Working Papers em Linguística (Apr 2014)

A Look at The Work with The Genre "Invitation" in Class of Literacy

  • Mônica de Araújo Saraiva,
  • Terezinha da Conceição Costa-Hübes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5007/1984-8420.2014v15n1p1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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This paper is the result of studies, reflections and articulated research to the project Continuing Education for Teachers of Basic Education in the lower elementary school: actions to literacy in cities with low IDEB of Western Paraná, linked to the Centre for Education Program - CAPES/INEP. In this context, our research, in particular, focuses on actions to mediate the appropriation of writing by working with speech genres language. Thus, as part of this investigative process, we aim in this paper to analyze the written text activities in a class of 2nd year (lower elementary school), considering a work using the gender invitation. Guided by the question: “how mediation of the teacher, while working with speech genres from the perspective of literacy, may contribute to the acquisition of written language of students in the 2nd year of elementary school? - Intend to reflect on a didactic - methodological strategies on a qualitative research process, of the ethnographic type, endorsed by the methodology of action research, with gender invitation, from the perspective of emphasizing the importance of the teacher’s role as mediator during this teaching process. It is, therefore, a research in Applied Linguistics, using the theoretical framework of Cultural-Historical Psychology (VYGOTSKY, 1995, 2001, 2007) and the concept of Dialogic Discourse (BAKHTIN/VOLOCHINOV, 2004; BAKHTIN, 2003), being within of the socio-historical approach to language . We also seek support in theoretical studies such as Geraldi (2003, 2006), Cagliari (2009, 1998), Martins (2007), and other authors who address on the inclusion of children in social interaction through writing. The results reveal the teacher importance of “intervention” in activities that facilitate the appropriation of the written language.

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