornam variáveis de extrema importância para
defendermos as muitas clivagens ou as muitas “gradiências” porque passam os
sujeitos juvenis durante esta fase da vida. É deste modo que nos deparamos com as
juventudes gradientes.
25Categoria que está sendo estudada e ampliada por mim agora no decurso da pesquisa de
doutoramento.
147
Marcados por ideais possivelmente inatingíveis ao longo dessa fase da vida,
dado o contexto social em que vivem, é desta feita que o conceito de juventude
gradiente se vale ao tentar evidenciar parte das muitas “oscilações sociais” que vem
marcar profundamente as trajetórias e os destinos biográficos de inúmeros jovens
nascidos nas classes populares. Por outro lado, o caráter mambembe também está pari
passu com os alunos que fazem de tudo para irem à escola, seja para “filar” a janta,
seja para buscar o diploma, seja para trocar conhecimento e “recuperar o tempo
perdido”. Fato é que deixam filhos, marido, esposa, bicos que poderiam fazer a
noite, mas estão ali, naquela sala de aula se dando uma nova chance, improvisando,
fazendo malabares, mas estão ali.
Somado a isso, essas juventudes vão mostrando o caráter espontâneo, que
caracteriza o mambembe. Ainda quando formam o que eu chamaria de seus “núcleos
de estudo no pátio da escola”, aquele espaço formal (por fazer parte da escola) se
torna informal ou não-formal (dado o uso que dele fazem) quando os estudantes
fazem dele sua roda diária de conversa, com inúmeras críticas ao funcionamento da
escola e seu ensino, ou quando surgem as conversas pessoais sobre o final de
semana, ou ainda quando se predispõem a ensinar uns aos outros a matéria perdida
ou não entendida, por exemplo. No entanto, para além das conversas e “fofocas”
diárias sobre seus pares, aqueles jovens estudantes se juntam naquele espaço e põem-
se a trocar informações sobre o conteúdo da aula passada, da prova do dia e mesmo
dos próximos tópicos a serem abordados, como diariamente presenciava; e ainda
informações sobre empregos e oportunidades laborais locais, em sua maioria bicos e
outros trabalhos ditos formais, mas abaixo da média do salário mínimo, ou seja,
precarizados. Tudo isso se deve, sobretudo, ao curto tempo que tem para tirarem
dúvidas em sala e ainda por conta de um curso com um currículo parco e resumido,
carregado de deficiências. Mesmo sem se dar conta disso eles e elas, faziam dali,
daquele lugar, um núcleo de estudos e espaço de troca, portanto, mambembe, por
excelência.
É ainda dentro desse contexto mambembe que residiria também a relação
professor-aluno expressa no relato:
“eles fingem que ensinam e a gente finge que aprende, porque é nóis que
tá e é nóis que sabe o que gente passa. O que a gente quer mesmo é
receber o diploma e sair fora!”.
148
catalisa essa singularidade, esse ciclo da vida que gira em torno dessa população, se
descobre essa juventude como classe.
Em 1826, sobre educação e trabalho, a Encyclopaedia Britannica exprime seu
significado político-social. A nação que não queira falhar na luta pelo êxito
comercial, com tudo o que isso implica para a vida nacional e para a civilização, deve
considerar que as suas indústrias sejam alimentadas com uma oferta constante de
trabalhadores adequadamente equipados tanto em termos de inteligência geral como
de treino técnico. Também no terreno político, a crescente democratização das
instituições torna necessário que o estadista prudente trate de proporcionar uma
vasta difusão de conhecimentos e o florescimento de um alto padrão de inteligência
entre o povo, especialmente para os grandes Estados imperiais, os quais confiam as
mais momentosas questões do mundo político ao arbítrio da voz popular.
Historicamente e até os dias atuais é através deste novo modelo de
trabalhador, empregado pelas ideologias neoliberais então em ascensão - tendo em
Locke seu maior difusor - que constatamos um sólido contexto de legitimação da
educação conjugada ao capital. Seria assim a base da educação já para a concorrência
e não para a transcendência26, como assim deveria ser seu fim. Para rematar esse novo
modelo de escola, o ensino que se encerra no método e na criação dos livros didáticos é
que vai dar legitimidade a esse ora nascido ensino burguês.
Condenando esse fatalismo e determinismo neoliberais, Mészáros (2005) nos
propõe uma forma alternativa e radical de superar a alienação na educação, em prol
de um pensar para além das forças invisíveis do capital. Pautando a educação, nesses
moldes até os nossos dias, como mercadoria, o autor nos leva a ver a educação por
uma outra clivagem. É, em nosso contexto, superar, portanto a violência simbólica a
que enormes contingentes populacionais são submetidos pelas condições precárias
de ensino e rumarmos para uma nova consciência transcendente, porque libertadora.
Para tanto,
26 Para este conceito, por exemplo, ver mais em: BOFF, Leonardo. Tempo
de transcendência. Rio de Janeiro: Sextante, 2000.
149
modos de internalização, de forma a subordiná-los às exigências da
ordem estabelecida” (p. 55).
150
multicultural, onde os estudos baseados na teoria e na prática devem ser
reconhecidos. (Art. 3º da Declaração de Hamburgo sobre Educação de Adultos, V
CONFINTEA, UNESCO, 1997, p.42)
Edward Thompson (1987) entendia a cultura do trabalho como um
emaranhado de disposições, que se expressa nos padrões, códigos, símbolos e
signos, crenças e valores. O autor também afirma que classe social não é apenas um
amontoado de pessoas, mas que esta reflete as transformações econômicas e sociais
na sociedade em que vivemos. No entanto, tais transformações somente tem sentido
quando passam a incorporar as experiências culturais vividas pela classe operária. E é
a partir desse processo histórico-cultural desses jovens trabalhadores que nos
debruçamos para entender essas transformações e seus muitos significados.
Partindo de uma perspectiva que privilegia a ação transformadora da
educação, através da transcendência - como já pontuamos - pretendemos apreender o
que se resvala nesses espaços não-formais de educação em que se aglutinam aqueles
a quem as instituições educacionais, pautadas pelo prisma do capital, não puderam
atender e entender seus anseios e dificuldades na idade certa, marginalizando-os
portanto dos processos educativos desde a mais tenra idade.
Para Dauster (1992) o trabalho nas camadas populares é visto como status,
muito mais que a educação escolar. Sem correr o perigo das generalizações,
concordamos com suas análises no que tange ao nosso universo vivido e pesquisado
durante quase uma década de investigação de juventudes de matriz popular da
Cidade do Rio de Janeiro. Para tanto, dentro de tais composições familiares e
vicinais, as condições laborais estariam em primeiro plano, tornando-se um símbolo
de status, que difere o jovem-trabalhador do jovem que não quer nada com o trabalho.
Portanto, é no plano ideológico e cultural que pode estar a chave para se entender a
adesão à cultura do trabalho como status social, visibilidade, donde pertencimento.
Desta feita, ao se analisar a Educação de Jovens e Adultos em um sentido
amplo, tomando-se como referência a pluralidade dos sujeitos que dela fazem parte,
constata-se que, longe de estar servindo à democratização das oportunidades
educacionais, ela se conforma no lugar dos que “podem menos e também obtêm
menos”. Conforme nos lembra Arroyo (2001, p. 10), os olhares sobre a condição
social, política, e cultural dos alunos de EJA têm se revelado nas diversas concepções
da educação que lhes é oferecida, “os lugares sociais a eles reservados –marginais,
oprimidos, excluídos, empregáveis, miseráveis...– têm condicionado o lugar
reservado a sua educação no conjunto das políticas públicas oficiais”. (Ribeiro, 2006,
p. 01)
Fazer com que esses jovens tenham o protagonismo, abrindo-lhes a
possibilidade e principalmente o direito de escolha e participação na esfera pública
requer possivelmente a equalização na escolarização e ainda postos de trabalho
sobretudo decentes, por intermédio de políticas públicas e ações afirmativas que de
fato vejam a juventude como um campo de possibilidades, de expansão e não como
151
um campo minado, que se deve aglutiná-lo por receio de por à prova a ordem social
vigente, pois, “quando se trata de jovens pobres, ainda mais se forem negros, há uma
vinculação à ideia do risco e da violência, tornando-os uma classe perigosa” (Dayrell,
2007, p. 1117).
Por outro lado, é importante destacar que, ao contrário do que faz pensar
o senso-comum, há um sem-número de movimentos e coletivos de juventudes
populares organizados em torno de questões relacionadas à educação, ao trabalho, à
cultura e à cidadania. Concentrados que estão principalmente nos espaços periféricos
das cidades, as diversas manifestações “alternativas” ou “comunitárias”, sobretudo
associativas, vão, pouco a pouco, tomando forma e espaço no cenário político e
social por meio de suas mídias, de seus diversos modos de fazer artes gráficas, de
seus coletivos musicais e poéticos, e ainda de seus espaços de educação informal e
não-formal, por exemplo, dentre outras inúmeras formas de evocação por cidadania.
Fazendo, assim, valer seus direitos civis, políticos e sociais, por intermédio de suas
expressões culturais, que se dão através destes modos peculiares de manifestações
contestatórias, esses jovens vão se movimentando lentamente da cultura para a
política (Novaes, 2007), através desses espaços não-formais de educação. Partindo,
portanto, dos espaços de invisibilidade e ilegitimidade para os espaços políticos de
ampla representação.
No entanto, historicamente as políticas direcionadas às juventudes, em os
seus matizes, têm sido, à primeira vista, uma perversa e preconceituosa maneira
encontrada para promover a disciplina “moral” e física de contenção daqueles
considerados párias em nossa sociedade. Além do mais: “As políticas para a
juventude têm como alvo os excluídos da escola e do mercado de trabalho. Nelas, de
uma maneira geral, o trabalho aparece como uma prática social capaz de disciplinar o
jovem, contribuindo para a diminuição dos riscos que ele, ocioso, potencialmente
cria para a sociedade” (Spósito e Carrano, 2003, p. 17).
Por fim, somada a essa visão deturpada e preconceituosa de ver as
juventudes, o que temos visto de forma constante são esses, que podemos chamar
de: jovens-estudantes-trabalhadores, sobretudo com CEP e cor definidas, assumirem
postos de trabalho cada vez mais sucateados e sem qualquer comprometimento com
a via dos direitos. Assim que, tomar para si os desafios da contemporaneidade na
relação da educação com outras instâncias de socialização (cultura e trabalho), requer
um mínimo de lucidez para não cairmos nos frequentes romantismos, achismos e
estereótipos que se colocam sobre a relação do jovem com o mundo. É buscar ainda
nos equívocos dogmáticos do passado - e na prática perversa de uma cultura
hegemônica no plano teórico e epistemológico (Santos, 2007), pela propagação de
um imaginário social pautado na igualdade - as respostas para o presente e as
possíveis saídas para o futuro, por meio de uma perspectiva contra-hegemônica e
descolonizante.
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REFERÊNCIAS BIBLIOGRÁFICAS
Algebaile, Eveline . Escola pública e pobreza no Brasil: a ampliação para menos. 1. ed. Rio
de Janeiro: Lamparina - Faperj, 2009. v. 1.
Arroyo, Miguel. A Educação de Jovens e Adultos em tempos de exclusão. Alfabetização e
Cidadania. SãoPaulo: Rede de Apoio à Ação Alfabetizadora do Brasil
(RAAAB), n.11, abril 2001.
Buffa, Ester; Arroyo, Miguel; Nosella, Paolo. (Orgs.). Educação e Cidadania; Quem
educa o cidadão? São Paulo: Cortez, 14ª edição, 2010.
Cardoso De Oliveira, R. O trabalho do antropólogo. Brasília: Paralelo 15; São Paulo:
Unesp, 2000.
Chauí, Marilena. Cidadania cultural – 1ª edição – São Paulo: Editora Fundação Perseu
Abramo, 2006.
Corrochano, Maria Carla. Jovens olhares sobre o trabalho. 2001. Dissertação (Mestrado
em Educação) - Universidade de São Paulo, Fundação de Amparo À Pesquisa
do Estado de São Paulo.
Coutinho, Carlos Nelson. “As categorias de Gramsci e a realidade brasileira”. In Gramsci:
um estudo sobre seu pensamento político. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1999.
Cury, C.R.J. Direito à educação: direito à igualdade, direito à diferença. Cadernos de Pesquisa
da Fundação Carlos Chagas, São Paulo, n. 116, p. 245-262, jul. 2002.
Dauster, T. Uma infância de curta duração: trabalho e escola. Cad. Pesq., São Paulo 82: 31-
36, 1992.
Dayrell, Juarez. A escola "faz" as juventudes? Reflexões em torno da socialização juvenil.
Educ. Soc. [online]. 2007, vol.28, n.100, pp. 1105-1128.
