¿Y esto qué es? ¿Por qué...? El desarrollo de unidades de discurso explicativas durante la lectura de cuentos en el hogar
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.46553/RPSI.17.33.2021.p81-103Palabras clave:
desarrollo discursivo, lectura de cuentos, explicacion, infanciaResumen
Este artículo tiene como principal objetivo estudiar los determinantes de la autopercepción de felicidad en la Argentina entre 2005 y 2007, utilizando información de la Encuesta de la Deuda Social Argentina (EDSA) relevada por la Universidad Católica Argentina (UCA). El estudio se lleva a cabo mediante un análisis estadístico descriptivo y una serie de modelos econométricos multivariados de tipo logit ordenado que permitieron identificar la percepción de suficientes determinantes que afectan la autopercepción de felicidad de manera positiva y
estadísticamente significativa: el ingreso; el estado de salud autopercibido; el empleo y su calidad; el estado civil; la cantidad de hijos en el hogar; la menor discriminación percibida; estar en comunión con Dios; y el tiempo libre.
Descargas
Citas
Aukrust, V. (2004). Explanatory discourse in young second language learners’ peer play. Discourse Studies, 6(3), 393–412. doi: 10.1177/14614456040
Aukrust, V. & Snow, C. (1998). Narratives and explanations during mealtime conversations. Lang. in Soc., 27(2), 221-246.
Barbieri, M., Colavita, F. & Scheuer, N. (1990). The beginning of the explaining capacity. En G. Conti Ramsden & C. Snow (eds.), Children's language, (Vol.7, pp.245-272). NJ: Erlbaum.
Beals, D. (1993). Explanatory talk in low-income families’ mealtime conversations. Applied Psycholinguistics, 14(4), 489-513. doi: 10.1017/S0142716400010717
Beals, D. & Snow, C. (1994) "Thunder is when the angels are upstairs bowling": Narratives and explanations at the dinner table. Journal of Narrative and Life History, 4, 331-352.
Blum-Kulka, S.(2002). ‘Do you believe that Lotís wife is blocking the Road 85 (to Jericho)?’: Co-constructing theories about the world with adults En S. Blum-Kulka & C. Snow (eds.), Talking to adults. The contribution of multiparty discourse to language acquisition (pp. 85-116). NJ: Erlbaum.
Blum-Kulka, S., Hamo, M. & Habib, T. (2010) Explanations in naturally occurring peer talk: Conversational emergence and function, thematic scope, and contribution to the development of discursive skills. First Language, 30(3-4), 440-460.
Callanan, M. & Oakes, L. (1992). Preschoolers' questions and parents' explanations: Causal thinking in everyday activity. Cognitive Development, 7(2), 213-233.
Crowley, K., Callanan, M., Tenenbaum, H. & Allen, E. (2001). Parents explain more often to boys than to girls during shared scientific thinking. Psychol. Science,12(3), 258–261.
Carmiol, A.M. & Sparks, A. (2014). Narrative development across cultural contexts. En D. Matthews (ed.) Pragmatic development in first language acquisition (pp. 279-296). Benjamins.
Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. (2006). Lineamientos para el comportamiento ético en las Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades, Resolución 2857/06. https://www.conicet.gov.ar/wp-content/uploads/RD-20061211-2857.pdf
.
Goodsitt, J.G., Raitan, M. & Perlmutter, M. (1988). Interaction between mothers and preschool children when reading a novel and familiar book. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 11(4), 489–505. doi:10.1177/016502548801100407
Griffin, T., Hemphill,L., Camp, L. & Wolf, D. (2004). Oral discourse in the preschool years and later literacy skills. First Language, 24(2), 123-147. doi:10.1177/0142723704042369
Haden, C., Reese, E. & Fivush, R. (1996). Mothers' extratextual comments during storybook reading: Stylistic differences over time and across texts. Discourse processes, 21(2), 135-169. doi: 10.1080/01638539609544953
Heath, S. (1983). Ways with words: Language, life, and work in communities and classrooms. Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press.
Heath, S. & Thomas,C. (1984). The achievement of preschool literacy for mother and child. En H. Goelman, A. Oberg & F. Smith (eds.), Awakening to literacy (pp.51-72). Heinemann.
Heller, V. (2014). Discursive practices in family dinner talk and classroom discourse: A contextual comparison. Learning, Culture and Social Interaction, 3(2), 134-145.
Hickling, A. & Wellman, H. (2001). The emergence of children's causal explanations and theories: Evidence from everyday conversation. Dev. Psychology,3 7(5), 668-683.
