The aim of this article is to study the possible influence that exercising a representative role at school may have on secondary school students' willingness to participate politically in society. In order to do this, an analysis was carried out of the answers given by 300 students between 13 and 18 years old, from a school with marked democratic practices, when asked about their experience of democracy at school and their intention to participate politically. The results show that students' willingness to participate in society by means of conventional actions, such as voting, does not depend directly on whether they have exercised a representative role at school. However, non-conventional actions, such as attending demonstrations or supporting boycotts, does have a meaningful relation with the exercise of representative roles in the school. As a conclusion, we highlight that participating in the representation of the school influences the democratic formation of students and their willingness to participate politically in society, although this influence is more closely related to non-conventional actions, such as strikes, boycotts and demonstrations.
This article examines storytelling events for children in a library and a children's bookstore in which storytellers are accompanied by sign language interpreters. The result is that both hearing and Deaf children participate in a literacy event in which storyteller and interpreter produce a multilingual, multimodal and multimedial narrative. Using tools derived from the ethnography of communication, social semiotics and multimodal interactional analysis we build a model to examine that this discursive interrelationship between storyteller and interpreter has for hearing and Deaf children's literary experience in the event. We postulate a continuum of six configurations (three for hearing children and three for Deaf children) in which the interpreter-storyteller relationship may add little to enhance or even disturb children's narrative experience. In the conclusions we discuss possible alternative designs that would reduce Deaf children's asymmetrical standing in the event.
Las investigaciones señalan que es imprescindible formar al profesorado novel en competencia emocional (CE) para dar respuesta a las exigencias y retos que plantea la escuela. Las prácticas curriculares del programa de formación inicial de magisterio demuestran ser un contexto idóneo para el desarrollo de esta competencia. Estas prácticas constituyen un momento de aprendizaje e ilusión para el alumnado, pero también supone enfrentar situaciones de mucho estrés y, por tanto, suele ser fuente de emociones negativas. En este artículo se presentan los resultados del análisis del cuestionario de CE pre y post test administrado a 46 estudiantes de magisterio que realizaron las prácticas curriculares del último curso de la carrera. El alumnado recibió información específica sobre CE, presentación de material interactivo para la reflexión sobre sus emociones y realizó la escritura de los diarios de prácticas, llamados “emociodiarios”, con un acompañamiento especializado por parte de sus tutores.
Los resultados muestran que el periodo de prácticas constituye un momento idóneo para el desarrollo de la CE. Asimismo, el alumnado participante aumenta el uso de estrategias adaptativas de regulación emocional y reduce el de las menos adaptativas. Por último, el acompañamiento del profesorado tutor resulta fundamental durante todo el proceso.
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