Demo, Pedro. Cidadania tutelada e cidadania assistida. Campinas: Autores Associados,
1995.
Elias, Norbert; e Scotson, John. L.; Os estabelecidos e os outsiders: sociologia das relações de
poder a partir de uma comunidade; Rio de Janeiro: Jorge Zahar Editor, 2000.
Fávero, Osmar (org.). Cultura popular educação popular: memória dos anos 60. 1983. Rio de
Janeiro: Graal, 1983.
Filardo, Verónica (2010): «Transiciones a la adultez y educación». Cuadernos del
UNFPA, Año 4, Nº5. Montevideo: UNFPA.
Maia, A. A. R. M.; Mancebo, D. Juventude, trabalho e projetos de vida: ninguém pode ficar
parado. Psicologia: Ciência e Profissão, Brasília, v. 30, n. 2, p. 376-389, 2010.
Mészáros, István. A educação para além do capital. São Paulo: Boitempo, 2005.
Novaes, Regina. Juventude e Sociedade: jogos de espelhos. Sentimentos, percepções
e demandas por direitos e políticas públicas. Revista Sociologia Especial –
Ciência e Vida. São Paulo, outubro de 2007.
153
Reguillo, Rossana, “Las culturas juveniles: Un campo de estudio.Breve agenda para la
discusión.” Em Medina Carrasco, Gabriel (ed.) (2000) Aproximaciones a la
diversidad juvenil. México, El Colegio de México.
Reis Filho, Casemiro. A educação e a ilusão liberal. São Paulo: Cortez, 1981.
Ribeiro, Eliane Andrade. Os sujeitos educandos na EJA. In: TV Escola, Salto para o
Futuro. Educação de Jovens e Adultos: continuar... e aprender por toda a vida. Boletim,
20 a 29 set. 2006. Disponível em: http://www.tvebrasil.com.br/salto/
boletins2004/eja/index.htm.
Freitas, Maria Virgínia e PAPA, Fernanda de Carvalho (Org). Juventude em Pauta:
Políticas Públicas no Brasil. São Paulo : Ed Peirópolis, 2011.
Rios, T. A. Compreender e ensinar: por uma docência da melhor qualidade. São
Paulo: Cortez, 2006.
Santos, Boaventura de Sousa e Menezes, Maria Paula Meneses (org). Epistemologias do
Sul. São Paulo: Cortez Ed., 2010.
Santos, Boaventura de Sousa, 1940- Renovar a teoria critica e reinventar a emancipação social
/ Boaventura de Sousa Santos ; tradução Mouzar Benedito. - São Paulo :
Boitempo, 2007.
Spósito, Marília; Carrano, Paulo. Juventude e políticas públicas no Brasil. Revista brasileira
de educação, n. 24, p. 16-39, set./dez. 2003.
Tedesco, Juan Carlos. Igualdad de oportunidades y política educativa. Cadernos de
Pesquisa, São Paulo, v. 34, n.123, p.557-572, set./dez., 2004.
Thompson, E. P. Formação da classe inglesa. Rio de Janeiro:Paz e Terra, 1987.Vol1.
UNESCO, MEC. Declaração de Hamburgo sobre Educação de Adultos - V CONFINTEA.
Brasília: MEC, 2004.
SÍTIO: Política Nacional de Juventude: Diretrizes e Perspectivas (Documento do
Conjuve)
www.agenciaraizes.com/seminariojuventude/docs/Conjuve_2006.pdf
AFFILIATION
154
SECTION 3
PERSPECTIVES FROM SCHOOLS AND E-LEARNING
155
EMMANUÈLE AURIAC-SLUSARCZYK
MYLÈNE BLASCO
LIDIA FRACZAK
RICHARD RYAN
12
TWENTY YEARS OF RESEARCH
INTO THE PRACTICE OF COLLABORATIVE
PHILOSOPHICAL INQUIRY AT SCHOOL
Current perspectives from school to citizenship
INTRODUCTION
Over the past ten years our research team, which has gradually grown into a
multidisciplinary entity (Auriac-Slusarczyk, Lebas-Fraczak, Blasco, Daniel,
Colletta, Simon, Fiema, Auriel, Henrion, 2012, Blasco & Auriac, 2013, Auriac &
Colletta, 2015) has been regularly collecting and analyzing transcriptions of
collaborative philosophical inquiry (CPI) (see http://philosophemes.univ-
bpclermont.fr/). Our research brings together expertise in the fields of
philosophy, linguistics, psychology and the sciences of education. This
multidisciplinarity meets a need to draw upon varied research methods in the
cross-analysis of CPI transcripts collected in the Philosophemes corpus. Earlier
more narrowly-targeted studies had already highlighted some factors linked to
the positive impact of CPI on schoolchildren’s social and cognitive development
(e.g. Auriac, 2007).
Here we describe the most important findings that have emerged from 20 years
of multidisciplinary research, to argue for the implementation of CPI in adult
education settings (higher education, lifelong learning, open universities, etc.).
Definition
What is CPI? What is a philosophy workshop?
CPI, as practiced in the classroom, can be defined as a shared discourse
involving several interlocutors – the pupils and their teacher – oriented by a
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starting question. The shared objective is to find a collective answer to a
question that requires a high degree of discursive interactivity. Historically, since
its inception by Mathew Lipman (1995) in the US (bi-annual conference of the
NACCi), research on CPI has been accompanied by concrete presentations. A
philosophy workshop is primarily a text, produced collectively. Data extracted
from the Philosophemes corpus (see Blasco & Auriac-Slusarczyk, 2013, Auriac-
Slusarczyk & Colletta, 2015) or from a discussion stemming from the public
demonstration made at UNESCO during the annual meetings on philosophical
practices (corpus: “Why do we say it’s not fair?” (see Simon et al., 2015) illustrate
this type of collective text.
Below is an excerpt from the UNESCO corpus, 5th grade pupils, Paris.
Michel Tozzi: alright / so we start off by giving say a few examples, and then we
explain why we think it’s not fair // here you give me an example between a
brother and so his sister she goes to bed later she’s not :: much older that him,
so you find that’s unfair
Melvil: hm hm hm
Lou: well I think its more for the unfairness like :: sometimes it’s unfair like um
right Melvil’s example was good so ::: // sometimes there’s brothers and sisters
where there’s unfairness but sometimes it’s you who’s / who’s luckier and
sometimes it’s the other one who’s luckier so sometimes we say it’s not fair //
but well we really think that // well maybe we think that but not much not
much.
157
we use it cannot account for those language phenomena that we all too readily
identify as bad speech or failed communication).
CPI, which produces concomitance between speaking and thinking, may
appear trivial in its production mode (Blanche-Benveniste, 1990, 2010).
However, it offers interplay that is not of the question-and-answer type, and it is
clear that some steps in the process have not yet been fairly assessed.
For example, it has been shown that schoolchildren construct reasoning
collectively (Fiema & Auriac-Slusarczyk, 2013; Auriac-Slusarczyk & Fiema,
2013). In learning to think, from the pupil’s point of view, the pupils carry out a
great deal of preparatory argumentation to clarify the initial question, which they
appropriate (the examples form conceptual steps in “extension”, while chosen
lexical items describe “intension” (Fraczak-Lebas, 201627). As regards the
teaching activity, the morphosyntactic organization describes those instructive
passages where the teacher plays a part, i.e. that serve to elucidate how the
reasoning is constructed.
rather than simply expressing it (Lev Vygotski 1934/1997, p. 107) are relevant here. The
ways in which syntactic productions acccount for this relation need to be explored.
158
SYNTACTIC VIEWPOINT
159
Figure 1
but
actually it’s fair
so um there
and so after um it depends on the situation
but:
160
2- The middle zone shows the verbs: there’s; there’s; then there’s; it depends.
The verb is central in the syntax because it governs the subject-complement
relations.
3- What we call the right-hand zone actually depends on the central zone,
because it is the place where the (non-pronoun) complements are placed.
Syntagmatic expansions are placed here. It is the place for syntactic progression
and developments. Here we transcribe relative clauses and adjectives, which are
essential in the process of definition: (that can) cause a disagreement, (that’s)
really not equality, a bit awkward, (you don’t think) about it, (that’s) more.
From this observation of the syntactic and lexical organization of each
zone, we can identify what contributes to the construction and development of
the reasoning. This is therefore the link between language and reasoning.
For example, here the pupil lists several meanings; she is challenging the
initial question. We are no longer talking about why. We are talking about the
expression itself.
This is why we stated above that in CPI, pupils seek fairly systematically
to clarify the question asked before they set about answering it. However, this
step is not always seen. The relative clauses are thus modalized: can/really, the
construction is very progressive, with semantic associations: not
fair/disagreement/not equality; awkward/so you don’t think about it /not
fair/but actually it’s fair.
The chart reading of passages chosen from CPI not only shows a general
organizing principle in speech; it also confirms that each oral text develops its
own grammar. The two-dimensional representation shows the text architecture
and reveals the language-thought co-construction by the study of regular or
irregular language features linked to the deployment of reasoning. We thus see
what is generated by the individual and what is collective, and we can see how
the grammar operates to shape the discourse.
161
Léna:
to make an effort you’ve got to try to succeed (…)
Soizic:
I agree too with Awen
to make an effort you’ve always got to keep...
if the first time you don’t succeed, you’ve always got to keep on trying or you
don’t succeed
Elsa:
yes, because sometimes we make an effort
and sometimes we don’t make an effort and don’t keep trying
but sometimes we try to succeed to make an
effort
and then we can write
or count
or write numbers
Figure 2
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Léna’s utterance (TP 177). But very quickly, Soizic moves away from the initial
proposition try by introducing another concept: keep on trying, first with just
keep. She then stops the progression and goes back to state and justify the use of
this word with a conditional if the first time you don’t succeed you’ve always got
to – an addition that the spoken language readily allows. The discourse can then
resume its progression; it ends with or you don’t succeed.
In the spoken discourse there is an apparent concern for coherence in
the reasoning and argumentation. You’ve got to keep on trying i.e. try once
more to…, which is indeed the definition of effort. At this moment, Elsa gives
an example in the form of yes because sometimes placed at the beginning. The
yes validates the way make an effort is understood. At the same time it carries
implicit meaning.
Placed on the left of the chart – frame of utterance – and via a
modification (to is dropped in favor of because), the sequence can now be
unfolded with the verb make, first affirmative and then negative. The whole is
framed and paced by sometimes, and sometimes, but sometimes. The repetition
of the verbal construction we make an effort and the time marker sometimes
bring a rhythmic effect. No new lexical information is introduced, but the
repetition itself takes part in the conceptualization.
The positive / negative modality and the conjunctions and, but play an
important role in the progression of the demonstration, which relies on the
contrast between the verbs we make/we don’t make (…) don’t keep trying; but
sometimes we try to until there is a new opening with the verb succeed. The
paradigm to succeed to make an effort is then exemplified by an enumeration of
lexical productions: read, write, write numbers.
In this progression, effort is rewarded. The syntax (repetition, contrast,
connectors and then, but) clearly takes part in the shaping, and helps to
represent the effort and its achievement through a progressive, varied rightward
extension: effort; effort to try; succeed; to write; to write numbers. In this very
rhythmic and regular syntactic construction, it is as if the pupil enacts the
situation. The syntax describes the effort; it materializes it.
Hence in this passage, there is a construction of reasoning with two
voices, those of Soizic and Elsa, initiated by Léna’s relatively simple statement.
The study of the zones and their content shows how the discourse is shaped.
Chart 2. “It’s not fair”: Lou
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Figure 3
1- The initial question was “Why do we say it’s not fair?”, but Lou sidesteps the
proposition to define what we mean by “not being fair”: she clearly says that it is
more to do with a feeling of unfairness.
2- From the organizational point of view: The chart can be read vertically and
horizontally. On the vertical axis, in the general progression, the chart is
organized in three periods, according to the verb constructions: (1). what I think;
(2). example there’s, it’s; (3). return to the starting theme we say, we think. To
explain what it means to say “it’s not fair”. Horizontally, the left-hand zone
receives the utterance markers well, sometimes, like, right, so. There is no dense
content, because we are no longer in an enacted situation with examples, but in
the drawing out of a definition on unfairness. In the center, there are verbs: I
think, he was, we say, we think and their subject pronouns, which vary according
to the purpose of the discourse. The we comes at the end when the reasoning
steps have advanced and the discourse enters a generic frame. On the right are
the items that carry information to drive the reasoning forward with examples or
definitions. The examples that support this reasoning operate on the persons
who are contrasted: brothers, sisters; you, the other one; the forms are lexical or
pronominal, and come with presentative items there’s, it’s. These syntactic
structures prevail in the construction of examples. The morphosyntactic
confrontation of these two lexicalized forms and the two pronominal forms
illustrates and strengthens the idea of unfairness and its expression. Here again
the syntax materializes the subject being addressed.
