Revista Brasileira de Educação do Campo
The Brazilian Scientific Journal of Rural Education
THEMATIC DOSSIER / ARTIGO/ARTICLE/ARTÍCULO
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.20873/uft.2525-4863.2018v3n4p1294
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1294
Este conteúdo utiliza a Licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Open Access. This content is licensed under a Creative Commons attribution-type BY
Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings
of pedagogical practice in countryside schools
Elisvania Nunes Braz
1
, Nilsa Brito Ribeiro
2
1
Instituto Federal do Pará- IFPA. Setor Pedagógico/Ensino. Avenida Brasília s/n. Vila Permanente. Tucuruí - PA. Brasil.
2
Universidade Federal do Sul e Sudeste do Pará - UNIFESSPA.
Author for correspondence: elisvaniabraz@yahoo.com.br
ABSTRACT: This article aims at understating in Internship
Reports written by female students during the Degree in
Countryside Education, the different social voices (discourses)
that percolate these women’s representation of the pedagogical
practices in countryside schools. The working hypothesis is that
these representations implicate the relation between the course’s
objectives to other social spheres that potentialize or challenge
the theorical, methodological and political configuration of the
degree itself if taken as object of enquiry. Analyses of excerpts
from the reports were theoretically grounded on the social
historical conception of language by Bakhtin and the Circle as
well as on the theoretical knowledge produced in the
Countryside Education studies. Analytical Results are identified
in the internship reports written by female students as the
remarkable presence of discourses turned to i) the pedagogical
“how to” of educators in the countryside; ii) the conflicting
relation between school-knowledge and the knowledge from
experiences lived by the learning subjects. That discursive
regularity present in the students’ reports from a teaching degree
leads us to the provisory conclusion that discourses by
undergraduate subjects produced in the alternance of educational
times point to both challenges and potentialities of an
educational proposition open to multiple voices present in the
very conception of the degree.
Keywords: Amazon, Women, Undergraduate Education,
Countryside Education.
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1295
A escrita de educandas do campo sobre sentidos da prática
pedagógica em escolas do campo
RESUMO. Este artigo tem por objetivo apreender, em
relatórios de Estágio escritos por mulheres estudantes de um
curso de Licenciatura em Educação do Campo, diferentes vozes
sociais (discursos) que permeiam as representações dessas
mulheres sobre o fazer pedagógico em escolas do campo. A
hipótese de trabalho é que estas representações evidenciam a
relação da proposta do curso com outras esferas sociais que
potencializam ou desafiam a configuração teórica, metodológica
e política do próprio curso, se tomadas como objeto de
problematizações. Para a análise de excertos extraídos dos
relatórios nos fundamentamos teoricamente na perspectiva
sócio-histórica de linguagem formulada por Bakhtin e seu
Círculo, além de fundamentos teóricos produzidos no domínio
dos estudos da Educação do Campo. Como resultados analíticos,
identificamos nos relatórios das educandas em situações de
Estágio, uma forte presença de discursos que se voltam: i) para o
"como fazer” pedagógico dos educadores das escolas do campo;
ii) para a relação conflituosa entre os saberes escolarizados e os
saberes do vivido no cotidiano dos sujeitos da aprendizagem.
Essa regularidade discursiva presente nos relatórios das
estudantes da licenciatura nos leva a concluir provisoriamente
que os discursos dos sujeitos em formação produzidos na
alternância dos tempos formativos indiciam desafios e
potencialidades de uma proposta educativa aberta à
multiplicidade de vozes presentes na própria proposta do curso.
Palavras-chave: Amazônia, Mulheres, Formação, Educação do
Campo.