Kelemen, D., Emmons, N., Seston Schillaci, R. & Ganea, P. (2014). Young children can be taught basic natural selection using a picture-storybook intervention. Psychological Science, 25(4), 893-902. doi: 10.1177/0956797613516009
Leech, K., Haber, A., Jalkh, Y. & Corriveau, K. (2020). Embedding scientific explanations into storybook impacts scientific discourse and learning. Frontiers in Psychology, 11:1016. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01016
Legare, C. & Clegg, J. (2014). The development of children’s causal explanations. En S. Robson & S. Flannery (eds.) The Routledge International Handbook of Young Children's Thinking and Understanding. Routledge Handbooks Online.
Legare, C., Lane, J. & Evans, E. (2013). Anthropomorphizing science: How does it affect the development of evolutionary concepts? Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 59(2),168-197.
McCabe, A., Bailey, A. & Melzi, G. (2008). Spanish-language narration and literacy: Culture, cognition, and emotion. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
MacWhinney, B. (2000). The CHILDES Project: Tools for Analyzing Talk. 3rd Edition. Mahwah: Erlbaum.
Nelson, K. (1989). Narratives from the crib. Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press.
Ninio, A. & Bruner, J. (1978). The achievement and antecedents of labelling. Journal of Child Language, 5, 1-15.
Peralta O. & Salsa A. (2001). Interacción materno-infantil con libros con imágenes en dos niveles socioeconómicos. Infancia y Aprendizaje, 24(3), 325-339.
Pan, B. & Snow, C. (1999). The development of conversational and discourse skills. En M. Barrett, The development of language (pp.229-250). NY: Taylor & Francis.
Pappas, C. (1993). Is narrative “primary”? Some insights from kindergartners’ pretend reading of stories and informational books. Journal of Reading Behavior, 25, 97-127.
Peets, K. & Bialystok, E. (2015). Academic discourse: Dissociating standardized and conversational measures of language proficiency in bilingual kindergarteners. Applied Psycholinguistics, 36(2), 437-461. doi:10.1017/S0142716413000301
Phillips, G. & McNaughton, S. (1990). The practice of storybook reading to preschool children in mainstream New Zealand families. Reading Research Quarterly, 25(3), 196–212.
Quasthoff, U., Heller, V. & Morek, M. (2017). On the sequential organization and genre-orientation of discourse units in interaction: An analytic framework. Discourse Studies, 19(1), 84-110. doi: 10.1177/1461445616683596
R Core Team (2017). R: A language and environment for statistical computing. https://www.r-project.org/
Ricard, R. & Snow, C. (1990). Language use in and out of context. Journal of Applied Dev. Psychology, 11(3), 251-266.
Sepúlveda, A. & Álvarez-Otero, B. (2010) El aprendizaje de los usos expositivos del lenguaje. Cs. de la Salud, 8(2), 45-59.
Sigel, I. E. (2002). The psychological distancing model: A study of the socialization of cognition. Culture and Psychology, 8(2), 189–214. doi: 10.1177/1354067X02008002438
Snow, C. (2014). Input to interaction to instruction: Three key shifts in the history of child language research. Journal of Child Language, 41, 117-123.
Snow, C. & Beals, D. (2006). Mealtime talk that supports literacy development. New directions for child and adolescent development, 111, 51-66.
Snow, C. & Uccelli, P. (2009). The challenge of academic language. En D. Olson & N. Torrance (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of literacy (pp.112-133). Cambridge Univ. Press.
Stein, A., Migdalek, M. & Rosemberg, C. R. (2020) Argumentación, narración y explicación: un estudio de las unidades de discurso en conversaciones espontáneas durante situaciones de comida. Cultura y Educación, 32(4), 705-737.
Stein, A. & Rosemberg, C. R. (2012). Compartir cuentos en el hogar. Diferentes estilos de lectura en poblaciones urbano marginadas de Argentina. Infancia y aprendizaje, 35(4), 405-419. doi:10.1174/021037012803495249
Sulzby, E. & Teale, W. (1987). Young children's storybook reading: Longitudinal study of parent-child interaction and children's independent functioning. Spencer’s Found. Report.
Van Kleeck, A., Gillam, R.,Hamilton, L. & McGrath, C.(1997). The relationship between middle-class parents book-sharing discussion and their preschoolers abstract language development. Journal of Speech, Lang. and Hearing, 40, 1261-1271.
Veneziano, E. & Sinclair, H. (1995). Functional changes in early child language: the appearance of references to the past and of explanations. Journal of Child Lang.,22, 557-581.
Wells, G. (1985). Preschool literacy-related activities and success in school. En D. Olson, N. Torrance & A. Hildyard (eds.) Literacy, language and learning (pp. 229-255). NY: Cambridge Univ. Press.
Zunino, G. M. (2017). Procesamiento psicolingüístico de relaciones causales y contracausales. En I. Arroyo Hernández (ed.). La expresión de la causa en español (pp.199-234). Madrid: Visor.
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Derechos de autor 2021 Alejandra Stein, Ailín Paula Franco Accinelli, Eliana Belén González Lynn
Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0.