At the end of the chart, we note a series of adverbs: really, maybe, not
much not much. The “it’s not fair” is then pronominalized: we think that so as
to focus on the adverbs and the progressive construction of what composes the
164
assertion “it’s not fair”. The rightward progression stops. The constructions
around the verb become concise, as if a conclusion is being reached.
In fact, the reasoning meets a caveat: is saying “it’s not fair” really
expressing true unfairness? Do we really think that, or maybe not... much, not...
much?
This construction is clearly very coherent. The chart shows that there is a
grammatical construction of the text for which the lexical and syntactic choices
help to express the relativity of the value judgment “not fair”.
In the light of the studies conducted on CPI it seems regrettable that philosophy
workshops are not better known and more widely practiced with adults, to
facilitate difficult learning paths like at school. The Philosophemes corpus,
collected since 2010, along with discussions filmed at UNESCO over the last ten
years, illustrate only school classroom practice. This practice runs from
kindergarten to 12th grade (technical high school). At the new practices in
philosophy event hosted by UNESCO in Paris every November31, practitioners
and researchers have structured the area into several fields: care philosophy, for
workshops in hospitals, school philosophy for schools, and training philosophy
for the sector interested in producing tools for group leaders and teachers,
irrespective of the domain of application, but generally for schools. The journal
Diotime32, a French-speaking publication echoing the journal Thinking, The
Journal of Philosophy for Children33 created by Matthew Lipman, offers a
scientific and professional space for papers describing, developing, exchanging
165
and making known practice in philosophy for children. After some 30 years of
successful experimentation in the field in North America, and 20 years of
experience in French-speaking countries, the question now arises of the
extension of CPI to other sectors.
Given the convergence of views and findings concerning the positive
impact of philosophy practiced in a spirit of intellectual inquiry rather than as
one more school subject, and the link between thought and language in syntax as
we describe here, we consider that the time is ripe to move on to developing
these practices in adult education.
Adult education is a vast area, and at the same time one that permits
experimentation. But do adults discuss issues in a way comparable to what we
have described above?
We present the following excerpt of a pupil, Dimitri, aged about 10.
After Danaé has spoken, Dimitri speaks:
Danaé: well when we say it’s not fair it’s often that we don’t agree with
something
Michel Tozzi: alright, so you have the idea then a little bit of disagreement can
you give an example
Danaé: um uh I dunno
Michel Tozzi: can someone help Danaé find an example to uh say um when we
say it’s not fair because we don’t agree // let’s hear those of you who haven’t
said much
Mathéo: Dimitri have you got anything to say
Dimitri: well yes um I think we we say / when we say it’s not fair sometimes //
like if our parents tell us to do our homework we say it’s not fair ‘cos we’d rather
not do it // but we’ve got to
Michel Tozzi: alright, you say it’s not fair because we have to do some things we
don’t really want to do // is that your argument?
Dimitri: well yes
Danaé: well when we say it’s not fair it’s often that we don’t agree with something
Dimitri:
Figure 4
but
we’ve got to
166
Without reproducing the detailed study in a syntactic perspective, it is
clear that the subjectivity illustrated by the children (shift from “when” to “it’s”,
“like”, i.e. from conjunctural to definitional, is not the children’s own. Each uses
language to redirect their first thoughts, through secondary or complementary
verbalizations, to develop their thinking. The term “when” uttered by Dimitri is
not to be interpreted as having any particular temporal value. Its function is not
temporal: “when” here is a thinking frame, which allows the introduction of the
example. An adult would do the same: “when we say it’s not fair”…
“sometimes…”; “like… ”, etc.
The models of grammatical construction presented show that the ways in
which pupils aged about 10 go about discussing the question are no different
from those that adults would use to argue, exemplify and conceptualize. Our
knowledge of the language, though based on an internal grammar used from
infancy, remains passive and unconscious.
We are convinced that taking part in philosophy workshops for adults
could help pacify relations by enabling everyone to reflect together in a collective
setting. It’s never too late to think.
CONCLUSION/DISCUSSION
Studying the syntax of utterances casts new light on the CPI corpus collected
over the last 20 years. Syntactic analysis of the language offers a new viewpoint
that highlights the complexity of the exchanges. CPI is a type of discourse that
elicits initiatives translated into linguistic entities. The language is enlisted to
serve what is to be said. These are fine features that help us grasp the link
between language and thought. It would have been difficult to predict these
forms of organization. Oral utterances thus make sense if we know how to
listen. In adult education, this approach could be used to develop more attentive
listening. One major impact of philosophy workshops lies in their pacifying
quality. This pacification probably arises in part from the fact that taking the
time to put our thoughts into words, shown up by syntax in a very fine and
detailed way, gives each participant satisfying positive feedback on their
mechanisms of mental production. Thinking is important, and thinking together
can extend our minds. Having to verbalize our thought leads us to choose
wording and vocabulary. Both children and adults can thus find inner concord in
CPI, provided it is properly directed.
167
REFERENCES/BIBLIOGRAPHY
168
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parlée, Paris, Peeters.
Blasco, M. (2016). Une lecture grammaticale de séquences choisies dans les
échanges philosophiques, In V. Saint-Dizier de Almeida & E. Auriac-
Slusarczyk, Les ateliers-Philo en contexte scolaire, Recherches en
Education, 24, 110-121.
Daniel, M-F, Gagnon, M. & Auriac-Slusarczyk, E. (2015, to appear). Thinking
critically as early as kindergarten? Philosophy for Children is still in debate.
In M. Gregory, J. Haynes & K., Murris (Eds.).The Routledge International
Handbook of Philosophy for Children.
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illustration sur les sous-corpus « Efforts », « Vie prêtée » et « Amour ».
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Simon et al., (2015). La conceptualization collective dans des discussions à vise
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philosophiques à l’École : les conduire, les analyser, Clermont-Ferrand,
PUBP.
Topping, K. J., Trickey, S. (2007). Collaborative philosophical enquiry for school
children: Cognitive effects at 10-12 years. British Journal of Educational
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AFFILIATIONS
Emmanuèle Auriac-Slusarczyk
Laboratoire ACTé, EA4281
Université Blaise Pascal Clermont Ferrand
[email protected]
Mylène Blasco
Laboratoire LRL,EA999
Université Blaise Pascal Clermont Ferrand
[email protected]
Lidia Fraczak
Laboratoire LRL,EA999
Université Blaise Pascal Clermont Ferrand
[email protected]
Richard Ryan
Laboratoire LRL,EA999
Université Blaise Pascal Clermont Ferrand
[email protected]
170
BERNARD SLUSARCZYK
13
A PREVENTIVE ROLE FOR COLLABORATIVE PHILOSOPHICAL
INQUIRY IN ELEMENTARY AND EARLY MIDDLE SCHOOL
IN THE BREAK IN COGNITIVE INTEGRITY DEVELOPMENT
OBSERVED IN 8TH GRADE
INTRODUCTION
In 1980, Wladimir Jankelevitch, reminded us, on the French TV literary talk show
Apostrophes, that philosophy is of no use to anything but itself. Philosophy helps us
think freely, whatever our age, from day to day, in a taxi, in the street, at school.
Even in the youngest grades, as soon as a pupil or a group of pupils asks a question,
the answer can take a philosophical turn. Philosophy is a lifelong individual and/or
collective transgenerational practice that teaches us to cope with complexity.
Education for complexity through the practice of philosophy workshops, like all
school subjects, comes up against marked inter-individual differences arising from
pupils’ developmental, social and anthropological characteristics. It is also influenced
by the community composed for the discussion. In French schools, the link between
reasoning skills and pupils’ age has often been an argument for keeping philosophy
for 12thgrade. Yet whether at nursery school or middle school (junior high school),
pupils every day ask questions that would not be out of place in a philosophy
examination set at the end of 12thgrade. Must these questions wait until adulthood
before being answered? Frustration admittedly helps any individual’s construction,
but childhood impatience, and possibly even more teenage impatience to get
answers can be a strong driver in the development of skills assessed in French
school curricula. In French elementary schools and in some middle schools,
philosophy workshops, also called community of philosophical inquiry (CPI), allow
often universal questions to emerge, and offer the possibility of comparing answers
in a given setting. Philosophy through discussion (Tozzi, 2007), is currently
implemented in communities (CPI is a collective praxis, Daniel, 1997) essentially
composed of elementary school classes (Daniel, Gagnon, Auriac-Slusarczyk, 2015 in
press). CPI in middle school with teenagers, who have grown out of childhood and
are often in conflict with the adult world, differs from CPI in elementary school.
The organization of the middle school curriculum and the pupils’ age are two
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essential reasons for this difference. The French middle school reform due to come
into effect in September 2016 is concerned to explore ways of teaching civics and
ethics. The specific study of the impact of CPI practiced today with adolescent and
pre-adolescent pupils is thus of major relevance.
BACKGROUND
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effects. In reports from teachers, CPI feedback and general behavior, inter-
individual differences in school attainment level are often claimed to account in part
for the conflicts observed. These differences are normally distributed on a bell
curve, where the very high- and very low-attainment pupils make up a small part of
the class, the majority of the pupils standing in-between. However, in the practice
of CPI, the high-attainment and low-attainment profiles, though in the minority,
were found to be those that most strongly influenced the class as a whole. Finally,
results of work on the facilitator effect can be enlisted to define different styles for
conducting philosophy workshops, just as for traditional school subjects (Bressoux,
2001).
In this paper we first define cognitive integrity, which we have measured in
pupils in different middle school classes taking part in CPI (7thand 8thgrades). We
then briefly review the initial result obtained in middle school, comparing the
cognitive integrity of CPI pupils with that of ordinary pupils. We go on to present
new results that highlight pupil profiles, whichcan at least partly explain (i) inter-
individual differences in cognitive integrity scores, and (ii) differences between
classes, i.e. between facilitator styles. We conclude by emphasizing, on the basis of
these results, the precautions that are currently required for implanting CPI in adult
education settings.
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
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traditionally conceived as an induction into the general reasoning process from the
school subject curriculum, the development of cognitive integrity being one result of
this process.
“Ethical and civic education shall emphasize the pupils’ own activity […]
The purpose of educating for ethical judgment is to enable pupils to
understand and discuss ethical choices facing all of them in their daily
lives. This results from education and teaching that induces the pupils to
see points of view taken by others, to understand different forms of
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ethical reasoning, and to be at ease in situations where they can discuss
and deliberate, appreciate the complexity of ethical issue, and justify their
choices. […] The development of ethical judgment, suitably adjusted for
age, calls especially on an ability to analyze, discuss, share and confront
viewpoints in problematic situations” (MEN, 2015).
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Hypotheses
On the basis of these first results, our research is prospective. It is supported by a
corpus collected in 2012 from 6 classes of CPI pupils (three 7thgrade and three
8thgrade) in the same middle school as before (Slusarczyk et al. 2015). We scored
cognitive integrity using a standardized test comparing the scores of CPI pupils in
middle school. We measured inter- and intra-individual variability in the
development of cognitive integrity. Our working hypotheses were:ç
1. In middle school, mid-attainment pupils are those who benefit least from
CPI.
2. In middle school, the variables ‘facilitator quality’ (facilitator effect) and
‘grade’ (7thor 8th) influence the impact of CPI on cognitive integrity.
METHOD
Subjects
The test data came from a middle school located in a socially deprived area in the
Puy-de-Dôme: 127 middle school pupils in three 7thgrade classes and three 8thgrade
classes, all six practicing CPI from October to June for 1 hour every fortnight during
free time set by for general class activity. The facilitators, who worked in pairs to
conduct the CPI, were either French, history/geography, or science teachers, or
schoollibrarians, or other school staff responsible for counseling or healthcare.
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Table 1. Questions specifically concerning cognitive integrity
Q1, Q16, Q20, Q22, Q2, Q3, Q4, Q7, Q10, Q6, Q9, Q12, Q19
Q24, Q25 Q14, Q15
Data processing
We performed regression analyses, controlling the variable ‘gender’ 1. Girl, 2. Boy
(category scale), considering three secondary integrity subdomains: 1. Curiosity,
2. Difficulty/Complexity, and 3. Resistance to others (categorial scale), and using
school subject results average (continuous scale, annual school grading report) as an
indicator of attainment.
The intra-individual variability was determined by forming three categories
according to the evolution of the integrity score over the school year: 1. Pupils with
no score change, 2. Pupils with scores raised by more than 4 points, 3. Pupils with
scores lowered by more than 4 points. The school subject results average of each
pupil was calculated from the full year grading report. The data were processed using
SAS software. To compare the results, the data were centered (see Slusarczyk, 2011;
Bressoux, 2010).