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1296
La escritura de las estudiantes del campo sobre los
sentidos de la práctica pedagógica en las escuelas del
campo
RESUMEN. El objetivo de este artículo es analizar, en
Informes de Prácticas hecho por mujeres estudiantes de un curso
en Licenciatura en Educación del Campo, distintas voces en el
hacer pedagógico en escuelas campesinas. La hipótesis de
trabajo es que las representaciones evidencian la relación de la
propuesta del curso con otras esferas sociales que potencializan
o desafían la configuración teórica, metodológica y política del
propio curso, si se toman como objeto de estudio fragmentos
extraídos de los informes de prácticas. Nos basamos
teóricamente en la perspectiva sociointeracionista de Bakhtin y
su círculo, además de estudios teóricos en la Educación
Campesina. Como resultados, identificamos en los informes de
prácticas una fuerte presencia de discursos que se vuelven: i)
para el “cómo hacer” pedagógico de los educadores de las
escuelas campesinas; ii) para la relación de conflicto entre los
saberes de la institución escolar y los saberes vividos en el
cotidiano de los sujetos del aprendizaje. Esa regularidad
discursiva se nos lleva a la conclusión, provisional, de que los
discursos de los sujetos en formación construidos en la
alternancia de los tiempos formativos indican desafíos y
potencialidades de una propuesta educativa abierta a la
multiplicidad de voces que están en la base de la propia
propuesta del curso.
Palabras-clave: Amazonia, Mujeres, Formación, Educación
campesina.
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1297
Introduction
Mikhail Bakhtin and the Circle
understand language as a symbolic
universe in which we are born and move in
a way that all spheres of human activity are
bound by its use. We share the Bakhtinian
assumption that it is in the human
interactive processes in the different life
spheres of production that we are
constituted through the mediation of
language. Therefore, the signs internalized
in interactional processes are not univocal
in meaning but filled with plurivocal
meanings from the different spheres in
which we interact to one another. In
Bakhtin’s words
i
:
At any given moment, languages of
various epochs and periods od socio-
ideological life cohabit with one
another. Even languages of the day
exist: one could say that today’s and
yesterday’s socio-ideological and
political “day” do not, in a certain
sense share the same language; every
day represents another socio-
ideological semantic “state of
affairs”, another vocabulary, another
accentual system with its own
slogans, its own ways of assigning
blame and praise. Poetry
depersonalizes “days” in language,
while prose, as we shall see, often
deliberately intensifies the difference
between them, gives them embodied
representation and dialogically
opposes them to one another in
unresolvable dialogues.
(Bakhtin/Voloshinov
ii
, 2006, p. 291).
It is that notion of language always
marked by historical processes in which it
is produced, that guides the analysis of
reports written by female students from
two major Countryside Education
(henceforth LPEC) [Licenciatura em
Educação do Campo] classes at Federal
University in the South and Southeast of
Pará (Unifesspa) [Universidade Federal do
Sul e Sudeste do Pará], to comprehend
how these students dialogue in their
written reports with other social voices that
constitute their subjectivities in the
undergraduate context. Therefore, it the
article’s main objective to learn from the
written reports by female students how
they produce in their discourse
representations of the educational work in
countryside schools and which other voices
intersect in the dialogical or interdiscursive
process.
Reports were produced in the
educational praxis on which the
undergraduate course is based which
implicates two educational contexts:
university time-space and local time-space.
By binding both these time-spaces to social
reality and to the conditions of the material
(re)production of subjects in the
countryside, LPEC seeks to overcome
classroom limitations and to foster a real
possibility of understanding the social
contradictions that move it. Regarding
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1298
countryside educators, it is important to
understand how feminine subjectivities
experience their undergraduate degree in
the relationship between these educational
times.
Methodology
The theoretical framework of the
dialogic relationship that holds as founding
principle the understanding of the others’
discourse anchored the steps taken from
corpus selection to their analysis.
1. The first contact with the Dean of
the Countryside Education Degree
[Faculdade de Educação do
Campo] at Unifesspa allowed
access to files from LPEC, where
reports written by undergraduates
throughout the course are
organized.
2. Selecting the 2009 and 2011
classes and respective reports to
compose the research corpus.
Reports by the 2009 class were
chosen as this was the first class of
LPEC/UNIFESSPA, and it was
expected that those reports
provided us with characteristic
features of the educational history
for the first undergraduate
experience with supervised register
of local time-space. Furthermore,
since the 2009 class had already
finished the program, the set of
written reports would contain the
register of all steps of local time-
space thus providing a wider
insight on the process. Choosing
the 2011 class is justified by the
reasonable chronological distance
from the 2009 class which would
allow observations of possible
variations of research decisions
and the subsequent effects on both
production and register of the
research work. Another reason for
having chosen the latter was the
fact that the Pedagogical Project to
which it was bound was a
modified version of the 2009
pioneer project.
3. By accessing the archives, the
reports were gathered using as
organization criterion students
register, class years, research steps
and guiding axes.
