ESMAD - uniMAD - Artigos
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing ESMAD - uniMAD - Artigos by Author "Azevedo, João"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Antonymy and networking lexical organization in the 1st CEB: teaching proposal using bimodal narratives and increased realityPublication . Baptista, Adriana; Morgado, Celda; Costa, José António; Azevedo, João; Querido, Joana; Oliveira, Inês; Leite, Luís; Ribeiro, IolandaNeste artigo, apresentamosuma proposta didática para o ensino das relações semânticas múltiplas entre palavras, para o 1.º CEB, com o auxílio da Realidade Aumentada.Propõe-se que a aprendizagem das relações semânticas entre palavras não se fundamente em relações antonímicas binárias, sob pena de se instalar nas crianças o pensamento dicotómico. Através de trêsnarrativas bimodais, são questionadas as possibilidades de organização lexical,colocando pares de palavras aparentemente dicotómicos em contextos textuais diversos, que criam relações de gradação ou sinonímia, comprometendo a inevitabilidade de organização/interpretação antonímica binária, assim como as negativasconsequências do seu ensino a crianças em idades precoces.
- Augmented reality to enhance nonopposite reality awareness: lexical relations amongst primary teachingPublication . Baptista, Adriana; Morgado, Celda; Costa, José António; Azevedo, JoãoLexicon allows particular cosmovisions built up with varied semantic, formal and pragmatic-discursive relations (Coseriu, 1991; Teixeira, 2005). In teaching context, these variations are often replaced by dichotomous and decontextualized proposals of lexical organisation (Baptista et al., 2017). We hope changing some teaching practices, based on complex lexical relationships research, and on new didactic resources. Firstly, we account for the diversity of existing lexical relations (Choupina et al., 2013), considering different linguistic criteria (Lehmann & Martin-Berthet, 2008). Then, we present an exploratory study to see if primary school pupils’ mental lexicon is intuitively organised in a dichotomous way. Departing from three bimodal narratives where words show opposition relations, although not exclusive, within the story, sometimes oppositional relations become similarity relations. These relationships allow to group words such as word class, worldviews, socio-cultural references. Although this approach starts with antonyms and synonyms in second-grade classes (according to Portuguese primary school curriculum, Buescu et al., 2015), we registered varied students’ responses, reflecting a mental lexicon escaping the dichotomy of certain oppositions taught in a decontextualized way. Thirdly, we propose an augmented reality tool that allows children (and adults) to watch visual narrative representing actions from written narratives. As a matter of fact, within particular contexts, words may not relate to each other in an opposite way. If intuitive knowledge on words isn’t confined to rigid perspectives, teaching shouldn’t lead that way, but to promote a critical thinking approach supporting education for citizenship.