RESULTS
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Figure 1. Comparison of integrity/ level of attainment at start of year, end of year,
difficulty/complexity item (centered data)
From this we then extracted population profiles: pupils with high cognitive
integrity (Figure 2) and with low cognitive integrity (Figure 3).
Figure 2. Pupils with high cognitive integrity (34 pupils scoring 4 to 8) Integrity/attainment (15%
variance explained) Integrity/difficulty/complexity (18% variance explained)
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Figure 3. Pupils with low cognitive integrity (13 pupils scoring: −8 to −3) Integrity/attainment (5%
variance explained) Integrity/difficulty/complexity (4% variance explained)
We see (Figure 2) that like in the whole population the pupils with the
highest cognitive integrity were always those with the highest attainment levels. The
difficulty/complexity item does not stand out from the overall integrity score. For
the pupils with low cognitive integrity (Figure 3), the curve shows the opposite
trend, and the relation to attainment differs between the start and end of the year.
In this category, the lower the pupil’s attainment, the higher their integrity score: this
effect is amplified with the end-of-year school results. Although the results obtained
show the limits of a linear representation (Bressoux, 2010), we can advance the
hypothesis of several subpopulations: high-integrity high-attainment pupils (Figure
2), high-integrity low-attainment pupils, and low-integrity mid-attainment pupils
(mid-attainment being situated at the high end of low attainment). The high-integrity
low-attainment population is the one that benefits most from the setting-up of the
CPI provision, as the end-of-year school result relative to the integrity score was the
highest. For this subpopulation, the score for the difficulty/complexity item was the
same as for the whole population.
We replicated the above measurement class by class. This revealed inter-class
differences.
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Figure 4. Comparison class by class.
Integrity (vertical axis) relative to school attainment (horizontal axis).
Regression line 1: start of year (solid line).
Regression line 2: end of year (dashed line).
Regression line 3: difficulty/complexity item (dotted line).
Centered data
For two 7thgrade classes (7th2 and 7th3) attainment was only weakly linked
to integrity (regression lines near-horizontal). For 7th5, the higher the attainment,
the higher the integrity.
For two 8thgrade classes (8th1 and 8th3) the higher the attainment, the
higher the integrity. In 8th6 the level of attainment was only weakly linked to
integrity (regression lines near-horizontal).
DISCUSSION OF RESULTS
Our work validates evidence that CPI in middle schools has more complex effects
than in elementary school. These effects are connected with the intra-individual
variability of integrity scores.
If we take all the middle school pupils, we validate that the evened-out effect
is linked to school attainment results, which validates after Giancarlo and Çokluk-
Bökeoğlu that school results averages are correlated with integrity score. CPI tends
to even out integrity scores in classes in which results averages are broadly dispersed,
over and above the differential evolution of the pupils. Discussion is a collective
praxis that favors less inequality.
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If we look at the subpopulations of the classes made up of (i) high-integrity
pupils and (ii) low-integrity pupils, we come up against the limit of a linear
representation: at the extremes, the high-attainment pupils and the low-attainment
pupils benefit most from CPI, while the mid-attainment pupils are those that benefit
least in middle school. This finding corroborates the comments made by the
facilitators involved, who found that in some classes the highest-attainment and the
lowest-attainment pupils could strongly interact positively or negatively in the
collective praxis. Thus the collective advancement achieved with CPI as we show
can be affected by the influence of the most active pupils, situated at the extremes
(strong versus weak) on the mid-attainment pupils.
When the measurements made for each class are compared, then we see that
in half of the classes, the link between cognitive integrity and attainment is
challenged. Level of attainment significantly influenced cognitive attainment in only
half of them. In addition to the above finding that the impact of subpopulations
affected the general results, there was a difference between classes. A comparative
study of facilitator style might explain this difference. The status of the adults
(teacher, counselor or school nurse) may also count. Thus the teacher effect
evidenced in various school subjects by Bressoux could apply to the CPI in middle
schools.
CONCLUSION
181
reflect on their own position with regard to pupils engaged in CPI. This diagnosis
serves as a starting point for each facilitator to adapt the existing teaching materials
to the specific features of the group in their charge. The challenge of developing
CPI in middle school is to successfully adapt the practice to the pupils rather than to
the school curriculum, which in any case often changes. It is not to directly address
current ethical and civic issues under debate in our modern democratic societies, but
rather to nurture an ability for self-reappraisal and criticism of the world at large,
regardless of topical events. Thinking must remain an ordinary activity. The
conditions for philosophical inquiry must not to be allowed to drift towards a
utilitarian purpose. We must remain free to think, and that freedom must be
exercised.
Teenagers are thrilled by the existential scope of philosophy. In the
transitional break between childhood and adulthood, they can take a strong interest
in this activity. However, freedom of thought is not so easy to exercise. As our
results show, pupil profiles and facilitator style count as factors of influence. The
strong impact of school attainment level on the rise in integrity scores for two
classes out of three in 8thgrade (this proportion is reversed in 7thgrade) may point
to a weaker involvement of pre-adolescents in philosophical inquiry. Overall, the
imposition of philosophy may not easily fit the expectancies of pre-adolescents,
whereas an adolescent can better understand that doing CPI is enjoying a form of
intellectual freedom. But also, imposing CPI during the free time of general class
activities may be felt by adolescents as competing with other “free” activities (see
Agostini, 2011, pp.198–203). Thus although using this time raised little or no real
problems in 7thgrade, we found in our experimentation that it caused controversy in
8thgrade, one class even asking to drop the CPI activity (interestingly, this top-
stream class comprised mostly high-attainment pupils). Should we carry on
philosophizing in adulthood? Should we have philosophy activities outside school?
What about at the workplace? In civil society? If we take care not to reduce
philosophy to a mere utilitarian exercise (preventing violence, telling right from
wrong, etc.), we consider that the precautions we have stated for directing
philosophy workshops at school apply generally: the support material is of minor
importance; it is the training and commitment of the facilitators that must be
developed to ensure a high level of informed citizenship.
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AFFILIATIONS
Bernard Slusarczyk
Clermont Université, Université Blaise Pascal, Laboratoire Activité,
Connaissance, Transmission, Éducation, ACTé, EA 4281
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LUC BAPTISTE
14
DISCUSSIONS À VISÉE PHILOSOPHIQUE À L’ÉCOLE PRIMAIRE :
POUR UNE CULTURE DE LA VERBALISATION
L’institution scolaire n’échappe pas à cette flambée des valeurs. Elle y plonge,
même, sous la pression, certainement, d’évolutions sociétales qui la mettent toujours
plus dos au mur. Le « vivre-ensemble » (qu’il faudrait d’ailleurs distinguer de
l’apprendre-ensemble) est en toute occasion sur les lèvres des professionnels de
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l’éducation et dans les notes de service, règlementations, prescriptions, injonctions ;
les apologistes des « éducations à » se font de plus en plus pressants, portant chacun
son lot de valeurs ; l’apprentissage de la « citoyenneté » est cité partout — quoiqu’il
s’agisse plutôt d’un apprentissage de la civilité, donc de régler des conduites en se
conformant à des convenances (Jaffro, Rauzy, 97) ; le recours quasi-incantatoire aux
« valeurs de la République » et, tout à la fois et partout, la construction de « règles de
vie » en classe (calquées généralement sur des modèles) : tout cela indique que
l’institution scolaire se donne pour tâche de consolider, de reconstruire en
permanence, de construire même ce qu’on pourrait désigner comme le contrat
d’entente commune de chacun avec tous. Ainsi, dans le Socle commun de connaissances,
de compétences et de culture et dans les Programmes qui en découlent ou s’y réfèrent, cette
sorte de contractualisation sociale apparaît comme un enjeu majeur, voire comme
l’enjeu premier pour l’école obligatoire en France (primaire et collège, de 6 à 16 ans),
devant même l’enjeu d’acquisition de connaissances.
Les DVP, pratiques encore émergentes, non institutionnalisées en tant que
telles en France, pas même nommées ou identifiées en tant que pratiques par
l’institution, pas interdites ou empêchées non plus, pouvant s’intégrer dans le
fonctionnement scolaire et s’y intégrant d’ailleurs dans un nombre croissant de
classes, pourraient être le lieu d’enseignement de la morale (Luxembourger, Saint
Dizier de Almeida, Specogna, 2015) et, par extension, trouver place dans
l’emballement des valeurs. On sait que là où elles existent, il arrive qu’elles
s’intègrent, se fondent dans cette inculcation ou imprégnation, dans ce ressassement
de ces valeurs que l’on nous somme de partager au titre du sens commun, du
patrimoine commun, voire de l’indiscutable (méfions-nous de l’indiscutable : ainsi
dira-t-on fréquemment qu’il faut respecter les idées d’autrui — non, respectons
autrui comme personne, accordons-lui la parole, mais ses idées n’ont pas a priori à
être respectées, car cela signifie alors une quasi-interdiction de les discuter, de les
contester, de les démonter). La DVP peut se transformer en séance d’inculcation, de
ressassement. Le catéchisme, fût-il humaniste et républicain, a-t-il quelque chose à
voir avec une « visée philosophique » ?
Les DVP sont nées dans le contexte philosophique américain du pragmatisme,
qui renonce à l’ambition de saisir la réalité derrière l’apparence, qui énonce que le but
de la recherche n’est pas la vérité, surplombante et transcendante, mais l’utilité. « La
recherche et la justification poursuivent une multitude de buts particuliers, mais il
n’existe pas de but qui surplomberait tous les autres et qui serait la vérité », écrivait
Richard Rorty, l’une des figures du pragmatisme (Rorty, 1995, p. 44). Le vrai, dans
cette perspective, c’est ce qui se justifie dans une situation donnée, ce qui procède
d’un accord entre des contractants, dans une situation particulière.
D’un autre point de vue, les DVP nous arrivent dans un temps où les
hiérarchies (de positions, de compétences, de savoirs, …) sont dans tous les
domaines bousculées et chamboulées par une revendication diffuse de démocratie
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participative — de démocratie conviviale, diront certains. Le paradigme dominant de
l’organisation sociale est aujourd’hui, contre la verticalité du vieux modèle
théologico-politique, l’horizontalité des relations et des pouvoirs. Dans ce contexte,
constatons que la perspective, managériale et non politique, du tous ensemble, degré 0
du discours politique, suggérant et enjoignant de s’abstenir de tout conflit, l’emporte
sur une vision de la démocratie comme gestion et régulation du conflit par le débat,
par la règle et, in fine, par le droit. En l’inéluctable « passion de l’égalité », que
Tocqueville déjà voyait à l’œuvre, se profile, si l’on n'y prend garde, une société
« maternante » au sein laquelle rien ne peut se dire, où règne la parole politiquement
correcte (Lebrun, 2010), où l’on célèbre et répète, dans l’incantation, dans le
recueillement qui sied, des valeurs qui ne disent rien, qui ne sont que des mots
attachés à des représentations toutes faites, figées, et non à des réalités. Perspective
qui, en matière d’éducation, est peu prometteuse !
Et pourtant (ouvrons là une parenthèse), c’est le Ministère de l’Education
nationale qui, dans des consignes publiées après les attentats de Paris à destination
des enseignants du primaire, prescrit cela : « Il n'appartient pas aux enseignants de
faire effraction dans les représentations des élèves »34. Voilà qui a de quoi
surprendre !… Qu’est-ce, en effet, que le métier d’un enseignant ? Mais c’est
justement de faire effraction dans les représentations de l’enseigné — si l’on veut
bien considérer, après Bachelard et bien d’autres, qu’une connaissance acquise est
une représentation nouvelle substituée à une représentation préexistante. Le métier
d’un enseignant c’est de faire irruption, et par effraction s’il le faut — la pédagogie et
la didactique étant l’outillage pour cela —, dans des représentations qui ne sont ni
naturelles ni spontanées, mais construites par les modes de vie, de pensée, de
croyance, de relation familiaux. D’entrer dans des représentations donc, pour les
enrichir, pour les transformer, pour les renverser, voire pour les anéantir. C’est toute
la réflexion sur le sens de l’école et sur la forme scolaire, depuis Condorcet au moins,
qui est mise en cause par une telle prescription. Simple et ponctuel témoignage
d’inculture ou, plus profondément, signe d’une reconfiguration en cours de
l’institution scolaire et de son rôle ? Fermons la parenthèse.