The present investigation develops
from a socio-historical perspective
characterized by the aspects listed by
Freitas (2003, p. 27-28):
1. Data source is the text (context) in
which the event rises, focusing on
the particular as instance of social
totality…
2. Research questions are not
established by the
operationalization of variables
rather they are oriented towards
understanding phenomena in all
their complexity and historical
development. This prevents the
creation of artificial situation for
investigation and meets the
situation as it is happening in its
development.
In addition, research subjects (LPEC
female students) are seen in its singularity
“but situated in relation to the historical-
social context, therefore, what happens in
the research is not the gathering of
individual psyches but a relation of texts to
context”
iii
(Freitas, 2003, p. 29).
From this theoretical-methodological
perspective, reports written by female
students were taken as discourses which
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
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allowed multiple readings since words are
symbolic elements and not translucid: “the
enunciation does not communicate it all,
the researcher must search for the effects
of meanings which demands leaving the
enunciation and getting to the enunciable
through interpretation”
iv
. (Caregnato &
Mutti, 2006, p. 681). Therefore, reports
taken as discourse are connected to the
historical conditions in which they are
produced. An important data that is part of
students’ writing constraints is that their
reports integrate the knowledge activated
during the university time-space as well as
the knowledge that is constructed through
experiences developed in the local time-
space be it schools or another place of
human activity in their communities. The
focus of our analysis befalls on the
meanings that rise from the articulation
between these two forms of knowledge:
historically produced knowledge
systematized in the scientific sphere and
knowledge from experience produced in
the subjects’ daily lives.
In the present article, nine reports
produced in the confluence of times and
spaces in the LPEC degree at Unifesspa
were analyzed. Several themes emerged
from the discursive analysis of these
reports, from which two were chosen:
Teaching knowledge centered on the “how
to” and tensions between school-
knowledge and lived knowledge.
According to Bakhtin/Voloshinov (2006),
the theme (something individual and
reiterable) is not taken merely as content,
subject, topic or main title of a
text/discourse. Consequently, it does not
become an isolated word exactly because
“The theme of an utterance is concrete-as
concrete as the historical instant to which
the utterance belongs”
v
.
(Bakhtin/Voloshinov, 1973, p. 100).
Threading considerations on the Degree
Countryside education according to
Caldart (2009) is a new concept and can
only be understood in its original
materiality, strongly bound to the historical
movement that first originated it.
Understanding countryside education
demands locating it in the triad countryside
public policies education. These
dimensions according to Caldart (2009) are
indissociable in the comprehension of
Countryside Education as a project
originated from social and union
movements in the fight for agrarian reform
and, most importantly, in the defense of
life and of survival in the countryside.
Caldart (2009, p. 40) argues that
Countryside Education emerged in a
given moment and historical context
and cannot be understood in itself or
merely in the educational world or in
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1300
the theoretical parameters of
pedagogy. It is a real movement of
fight against the current state of
affairs: a practical movement with
practical purposes or objectives and
practical tools, that expresses and
produces theoretical conceptions,
criticism to certain notions of
education, of education policies, of
projects for both the countryside and
the country but that are
interpretations of reality constructed
to guide concrete actions/fights
vi
.
After the consolidation of several
academic experiences supported by the
National Program of Education in Agrarian
Reform [Programa Nacional de Educação
na Reforma Agrária] (Pronera) as well as
by countryside social and union
movements and the yet existent in 2007
association of Federal University of Pará
[Universidade Federal do Pará] (UFPA
vii
)
to the Federal Government Sponsoring
Program to Plans for Restructuring and
Expanding Brazilian Federal Universities
[Programa do Governo Federal de Apoio a
Planos de Reestruturação e Expansão das
Universidades Federais Brasileiras]
(REUNI)
viii
, UFPA/Marabá started offering
the first Degree in Countryside Education
in the South and Southeast of Pará in 2009.
In the initial notes in the book Counter-
hegemonic practices in educational
degrees: reflections from the degree in
Countryside Education in the South and
Southeast of Pará [Práticas contra-
hegemônicas na formação de educadores:
reflexões a partir do curso de Licenciatura
em Educação do Campo do Sul e Sudeste
do Pará] (2014), the editors allude to the
experiences of educating countryside
educators and highlight:
The total conquered by this historical
construction has enabled the
conception of the Teacher Degree in
Countryside Education [Licenciatura
Plena em Educação o Campo]
(LPEC) that since 2009 has offered
one class per year. Albeit the
institutionalization of degrees for
Unifesspa represent the convergence
of a national policy for Countryside
Education, it answers more
concretely to demands by movements
in Countryside Education in the
region, especially as part of the fight
for Agrarian Reform. (Santigo, Souza
& Ribeiro, 2014, p. 11)
ix
.
More than the offer of a new teacher
degree, LPEC is a proposal born from/with
countryside subjects (Caldart, 2011)
similar to other regions in the country. In
the South and Southeast regions in Pará,
the degree is presented as part of a wider
fight in which the counter-hegemonic
project of graduating countryside educators
is inserted. Underlying the mission of the
degree regarding social struggle, its
required courses are structured in four
knowledge areas “sustaining the exercise
and search for interdisciplinarity as a
principle for future educators”. (Unifesspa,
2014, p. 15)
x
. They are Human and Social
Sciences [Ciências Humanas e Sociais]
(CHS), Agrarian and Natural Sciences
[Ciências Agrárias e da Natureza] (CAN),
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
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Literature and Languages (LL) and
Mathematics (MAT).
Choosing areas of knowledge is an
important strategy for teaching degrees to
expand the offer of final years of primary
education and high school in the
countryside because in many places
schooling is yet limited to the initial years
of primary school. It is highlighted in
respect to the expansion of access to
education that “the main intention is to
contribute to the construction of processes
capable of triggering changes in the
reasoning of use and production of
knowledge in the countryside”. (Molina,
2015, p. 153)
xi
.
This reasoning is related to the
“process of destabilization of a given order
and the denaturalization of a (disciplinary)
curriculum that is historic, but begins to be
taken as the only possible in working with
knowledge” (Caldart, 2011, p.141)
xii
.
Criticism to this reasoning promotes
rethinking of both the education of future
educators and their teaching activities in
various localities. Molina and (2012, p.
471-472) claim that:
As respects the proposal of educating
in areas, disciplines are not the main
objective of the pedagogic work with
knowledge. This work is directed
towards questions of reality as
objects of study based on the
appropriation of scientific knowledge
already stored. Epistemological
questions are thus made about the
very conception of knowledge,
science and research. It is questioned
how the pedagogical work can
guarantee the movement between
appropriation of knowledge and its
production and the articulation of
knowledge and educational process
as a permanent whole between the
knowledge sciences helps producing
and current life issues. Phenomena
from real life need to be studied in
their complexity, such as they exist in
reality, by means of an approach that
comprehends totalities in their
contradictions, their historical
movement. (Molina & Sá, 2012, p.
471-472)
xiii
.
The choice of working with
knowledge areas in LPEC is based on the
pedagogy of praxis and the appreciation of
the subjects’ experiences as concrete forms
of producing and generating knowledge to
transform reality (Unifesspa, 2014). Due to
the understanding of praxis as reflexive
action of constructed knowledge and the
association of theory-practice in the
teaching practice, the degree assumes as
ethical and pedagogical principles:
contextualized higher education; the reality
and experiences of countryside
communities as object of study and
knowledge source; research as educational
principle; the indivisibility of theory-
practice; planning and educational act
integrated to the knowledge areas; learners
as subjects of knowledge and; academic
production to transform reality.
It is announced in the curricular
guidelines of the Pedagogical Project
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
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n. 4
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2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
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designed for the LPEC/Unifesspa the
articulation of various knowledge in the
context of countryside populations without
neglecting the theories and methods from
the academic sphere. It is believed that
through these guidelines, the degree
achieves its mission.
The bond between education to the
space of rural life is materialized and
organized in LPEC through the alternance
of two times in the graduation that
complement each other dialectically to
promote the pedagogical education of
countryside educators. They are: the
University Time-Space [Tempo-Espaço
Universidade] (TEU) and the Local Time-
Space [Tempo-espaço Localidade]
(TEL)
xiv
. These time-spaces are
comprehended as “territories of knowledge
characterized by disputes, conflicts, power
relations inherent to the historical
construction of the social being”. (Costa &
Monteiro, 2014, p. 117).