Il n’y a pas à ce jour de forme technique canonique pour la pratique des DVP,
pas de cadre d’action obligé qui définirait stricto sensu ce qu’est une DVP — les
différences d’appellation en témoignent (DVP, atelier philo, débat philosophique,
…). L’âge des élèves bien sûr importe pour configurer l’activité, mais on constate
que des pratiques extrêmement diverses existent, entre quasi abstention de
l’enseignant (abstention quant à la prise de parole en tout cas) et intervention plus ou
moins marquée. L’abstention conduit à faire de la DVP une pratique qui s’apparente
aux groupes de parole mis en place par exemple dans des structures qui reçoivent des
34 http://eduscol.education.fr/cid95370/savoir-accueillir-la-parole-des-eleves-apres-les-
attentats-terroristes-en-ile-de-france.html
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malades qu’il faut guérir d’addictions ou des femmes victimes de violences, ou aux
groupes de parole pratiqués jadis par les groupes féministes, l’enjeu étant alors
d’accueillir la (les) parole(s). Mais alors dire qu’il s’agit à l’école d’ateliers de langage
serait plus juste.
A l’envers d’une position qui prône l’abstention de l’enseignant, considérons
que la qualification de philosophique pour nommer ces pratiques enseignantes en cours
d’invention que sont les DVP est porteuse de signification ; la philosophie, depuis
ses origines grecques et dans toutes ses évolutions, convie à mettre en question les
évidences, à tenir qu’il n’y a rien qui ne soit discutable, et elle vise et construit, dans
le rapport que nous avons à notre culture et à la culture en général, la possibilité
d’une liberté de l’esprit, d’une autonomie de la raison (Baptiste, 2015).
Nous prenons le parti de considérer que la communion dans des valeurs,
prescrite par les textes qui régissent les pratiques enseignantes, n’est pas a priori un
objectif pour les DVP. Les séances d’instruction morale et civique sont là pour ça.
Bien plus, les échanges langagiers, en toute occasion et dans toutes les disciplines, y
pourvoient ; plus généralement, l’expérience nous apprend que « l’atmosphère »
construite dans la classe par l’enseignant, entendue comme espace de collaboration
langagière et cognitive (Bucheton et coll., 2009), contribue bien plus que tous les
discours prescripteurs voire moralisateurs, à identifier, à nommer, à expliciter, à
respecter ce qui permet de vivre ensemble avec le souci de l’autre et des autres et le
souci de soi-même. Nous choisissons donc, pour la conduite de DVP en cycle 3, de
déserter le terrain des valeurs, de « l’exaspérant bavardage au sujet des valeurs »
(Ruwen Ogien, Libération, 14-10-15) pour celui de l’investigation critique.
Considérons donc que les DVP visent l’émergence et l’exercice de la pensée
critique. Par critique, terme que nous prenons au sens philosophique du terme, il
faut entendre non pas une activité polémique mais une activité qui examine et
questionne ce qui se donne comme évidence et de sens commun, qui ne prend pas
pour établi et stable le sens des formulations toutes faites, qui prend les mots et
formulations d’usage courant, ces termes et expressions que tout le monde semble
entendre à l’unisson, comme des boîtes noires qu’il faut ouvrir. La critique déconstruit.
La critique en ce sens n’est pas polémique (quoiqu’elle ne s’interdise pas de l’être),
elle est ouverture, dévoilement, multiplication des points de vue et découverte de
relations. Elle révèle que telle formulation, figée dans des usages ou convenances du
moment, porte d’autres significations, que ces significations ouvrent à d’autres voies,
qu’elles agrandissent la pensée.
Deux remarques ayant trait à la professionnalité enseignante. Premièrement
cette ambition est concordante avec la construction en classe d’un rapport au
langage dont on sait qu’il est absolument déterminant dans la réussite ou l’échec
scolaire (Lahire, 1993). Les DVP s’inscrivent — cela n’est pas sans conséquence
concernant la formation des maîtres — dans une très grande attention accordée aux
interactions langagières. Deuxièmement la pratique en classe de ces interactions
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requiert de l’enseignant un intérêt personnel pour l’investigation, une habileté de
parole et, plus globalement, une habileté dans la conduite collective de
l’investigation. Les gestes professionnels requis ne peuvent se déployer que dans une
culture partagée (Bucheton et coll., 2009) et stabilisée. Cela signifie que la régularité
de l’exercice et donc les habitudes acquises sont déterminantes. Habitudes et
accoutumance qui vont permettre de construire une démarche qui n’a rien de
spontané ou de naturel.
Exercice de la pensée critique et investigation ? Comment ? L’expérience que
nous menons a lieu en cycle 3 de l’école élémentaire. Le protocole de conduite des
séances est très simple. Un mot est donné, qui a été choisi par l’enseignante. Après
un moment de réflexion, les élèves demandent la parole (distribuée par l’enseignante)
et enchaînent les prises de parole. L’enseignante opère des relances quand le propos
peut être approfondi ou qu’une ouverture se présente, et fait de très courtes reprises
pour stabiliser une formulation, souligner une pluralité de sens, valider l’apparition
d’un mot non encore advenu. L’atelier, portant sur un groupe de 10 à 12 élèves, dure
une vingtaine de minutes.
L’enseignante prépare la séance comme suit. Un mot est choisi, soigneusement
choisi et formulé. Ainsi être heureux et le bonheur ne susciteront pas les mêmes
réactions parmi les élèves, les mêmes formulations, le même enchaînement. Le mot
étant choisi, l’enseignante fait un inventaire en vrac des acceptions du terme, des
champs d’application, des dérivations, sans rechercher l’exhaustivité. L’enseignante
se trouvera ainsi pourvue d’une réserve de significations et de pistes. Cela lui évitera
(du moins est-ce l’ambition) de privilégier d’emblée telle voie, telle opposition, telle
signification tirées de son habitus personnel, de s’y enfermer, d’y enfermer la
discussion. Elle sera disponible et préparée à ce qui adviendra, elle n’imposera pas.
Elle écoutera, pourra relever et distinguer des formulations, les mettre en relation
avec d’autres, les mettre en opposition le cas échéant.
Une séance de verbalisation ainsi préparée et dirigée conduit les élèves à
conceptualiser. En effet, poser un terme général et abstrait, d’usage courant
cependant, suscite la verbalisation d’expériences et perceptions diverses,
hétérogènes. On a là une exploration langagière (accroissant le lexique et spécifiant
des relations) qui construit un objet de pensée auquel peuvent être rattachées ces
expériences et perceptions, auquel se rattachent des mots et énoncés qui ne sont pas
spontanément dans un rapport de proximité avec le mot de départ. En lieu et place
d’un terme fermé sur une signification courante et donc fluctuante et floue, surgit
une efflorescence de formulations, un accroissement du bagage lexical, générant une
complexification de la signification. Des formulations sont stabilisées du fait d’être
énoncées, des liens se tissent entre des expériences, entre des formulations. C’est un
processus d’abstraction, de conceptualisation.
Les DVP s’inscrivent dans le difficile enseignement de la capacité à
verbaliser — capacité à traduire et construire langagièrement l’expérience (qu’elle
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soit vécue, imaginée, pensée, commentée, …), capacité à décrire et à relier. Focalisée
depuis des décennies par les didacticiens du français sur le lien lire-écrire, l’école
primaire n’enseigne guère la verbalisation, en laquelle se joue la capacité à dire mais
aussi la capacité à écrire. Le lien dire-écrire fut jadis énoncé par l’institution scolaire.
En effet les textes prescriptifs du Ministère de l’Instruction publique, en France, à la
fin du 19ème siècle (sous Jules Ferry), qui instituaient et formalisaient la rédaction
comme modalité d’apprentissage de la langue française écrite, instituaient et
formalisaient également une modalité d’apprentissage de l’oral (Baptiste, 2002). On
nomma alors élocution cette modalité, reprenant en cela un terme de la vieille
rhétorique.
Les DVP ne peuvent assurément pas être assimilées à ce que l’on nommait
l’élocution. Cette invention, sous la conquérante Troisième République, de l’oral en
classe primaire et celle, conjointement, de la rédaction, visaient l’homogénéisation
langagière du territoire. Il n’empêche : cette conjonction entre exercice de la parole
et apprentissage de l’écriture nous paraît à explorer. Il y aurait lieu de s’interroger sur
les effets des DVP sur l’apprentissage de l’écriture.
Nous faisons l’hypothèse que les comportements imposés par les DVP
(expressions langagières diverses des expériences, écoute des autres, partage des
formulations, délibération collective) et les exigences langagières induites par leur
pratique régulière (contrôle mutuel de la pertinence et de la justesse des
interventions, exigence de précision des formulations, enrichissement lexical,
reformulations, conceptualisation) construisent une culture de la verbalisation qui
accroît les capacités des élèves à produire des textes écrits.
BIBLIOGRAPHIE
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Lebrun, J.P. (2010). La condition humaine n’est pas sans conditions, Paris, Denoël.
Luxembourger, Ch., Saint Dizier De Almeida, V., & Specogna, A. (2015). La
discussion philosophique comme modèle pour former les enseignants à la
gestion des interactions sociocognitives, in Auriac-Slusarczyk, E. et Coletta,
J.M. (dir.), Les ateliers de philosophie : une pensée collective en acte, Clermont-Ferrand,
Presses Universitaires Blaise Pascal.
Manent, P. (2015). Situation de la France, Paris, Desclée de Brouwer.
Rorty, R. (1995). L’espoir au lieu du savoir. Introduction au pragmatisme, Paris, Albin
Michel.
AFFILIATION
Luc Baptiste
Ecole Supérieure du Professorat et de l’Education
Université Blaise Pascal – Clermont-Ferrand
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CARLOS MARCELO GARCÍA
JUAN ANTONIO ÁLVAREZ GARCÍA
CARMEN YOT DOMÍNGUEZ
ÁLVARO ARCOS GARCÍA
15
FORMARSE EN LA MOVILIDAD CON MOODLE CONTEXT.
DESARROLLO DE UNA APLICACIÓN DE MOBILE LEARNING
SENSIBLE AL CONTEXTO
REVISIÓN DE LITERATURA
193
dificultad o tiempo necesario para su desarrollo), recursos que se le asocian (basados
en texto, basados en audio, basados en gráficos, basados en videos, inmersivos, etc.)
y sistema de evaluación, a la infraestructura tal como el dispositivo tecnológico en
uso y las condiciones ambientales (la luz, el sonido o la temperatura).
En consecuencia, el proceso de adaptación se efectuaría en tiempo real y
constaría de tres fases (Zervas, Sampson, Gómez & Fabregat, 2013):
1. Detectar las dimensiones del contexto móvil del estudiante. En esta primera
fase se detectan las dimensiones del contexto actual mediante el hardware y los
sensores del dispositivo móvil del estudiante, así como de los datos introducidos por
éste manualmente.
2. Ejecución de la adaptación de contenidos móviles. Durante esta fase, se
evalúan las dimensiones del contexto y se aplica la adaptación de contenido en
tiempo real.
3. Entrega del contenido adaptado: Por último, el contenido adaptado en la fase
anterior se presenta en el dispositivo móvil del estudiante.
Moodle Context es una aplicación móvil que incorpora a las dimensiones del
contexto la ubicación, el tiempo y la actividad física que estén desarrollando sus
usuarios. Desarrollada para Android, una vez que detecta el contexto de un sujeto
particular le hace llegar notificaciones, ajustadas a dicho escenario y ambiente, sobre
los recursos y las actividades de aprendizaje en los que puede avanzar.
Cuando identifica un nuevo contexto para un usuario, envía los datos a la
nube y, a su vez, a la plataforma Moodle donde se encuentra la acción de formación
desarrollada para obtener información sobre las actividades de aprendizaje que ha de
realizar o los recursos disponibles para el estudio. Las actividades y recursos de
aprendizaje se organizan por objetivos. Los que en la app se recomienden serán los
concernientes al objetivo que el usuario esté cursando en ese momento. Los ya
superados, por su parte, quedarán asimismo accesibles desde la app.
El desarrollo de las actividades de aprendizaje se realiza directamente sobre
las herramientas que Moodle incorpora, así como sobre sus recursos. Así, Moodle es
el encargado de llevar el seguimiento del usuario y de procesar cuáles son las
actividades que se han finalizado y cuáles los recursos de estudio que han sido
revisados para que desde la app se pueda consultar dicha información. Todas las
comunicaciones se efectúan a través de Internet.
Para describir Moodle Context en mayor profundidad, en lo que sigue se
hace referencia explícita al contexto de aprendizaje y el contexto móvil siguiendo la
diferenciación realizada por Sampson & Zervas (2013).
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EL CONTEXTO DE APRENDIZAJE
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obligatorios tienen siempre orden consecutivo aunque la posición podrá ser, en
algunos casos, compartida por varios de ellos. Por su parte, los opcionales ocupan el
mismo orden que el OAA obligatorio al que estén asociados. Véase el gráfico que
sigue:
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− Informe Seguimiento M-Learning: Informe detallado para el seguimiento,
por parte del docente, del avance de todos los usuarios. Desde él, se puede dar por
superado cualquier OAA u objetivo. Ofrece información de la fecha en que cada
usuario ha trabajado con cada objeto de aprendizaje y presentado sus actividades.
El procedimiento que ha de seguirse para organizar la secuencia de OAA de
un objetivo, por consiguiente, se produce esencialmente desde el bloque Gestión de
Recursos M-Learning y sería como se describe:
1. Crear el objetivo. El registro de cualquiera de los objetivos de la formación,
se hace desde el citado bloque. Necesariamente hay que darle un nombre y asignarle
un orden. Los objetivos en la página de inicio de Moodle ocuparán secciones
diferenciadas. La sección tomará por denominación el nombre que demos al
objetivo. Asimismo, tal como ahora el objetivo sea nombrado aparecerá en la app.
2. Incorporar a Moodle los OAA. Los objetos de aprendizaje se vincularán en
la página de inicio de Moodle agregando el recurso que se considere más pertinente
ya sea Archivo, URL, Paquete SCORM, etc. Del mismo modo, las actividades se
configurarán sobre la herramienta en que se vayan a desarrollar ya sea Foro, Wiki,
Taller, Tarea, etc. En la página de inicio, los OA y actividades aparecerán
automáticamente en una primera sección que sólo visualiza el diseñador.
3. Dar formato a los OAA. Tanto los objetos como las actividades de
aprendizaje requieren que respecto de ellos se facilite una serie de metadatos, entre
otra información: duración, condición para considerarlo superado, actividad física
que se le asocia (andando, parado, en vehículo) o idioma. Estos metadatos se
utilizarán posteriormente al recomendar el recurso en la app. Se incorporan desde el
mismo bloque.
4. Asociar los OAA a su correspondiente objetivo. Para ubicar cada OAA en su
objetivo, desde el bloque, ha de crearse la relación entre ellos. Al establecer el
vínculo, hay que especificar el carácter que adopta el objeto o actividad dentro de la
secuencia (si es obligatorio u opcional) y su orden o posición.
Los usuarios, una vez que accedan a Moodle, visualizarán aquellos bloques
que hayan sido añadidos en los márgenes laterales de la página de inicio. Entre ellos,
aparecerán los bloques Recursos Complementarios y Avance Curso M-Learning. En
la parte central, se mostrarán los OAA del objetivo que se encuentren cursando.
Junto a cada uno de ellos, una marca informa si el objeto o actividad ha sido
superado o no. Un cron va actualizando el estado de los OAA cada 5 minutos.
CONTEXTO MÓVIL
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posibilidad de seguir el proceso de aprendizaje de una acción de formación
implementada en Moodle de manera ajustada a su cambiante contexto móvil. El
contexto móvil con el que trabaja la app atiende a las siguientes dimensiones:
− Lugar: Esta dimensión incluye información geoespacial relativa tanto a la
localización actual del usuario, como a los lugares frecuentados en su vida diaria.
− Tiempo: Esta dimensión incluye información sobre la disponibilidad
temporal que tiene el usuario para participar en el proceso de aprendizaje.
− Actividad: Esta dimensión incluye información sobre la actividad física que
está realizando el usuario en un momento concreto del proceso de aprendizaje. El
conjunto de actividades físicas consideradas se describirá en el siguiente punto.
En concreto, cuando se determina un nuevo contexto, en tiempo real, se manda una
notificación al dispositivo móvil del usuario con el listado de OAA pendientes de
acuerdo al contexto móvil que se ha calculado.
A) ACTIVIDAD
La actividad es la primera de las tres dimensiones que se atiende al definir el
contexto móvil de un usuario. Por actividad se entiende los siguientes tres estados de
actividad física que cualquier usuario puede llegar a desarrollar: estar parado, estar
andando y viajar en vehículo.
Para detectar la actividad, se ejecuta un servicio en segundo plano en el
dispositivo móvil cuya funcionalidad es obtener la probabilidad de que el usuario
esté realizando alguna de las tres actividades físicas. La frecuencia de muestreo de las
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actividades es de tres minutos y el umbral de probabilidad establecido es del 70%. Si
la actividad detectada por el dispositivo móvil supera dicho umbral, pasará a ser
considerada como candidata. Es necesario que en el siguiente muestreo, pasados
otros tres minutos, la actividad detectada vuelva a superar el umbral mínimo y
además sea la misma que la candidata en el último muestreo para que la actividad sea
elegida para el contexto. Es decir, el estudiante tiene que estar aproximadamente seis
minutos realizando la misma actividad para que pase a formar parte del contexto
actual.
Figura 3. Representación de la dimensión Actividad
Actividad detectada
No
¿Prob. > 70%?
Sí
No
¿Existe Nueva candidata
candidata?
Sí
No
¿Detectada =
candidata?
Sí
Dispositivo móvil
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Supongamos que Juan ha salido a hacer deporte y comienza a caminar.
Pasados tres minutos su dispositivo móvil detecta que está andando con una
probabilidad del 98% y que está parado con una probabilidad del 2%. La actividad
considerada candidata es estar andando. Después de otros tres minutos, el dispositivo
móvil detecta estas otras actividades: andar con probabilidad del 78%, viajar en
vehículo con probabilidad del 2% y parado con probabilidad del 20%. En este caso
la actividad más probable también es estar andando. Como, por una parte, supera el
umbral mínimo establecido se compara con la actividad candidata. Al ser iguales, por
otra, la actividad estar andando pasará a formar parte del contexto actual de Juan,
quien recibirá en su dispositivo móvil todas aquellos OAA que se ajusten a ese
contexto.
Si en el segundo muestreo las actividades detectadas hubiesen sido las
siguientes: viajar en vehículo con probabilidad 80% y estar andando con
probabilidad 20%. La actividad candidata sería ir en vehículo. Al superar el umbral y
ser distinta a la última candidata, ir en vehículo pasa a ser la nueva candidata. Por lo
tanto, hay que esperar al siguiente muestreo para confirmar si la actividad ir en vehículo
es la actividad del contexto y que se le envíen a Juan los OAA de ir en vehículo.
La actividad física incluida en el contexto se utiliza para filtrar y seleccionar
los OAA de acuerdo a la información que al configurarlo se reseñó en los metadatos.
Así si la actividad física es ir en vehículo, se le mostrará al alumno aquellos OAA que
previamente se hubiesen reconocido como propios para la citada actividad como
escuchar cualquier archivo de audio o visualizar vídeos breves que no requieran de
alta concentración. En el caso de que la actividad sea andando, los OAA mostrados
estarán relacionados con la tarea de escucha. En tercer lugar, si la actividad es estar
parado, el alumno recibirá todos los OAA disponibles ya les propongan la lectura de
textos, la intervención en un foro, la realización de cuestionarios, etc.
B) TIEMPO
Una segunda dimensión del contexto móvil es el tiempo, que se determina mediante
la combinación de la hora actual y los tres mecanismos que se describen a
continuación: límite de notificaciones por tramo horario, restricción por franja
horaria y restricción durante una hora.
En primer lugar, el usuario desde la app establece aquellas preferencias
horarias que considera oportunas. Estas preferencias se definen como una franja
horaria compuesta por una hora de inicio y una hora de fin. Las preferencias
horarias se evalúan como restricción, es decir, si la hora en que se identifica una
nueva actividad se encuentra dentro de alguna de las franjas horarias establecidas por
el usuario para no recibir ninguna notificación, no se le enviará. De tal modo que el
sistema las ha de comprobar cuando se asume una nueva actividad.
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En segundo lugar, el usuario también tiene la posibilidad de establecer el
número máximo de notificaciones que desea recibir en tres tramos horarios
predefinidos por defecto en la aplicación: mañana (7:00 - 15:00), tarde (15:00 - 23:00)
y noche (23:00 - 7:00). Esto permite al usuario establecer en qué momentos del día
desea recibir más o menos notificaciones. Si un usuario llega al límite, no se le
enviarán más notificaciones en el tramo horario en el que se encuentre. El contador
de notificaciones enviadas se restablece a cero diariamente durante la madrugada en
zona horaria europea.
Por último, existe una tercera opción consistente en que el estudiante
deshabilite las notificaciones durante una hora. Al recibir una notificación, tiene
siempre la posibilidad de silenciar las notificaciones durante la próxima hora. La
opción se facilita en la misma notificación y no en la aplicación.
Dispositivo móvil
Actividad de contexto
Sí
¿Restricción
de una hora?
No
Servidor
Sí
¿Límite por
tramo horario
alcanzado?
No
Sí
¿Restricción
de franja
horaria?
No
Se puede mandar
No mandar notificación
notificación
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Supongamos ahora que Laura tiene dos turnos de trabajo, uno por las
mañanas de 8:00 a 12:00 y otro por las tardes de 16:00 a 20:00. Para adaptar el
proceso de aprendizaje a sus necesidades, establece no recibir notificaciones en
ninguna de esas dos franjas horarias. Hoy por la mañana ha cogido el autobús para ir
al trabajo. A las 7:30 se detectó la nueva actividad, ir en un vehículo. Como no
disponía de ninguna restricción horaria establecida a esa hora, le llegó una
notificación a su dispositivo móvil con los OAA que se adaptaban al contexto, por
ejemplo, escuchar un archivo de audio mp3 a lo que accedió. Más tarde, a las 11:00,
se ha detectado la actividad de estar parada pero, como en este horario no desea
recibir ninguna notificación, no se le envía.
C) LUGAR
El lugar es la tercera dimensión que se tiene en cuenta al establecer el contexto.
Viene dada por la ubicación del estudiante expresada en términos de latitud y
longitud y por los lugares donde el usuario no desea ser notificado.
De forma similar a las preferencias de tiempo, el usuario puede establecer
preferencias de lugar con carácter restrictivo para evitar la recepción de
notificaciones en determinados sitios.
Si se puede determinar la localización del estudiante cuando se asume una
nueva actividad, se comprobará si se encuentra en un radio de 200 metros respecto a
los lugares que haya establecido en las preferencias. En caso afirmativo, no se le
mandará ninguna notificación. Si no se puede determinar la ubicación del estudiante
en tiempo real, esta dimensión no será considerada para establecer el contexto.
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Figura 5. Representación de la dimensión Lugar
Dispositivo móvil
Actividad de
contexto
No
¿Localización
disponible?
Sí
Servidor
¿A más de 200 No
metros de
lugar
restringido?
Sí
Supongamos que Adela tiene mañana una reunión de trabajo por la tarde en
la oficina de uno de sus clientes. No quiere recibir ninguna notificación durante el
encuentro por lo que al revisar en la noche su agenda para el día siguiente establece
una nueva restricción de lugar indicando el sitio donde se encuentra la oficina. A las
18:00 del día de la reunión, la aplicación detecta que está parada. Como no tiene
establecida ninguna restricción horaria se le podría mandar la notificación. Sin
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embargo, el sistema comprueba que existe una ubicación que restringe la
notificación, y por consiguiente, no se le mandará mientras permanezca en ese lugar.
Cloud Computing
Esta propuesta de aprendizaje móvil basado en contexto hace uso de la plataforma
de Cloud Computing de Google continuamente. Las ventajas son varias.
En primer lugar, se derivan las operaciones de computación más complejas
del dispositivo móvil a Google App Engine, con lo que el consumo de batería del
dispositivo móvil es mínimo y la aplicación móvil funciona de forma fluida,
mejorando así la experiencia de uso de los usuarios. El acuerdo a nivel de servicio
(SLA) de Google establece que sus sistemas estarán disponibles mensualmente al
menos el 99.5% del tiempo, es decir, los estudiantes no tendrán problemas para
utilizar los servicios de Google y guardar sus preferencias de tiempo o lugar, por
ejemplo, en cualquier momento y en cualquier parte del mundo.
En segundo lugar, Google App Engine ofrece escalabilidad lo cual permite a
nuestro sistema soportar un alto grado de usuarios utilizando la aplicación móvil
simultáneamente. Para el piloto se está utilizando el plan de tarificación gratuito y
estas prestaciones están más limitadas.
En tercer lugar, aprovechamos la integración de Android con el ecosistema
de servicios de Google. Específicamente, utilizamos:
− Google Cloud Datastore para almacenar los datos y las preferencias de los
usuarios ya que ofrece un altísimo grado de durabilidad, escalabilidad, disponibilidad
y consistencia.
− Google Maps Android API para que los estudiantes seleccionen de forma
fácil e intuitiva la ubicación donde no desean recibir notificaciones mediante la
aplicación móvil.
− Google Cloud Messaging para el envío de notificaciones push a los
dispositivos móviles de los estudiantes.
− Google Analytics para obtener estadísticas de uso de la aplicación Android y
estudiar el comportamiento de los usuarios.
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cómo puede desarrollarse. Más de 160 OAA se facilitan para completar la
formación.
Al término de la formación, se demandará a cada sujeto en particular que
cumplimente dos inventarios específicos de evaluación. El primero confeccionado
de acuerdo a la teoría unificada sobre uso y aceptación de la tecnología desarrollada
por Venkatesh, Morris, Davis & Davis (2003) que ha sido adaptada al empleo de
dispositivos móviles en diferentes contextos y situaciones (Magsamen-Conrad,
Upadhyaya, Youngnyo & Dowd, 2015; Moran, Hawkes & El Gayar, 2010) y al m-
learning (Abu-Al-Aish, & Love, 2013; Wang, Wu, & Wang, 2009). El segundo
creado expresamente para valorar el diseño instruccional y tecnológico que ha sido
aquí presentado.
BIBLIOGRAFÍA
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al. (Eds.), Ubiquitous and Mobile Learning in the Digital Age (pp.37-50), New York:
Springer.
AFILIACIONES
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CARMEN YOT DOMÍNGUEZ
CARLOS MARCELO GARCÍA
16
FORMAR EN COMPETENCIAS PROFESIONALES
PARA EL DESEMPEÑO EN ELEARNING
INTRODUCCIÓN
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Si se confirman las previsiones de crecimiento de su industria, se afianzará
como ocupación laboral de amplio volumen de personas, entre ellas nuestros
estudiantes universitarios egresados. Por lo que cabe preguntarse, ¿estamos
preparándolos para esta salida profesional? El estudio que se presenta ha tenido
como objetivo analizar y describir las competencias profesionales que son necesarias
para el ejercicio en el eLearning de acuerdo a los diferentes perfiles que se ven
involucrados en su desarrollo.
REVISIÓN TEÓRICA
Son muchos los investigadores los que, como Cukusic, Afirevic, Granic & Garaca
(2010), se han preocupado por definir el proceso de desarrollo del eLearning
viniendo a coincidir en que las etapas esenciales, aún cuando en la realidad se pueden
desdibujar (Dunn, 2007), coinciden con: la planificación, el diseño y desarrollo, la
ejecución o entrega y, finalmente, la evaluación del proceso y sus resultados.
Entre los factores críticos que contribuyen al éxito del eLearning se localizan
los relativos a atender a las necesidades formativas del alumnado y conocer de
antemano las experiencias previas y el nivel de preparación de los estudiantes para
esta modalidad formativa (McPherson & Nunes, 2008). De ahí que se hayan
confeccionado instrumentos de evaluación como el de Hung, Chou, Chen & Own
(2010) y que, en consecuencia, en una fase inicial sea necesario emprender un
diagnóstico de necesidades útil para determinar los vacíos competenciales que deben
ser cubiertos y estipular si el eLearning es la mejor solución formativa para ello.
Una vez identificadas las necesidades de formación, y derivados los objetivos
formativos, se establecen los contenidos de estudio, se concretan las actividades de
aprendizaje y se delimitan los apoyos al aprendizaje (Oliver, 1999, 2001). Es el
momento de diseñar la experiencia de formación y numerosos trabajos nos ayudan
en la tarea como el de Herrington, Reeves & Oliver (2010) que nos introducen en
cómo crear escenarios de aprendizaje auténticos o el de De Freitas (2007) que nos
clarifica el proceso de producción de los contenidos. Sin embargo, no sólo se ha de
ejecutar el diseño instruccional sino también el diseño de los recursos digitales y de
la tecnología y, seguidamente, se ha de acometer su creación. Tómense como guías
para este desempeño las publicaciones de Clark & Mayer (2011) o Rosen (2009).
Como parte de esta fase de diseño y desarrollo, un segundo momento de
evaluación es posible (Horton, 2001, p. 9). La evaluación es necesaria para garantizar
la calidad de las acciones formativas y la gestión de la calidad debe hacerse de
manera sostenible durante todo el proceso de desarrollo de un proyecto de
eLearning (Botturi, Succi, Cantoni & Inversioni, 2007).
Seguidamente, la implementación de la formación atraviesa por diferentes
períodos. Salmon (2004) nos enseña cómo han de abordarse estos y, por ende, nos
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muestra cómo motivar a los estudiantes durante el proceso de enseñanza-aprendizaje
o cómo favorecer la construcción del aprendizaje. Bennett & Marsh (2007) también
han descrito, a modo de recetas, todo un conjunto de actividades para la promoción
del aprendizaje online.
Por último, un nuevo espacio debe ser reservado a la evaluación. Las razones
específicas para evaluar el eLearning pueden ser variadas (Horton, 2001, p. 2) pero lo
que se debe garantizar es que ésta cubre la totalidad de elementos que inciden en la
calidad de esta modalidad de formación tal como se refleja en el instrumento editado
por Marcelo & Zapata (2008).
El abordaje que acabamos de hacer del proceso es somero e incluso
reduccionista pues adolece de la carencia de referencias a cuestiones propias de la
gestión de proyectos, gestión de la formación y gestión de la calidad. Khan & Joshi
(2006) lo han descrito de manera más completa en términos de las personas
participantes en cada una de las fases. Pero sirve a nuestro interés de llamar la
atención sobre el hecho de que en cada una de las fases se ven implicados
profesionales que asumen responsabilidades y cuentan con capacidades y
conocimientos diferenciados (Atwere, Dennis et al., 2007; Marcelo, 2006, pp. 22-45).
Llegados a este punto, cabe preguntarse ¿cuáles son los perfiles profesionales
vinculados con el eLearning?, ¿cuáles son las competencias que requieren para un
desempeño eficiente?
MÉTODO
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indicar con qué perfil se identificaban en su actividad profesional además de su sexo,
edad y situación laboral. En función del perfil seleccionado, el inventario ofrecía la
relación de ítems que debían valorar con puntuaciones entre 1 y 5.
En un segundo momento, procedimos a realizar entrevistas individuales y
semiestructuradas a una muestra de profesionales del eLearning. Las entrevistas
tenían por finalidad que los entrevistados describieran qué tareas desempeñan
cotidianamente en sus puestos de trabajo y que enumeraran qué capacidades y
conocimientos requieren para un ejercicio eficaz de las mismas.
A los datos recogidos por medio del inventario se les aplicó todo un análisis
estadístico de carácter descriptivo haciendo uso del software SPSS. Para el análisis de
los datos de naturaleza cualitativa desarrollamos un sistema de categorías. Éste fue
diseñado siguiendo un proceso inductivo, emergente a partir de los propios datos. El
análisis del contenido de las entrevistas nos aportó información descriptiva acerca de
cada una de las categorías y subcategorías del sistema.
Muestras
El inventario fue contestado por 317 personas, de las cuales 120 eran hombres
(37.9%) y 192 eran mujeres (60.6%). Las edades de los sujetos oscilaron entre los 23
y 68 años. Mayoritariamente eran residentes en España (77.9%), más
específicamente en Andalucía (61.2%). El 34.4% de los sujetos eran empleados de
una gran empresa (más de 300 trabajadores), el 15.1% se encontraban trabajando
para una empresa de entre 50 y 300 trabajadores (mediana empresa) y el 11.5% se
ejercían en una pequeña empresa (entre 10 y 50 trabajadores). El 10.8% estaba en
situación de desempleo y el 21% trabajaba por cuenta propia.
Por su parte, los entrevistados fueron 46 profesionales del eLearning. De
ellos, 21 eran hombres y 25 mujeres. Mayoritariamente eran residentes en España.
Ejercían profesionalmente en empresas que ofertan la producción de contenidos
formativos y la impartición de acciones formativas (Formación Digital, TAC
Learning, AGE Formación o Sadiel), entidades que distribuyen soluciones
tecnológicas para la formación (Samoo o e-learning Solutions), Confederaciones de
Empresarios, Escuelas de Negocio, Escuelas de Idiomas, fundaciones e institutos
que disponen de programas de formación online (CEA, ESADE, EOI, Fundación
CEDAC, Institut Obert de Cataluña, Mondragón Lingua), empresas con planes de
formación interno online para su personal (Grupo Pelayo o Asepeyo), universidades
que trabajan por la implantación del eLearning (Universidad de Sevilla, Universidad
Pontificia del Ecuador, INACAP) u organismos públicos que financian acciones de
eLearning (Servicio Andaluz de Empleo), etc.
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RESULTADOS
PREVIO A LA FORMACIÓN
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pueden hacerlo con el apoyo de los contables de la institución y en algún caso de los
gestores de formación (M= 3.88 SD= 1.562).
El desempeño de estas tareas requiere:
− Disponer de conocimientos tanto del producto o servicio que se
comercializa como del sector, de habilidades sociales como expresarse bien en
público o de empatía, de habilidades de venta y marketing y capacidad para captar las
necesidades de las personas y sintetizarlas o recogerlas en una propuesta.
− Mantenerse informado de los productos y servicios de la competencia, de los
nuevos que aparecen en el mercado, de las tendencias en el sector, etc.
Al inicio de un proyecto es responsabilidad de estos cargos directivos concretar qué
se debe hacer, prestando atención entre otros aspectos a los requerimientos
recogidos en la primera reunión con el cliente, y definir cómo llevarlo a efecto, esto
es, proporcionar las pautas técnicas para el trabajo. Asimismo han de hacer “un project
con tareas, perfiles y horas”, o lo que es lo mismo, asignar el personal que participará en
el proyecto, estimar los recursos que se requieren, concretar el cronograma de
ejecución y marcar los hitos a cubrir según se hayan pactado. Si es necesaria la
incorporación de nuevo personal, de su selección y contratación se encargan
asimismo ellos.
Hay casos en los que para este cometido se ayudan, porque en un momento
determinado los idearon y definieron, de unos procedimientos de trabajo y esquemas
o flujos de procesos en los que son representados todos los trabajos a desarrollarse
en el marco de un proyecto tipo, los puntos de decisión, los equipos o personas
intervinientes y los productos u outputs que se deben generar, etc. Los cuales, en
tanto que son concebidos para ser pautas de acción perdurables, “hay que someterlos a
revisión para que no queden obsoletos”. Esta revisión, no obstante, puede quedar a cargo
de ellos o de los técnicos de calidad de las instituciones según se ha desvelado en
las entrevistas.
El desempeño de estas tareas requiere, en primer lugar, tener una visión
global de lo que es un proyecto de eLearning, conocer las fases o momentos por los
que atraviesa y saber de lo que sabe cada miembro del equipo participante para de
este modo disponer de conocimientos de hasta dónde puede llegar el trabajo del
personal y cuánto tiempo hay que asignarle para la ejecución de sus labores. Hay que
saber, asimismo, organizar, estructurar y planificar el trabajo de las diferentes
personas o equipos involucrados. En segundo lugar, se debe ser analítico y tener la
capacidad de pensar en procesos y flujos.
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hacer la publicidad y la pertinente captación de alumnos. Ellos han de idear e
impulsar la puesta en marcha de las estrategias que se seguirán para ello.
Si bien junto a los diseñadores instruccionales definirán la información
relevante para los posibles destinatarios de la formación cubriendo cuestiones como
el programa o el tipo de evaluación, son los gestores quienes han de proporcionar
mayor información sobre plazos de matriculación, certificación, etc. a las personas
interesadas en la oferta (M= 4.07 DE= 1.022) y sobre los requisitos técnicos que
deben de poseer en sus ordenadores y dispositivos tecnológicos (M=4.19 DE=
1.087). También han de ofrecer información en relación con los compromisos de
calidad del programa, tarea que recae de igual modo sobre los técnicos de calidad
(M=4.46 DE= .776).
Para dar una respuesta pertinente es necesario que conozcan bien qué se está
ofertando. Esto requiere estar familiarizado con el programa de formación pero
también con el entorno y los materiales de aprendizaje.
Asimismo han de diseñar el proceso de selección del alumnado estableciendo
los requisitos de acceso, pudiendo estar auxiliados en ello por los diseñadores
instruccionales (M=3.77 DE=1.336), seleccionarlo de acuerdo a los criterios
establecidos y administrar las matriculas. Si el alumnado ha de sufragar los gastos de
matriculación, deben supervisar y controlar que se ha procedido a hacer efectivo el
ingreso.
También deben seleccionar a los tutores para el desarrollo de la acción
formativa (M=4.40 DE=1.211) aunque la tarea es compartida con los diseñadores
instruccionales (M=4.33 DE=1.084). Junto a ellos y, más específicamente con los
técnicos de calidad (M=4.64 DE=.505), establecerán los procedimientos de
coordinación entre tutores. Los tres colectivos proporcionarán información y
orientaciones al profesorado y tutores en relación con la estructura, modelo y
orientación pedagógica de la acción formativa.
El desempeño de estas tareas requiere de conocimientos generales de lo que
es el eLearning y cómo se desarrolla, de dominio en ofimática y gestión de bases de
datos, de habilidades comunicativas como saber escuchar, de capacidades como las
de redacción y de una actitud de apertura permanente a mejorar.
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lo hacen en el escenario de la organización que les ha solicitado y contratado el
diseño de contenidos y/o una acción de formación. Realizado el diagnóstico,
gestores y diseñadores junto a los diseñadores de recursos digitales, y en algún
caso los expertos en contenidos, determinarán la viabilidad de un diseño de
eLearning en relación a la necesidad formativa detectada.
Posteriormente, son los diseñadores instruccionales y expertos en contenidos
quienes redactan los objetivos de aprendizaje o competencias a desarrollar con la
formación, definen la estructura de la acción formativa considerando entre otras
cuestiones las características del alumnado, identifican los criterios de evaluación y
describen las evidencias de logro necesarias para que el alumnado acredite el
dominio de las competencias objeto de formación. En el diseño de estrategias
variadas de evaluación acordes con las competencias perseguidas por la acción de
formación intervienen además los técnicos de calidad (M=4.85 DE=.378). La
creación de los instrumentos para evaluar los aprendizajes que puedan utilizarse en
cambio corresponde además los diseñadores de recursos digitales (M=4.10
DE=1.261).
Cabe matizar que el diseño de las actividades de aprendizaje, de carácter
formal o no formal o de tipo individual o grupal, recae exclusivamente en los
diseñadores instruccionales aún cuando después los tutores puedan proponer otras
en el transcurso de la experiencia formativa. Los diseñadores han de definir acciones
de aprendizaje que produzcan evidencias de logro utilizables en los procesos de
evaluación (M=4.50 DE=.797). Y que, según nuestros entrevistados, en ocasiones
los diseñadores, en colaboración con los tutores, han de establecer cómo se
desarrollará la función de tutoría definiendo lo que denominan “guión didáctico”. Ahí
determinarán, por ejemplo, qué preguntas se debatirán en el foro, qué recursos se
recomendarán, qué mensajes se enviarán, etc. y todo esto cuándo.
El desempeño de estas tareas requiere de conocimientos acerca de las
estrategias y métodos didácticos para el aprendizaje online y de los principios
pedagógicos.
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la web y reutilizables y garantizando que se respetan las normas y condiciones éticas
aplicables y se evita el plagio.
Para la redacción de contenidos se necesitan conocimientos y experiencia
profesional en la materia que se aborda, conocimientos de los aspectos
metodológicos de la enseñanza online, domino de la gramática y la ortografía,
habilidades en expresión escrita y capacidad de redacción, imaginación y capacidad
de concentración y constancia.
El desarrollo digital de los contenidos y recursos de aprendizaje, haciendo
uso de los programas informáticos necesarios y respetando no sólo los principios de
usabilidad y las normas de accesibilidad sino también los estándares de
interoperabilidad (M=4.05 DE=1.203), es tarea de los diseñadores de recursos
digitales.
El proceso de producción digital tiende a iniciarse con el diseño de un
storyboard que permite previsualizar con antelación cuál será el efecto del recurso
digital que finalmente se genere y que ayudará a guiar la posterior tarea de creación.
Durante su confección, los diseñadores de recursos digitales procuran que la estética,
que después reproducirán, sea homogénea e invierten esfuerzos en que el diseño
estético presente y comunique la información de estudio claramente (M=4.40
DE=1.273).
Lo más frecuente es maquetar el contenido para que esté disponible en
formato video, texto en HTML o animación. Así, los diseñadores han de diseñar
contenidos formativos digitales utilizando recursos audiovisuales (M=4.43
DE=1.287), recursos web (M=4.29 DE=1,231) o animaciones y demostraciones
(M=4.14 DE=1,153) que promuevan la interactividad y la motivación del alumnado.
Sin embargo, no reconocen que estos deban estar adaptados para dispositivos
móviles (M=3.43 DE=1.399). Ni que ellos deban incorporar las herramientas de
videojuegos y mundos virtuales en sus diseños (M=3.30 DE=1.625).
Esta fabricación suele llevar aparejado el tener que indagar qué herramientas
de autor se pueden emplear, valorar la utilidad de éstas, descubrir cómo funcionan,
probar a modificar las hojas de estilo predefinidas y comprobar las compatibilidades
de los productos, que con ellas se generan, en navegadores y dispositivos. Nos
decían en una entrevista:
También el deber localizar los recursos más adecuados a los contenidos que se
diseñan y seleccionarlos mediante la utilización de una variedad de repositorios
digitales. Pero esto también es tarea del experto en contenidos y diseñador
instruccional.
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Una vez producidos los recursos, si fuese el caso de que éstos fueron
demandados, los responsables de proyecto validan que se ajusta a lo que el cliente
requiere y velan porque se cumplen los criterios de calidad.
El desempeño de estas tareas de diseño requiere conocer las formas variadas
en que se puede presentar el contenido en un recursos digital, disponer de
creatividad para hacer diseños diferentes, tener conocimientos de HTML, CSS, etc. y
de edición de imágenes, disponer de dominio en el uso de programas de autor y en
ofimática y contar con facilidad técnica (capacidad de aprender rápido a usar algún
software).
Desarrollo de software
Del mismo modo que existen entidades que suministran software útiles para el
diseño y desarrollo de la formación online, existen otras cuyo énfasis está en la
creación de estos programas. También en el seno de las universidades se están
implementando proyectos cuya finalidad es lanzar al mercado herramientas que nos
faciliten la tarea de edición de recursos digitales. Por su parte, en algunas de las
entidades dedicadas a la comercialización de la producción de contenidos digitales
para la formación, los programadores de la propia institución se están dedicando a
tal cometido. Uno de ellos nos decía:
Administración de la tecnología
Ya sea en instituciones donde los directores o responsables del área de
tecnologías diseñan la arquitectura tecnológica necesaria para el desarrollo de
acciones de eLearning o no, las plataformas tecnológicas son el desarrollo
informático por excelencia que da forma al entorno en que tiene lugar la formación.
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Es por ello que entre las tareas de administración de la tecnología encontramos las
relativas a:
− seleccionar la plataforma o las herramientas tecnológicas más adecuadas, lo
que es responsabilidad de los gestores de contenidos (M=4.78 DE=.548), los
administradores (M=4.73 DE=.550) y en algún caso de los diseñadores de
recursos digitales (M=3.85 DE=1.348).
− crear espacios en la plataforma, personalizarlos, añadir y configurar
herramientas como crear las evaluaciones pertinentes lo que es competencia de los
gestores de contenidos (M=4.50 DE=.514), los diseñadores de recursos digitales
(M=4.10 DE=1.334) y en algún caso de los administradores (M=3.77 DE=1.478).
− diseñar la navegación del espacio tecnológico con adecuada organización a
fin de facilitar por parte de los alumnos la comprensión de su estructura, lo que
ocupa a gestores de contenidos (M=4.72 DE=.575), administradores (M=4.43
SD=.746), diseñadores instruccionales (M=4.31 DE=1.022) y diseñadores de
recursos digitales (M=4.55 DE=1.101).
Al término de las acciones de formación, los entrevistados señalaron que los
administradores debían de hacer copias de seguridad. Es así que, si lo que se va a
implementar son nuevas ediciones de alguna acción formativa ya desarrollada, han
de duplicar los espacios y poner a punto las herramientas para la nueva versión.
Previo al desarrollo de la acción formativa, también han de dar de alta a los
usuarios (M=4.36 DE=,953). Los gestores de formación son los que comunicarán,
finalmente, el nombre de usuario y contraseña de acceso asignados y habrán de
asegurar la correcta recepción de ellos (M=4.26 DE=1.170).
La revisión del funcionamiento del diseño organizativo y tecnológico antes
del inicio de la formación, por su parte, compete a los gestores de contenidos
(M=4.67 DE=.594), los gestores de formación (M=4.49 DE=.840) y a los tutores
(M=4.34 DE=.885). El mantenimiento de los contenidos en la plataforma, en
cambio, es tarea de los gestores de contenidos (M=4.56 DE=.616), administradores
(M=4.09 DE=1.377) y diseñadores de recursos digitales (M=4.14 DE=1.283).
El desempeño de todas estas tareas requiere básicamente de conocimientos
de administración de servidores y sistemas, estructuras de directorio, etc.,
conocimientos y dominio en el uso de las plataformas de eLearning incluyendo
conocimientos del lenguaje de programación en que están escritas y saber
programar.
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− Hacer el seguimiento de los proyectos para controlar que se hace en tiempo,
se ajusta al presupuesto y atiende a las pautas dadas. Si es necesario algún ajuste, lo
medita y lo demanda.
− Poner a disposición de los demás las herramientas y recursos que necesiten
durante el proceso de desarrollo del proyecto. Si es necesario hacer alguna
adquisición, del tipo de software o hardware, deben gestionarla.
− Ante desfases temporales o problemas tienen que volver a estimar los
tiempos calculando las posibles holguras y retrasos, hacer ajustes en el cronograma y
tomar decisiones (del tipo variar el alcance, incorporar a más personal…) teniendo
presente los riesgos y el coste.
Con el cliente el contacto debe ser constante “ya sea en persona o normalmente a través de
videoconferencia”. Por un lado, para informarle sobre el avance del proyecto. Por otro,
para demandarle la entrega de inputs y/o validaciones o feedback. Al término del
proyecto, al cliente le pueden solicitar asimismo que exprese su grado de satisfacción
con respecto al proceso y el trabajo desarrollado.
Son imprescindibles para ello capacidades como las de trabajo en equipo, de toma de
decisiones, de resolución de problemas y de negociación. El liderazgo y las
habilidades comunicativas son también necesarios.
DURANTE LA FORMACIÓN
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DE=.738) y promover el intercambio de documentación, trabajos, etc. (M=4.52
DE=.796).
Inevitablemente deben motivar y despertar el entusiasmo por la acción
formativa haciéndoles ver la relación de la materia con sus necesidades de
aprendizaje (M=4.80 DE=.536). Ellos han de facilitar un aprendizaje auténtico
aportando al alumnado ejemplos de aplicación práctica de los contenidos (M=4.72
DE=.600) y proponiendo actividades alternativas de puesta en práctica o
profundización (M=4.52 DE=.751). Deberían apoyar la aplicación de lo aprendido
desarrollando actividades de aprendizaje en el puesto de trabajo, cuando sea posible
(M=4.51 DE=.888).
Es responsabilidad de ellos introducir modificaciones en la programación
adecuándola, cuando sea oportuno y las circunstancias así lo requieran, al progreso y
necesidades de los alumnos (M=4.30 DE=.965). Tarea esta última en la que se verán
involucrados también los gestores de contenidos (M=4.59 DE=.618). Es
igualmente importante que favorezcan la inclusión del alumnado con necesidades
especiales adaptando los medios y procesos según normas de accesibilidad (M=4.27
DE=1.058).
A tutores y gestores corresponde supervisar los materiales que serán
empleados con objeto de que se adapten a los objetivos y evitar la existencia de
información desfasada. Por otra parte, los gestores, en ocasiones también los tutores
y los técnicos de calidad, habrán de asegurar el funcionamiento de los dispositivos
tecnológicos y contenidos digitales a lo largo de la formación mediante su revisión
permanente. Los administradores de la tecnología, por su parte, han de
supervisar el funcionamiento de la plataforma y hacer el mantenimiento de los
servidores para evitar la presencia de problemas y garantizar su rendimiento óptimo.
Asimismo han de resolver las incidencias que se les presenten a los usuarios y
proporcionar soporte sobre cómo funciona la plataforma.
Por último, los tutores evalúan al alumnado de acuerdo a los criterios de
evaluación establecidos (M=4.66 DE=.670) y les proporcionan feedback sobre sus
progresos y orientaciones para mejorar su aprendizaje (M=4.77 DE=.637). Junto a
los técnicos de calidad, realizarán el seguimiento de la evolución de los aprendizajes
del alumnado mediante el análisis de su actividad en la actividad formativa.
En consecuencia, los tutores requieren disponer de conocimientos de la
materia objeto de estudio, de la capacidad de generar confianza, de empatía y
sensibilidad, de dominio de los entornos colaborativos y de manejo de las
herramientas de comunicación. Sería pertinente asimismo tener experiencia como
alumno en eLearning para entender la relevancia de una tutoría efectiva en el
proceso de aprendizaje online.
219
DESPUÉS DE LA FORMACIÓN
CONCLUSIONES
220
tiene cada una de las competencias en el desempeño, rendimiento y éxito de los
profesionales en el puesto de trabajo para poder priorizarlas. No obstante, nuestros
resultados sirven para fundamentar la programación de aquella formación que trate
de facilitar la adquisición de las competencias que los diferentes profesionales en
eLearning han de poner en ejercicio.
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AFILIACIONES
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