The organization of times and spaces
in alternance (School Time and
Community Time) is based on the
principle that school and community
are times/spaces to construct and
evaluate knowledge and therefore it
is necessary to overcome the
understanding of school as a place of
theory and the community as the
place of application/transformation.
During the graduation, the student
develops a time to study at university
and another one at home/work.
Hence, there are no distances during
the graduation but different
spaces/times to produce and socialize
knowledge. (Antunes-Rocha, 2010,
p. 02).
University Time-space embraces
Seminars of socialization of Local Time-
Space and “studies on pedagogical
knowledge and countryside education
centered on teacher’s education”.
(Unifesspa, 2014, p. 29), materialized in
studies throughout the Common Core
Requirements and Specific Requirements
Core.
Local Time-space is the moment in
which learners are immersed in their places
of origin to practice local research and to
learn the social, educational, political and
cultural context through investigative
practice. Such time-space gathers different
activities in its educational itinerary.
According to the Pedagogical Project (PP),
these activities are divided into: Socio-
Educational Research and Teaching
Internship. According to the curricular
project, Local Times-space is:
The time of practices of social and
educational research, configuring a
moment of academic investigation on
the pedagogical day-today of rural
schools and the communities where
they are located. It is the moment to
collect data and go through socio-
educational experiences along with
the school and the community to
foster reflections on the reality and
pedagogical processes that are
developed in the countryside.
(Unifesspa, 2014, p. 30).
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
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n. 4
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Educational times for LPEC TEU
and TEL are composed of five thematic
axes: (Society, State, Social Movements,
and Agrarian Questions; Countryside
Education; Knowledge, Culture and
Identity; Familiar systems of production;
Countryside, territoriality and
sustainability) distributed in eight stages.
According to this proposal, the axis model
breaks with the disciplinary tradition to
articulate different knowledge areas. Three
distinct and interrelated cores core
foundation, specific requirement core and
free or complementary core consolidate
the educational trajectory in the eight
stages of time-spaces oriented by the
theme axes.
Internship reports, the corpus of the
present paper, are produced in the
movement of alternance between both
these times (TEU and TEL) and are always
guided by the reflections produced in each
axis. Therefore, the interpretation of
meanings from the students’ reports must
take into account the context fostered by
the reflections in each axis. Next, the
analysis of the enunciations extracted from
the reports follows a dialogical conception
of language as it enables the mobilization
of different voices present in a given
discourse and the social struggle there
produced. Before analysis, nonetheless,
brief notes on the Bakhtinian dialogical
theory that supports analysis have to be
shared.
In the discourse of women educators,
other voices rehearse dialogue
The effective organization and
development of analysis involved
collecting the enunciations around themes
as the meaning/theme constitute the unit of
a complex whole in the discursive chain
circulating in the society. Theme for
Bakhtin has no correspondence to the
random gathering of subjects to debate as it
is traditionally done in writing classes at
school. Bakhtin argues that the theme
emerges from the subjects’ discourses in
their relation to history, in a given sphere
of human activity, therefore it is not an a
priori data to discourses because it can
only be comprehended in the relationship
between the researcher to what is said in a
given conjuncture.
In the current investigation, what is
written/said in the reports is taken as
discourses/enunciations mobilized by
representations that undergraduate students
produce about the world, about themselves,
about the other from the social and
ideological place they occupy in the world.
Writing by these female students,
discursively understood, composes the
enunciative chain of the endless production
of their knowledge throughout the
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
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sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1304
graduation, even before they get to the
school. Meanings conveyed by the reports
are always interpreted in their dialogic
relationship because no discourse
circulates in the world without carrying the
echoes of alterities, no discourse is
indifferent to the social voices with which
it dialogues in the form of response,
adherence, rebuttal, complement,
questioning, refusal etc.
Following the method proposed by
Bakhtin (1973) for working with language,
the first approximation concerns the socio-
historical conditions in which the Project
of Countryside Education is materialized
and the political, educational and cultural
context of the subjects involved in the
project as previously discussed. The
second approximation involves the spheres
in which the reports were produced,
considering the scientific/university
sphere, the research environment in the
community as well as the students’ work
spaces; finally, the materiality of the
enunciation is achieved to comprehend the
movement of discourses.
A dialogical process with the
academic knowledge is realized when the
students recollect knowledge from the
community, granting it research status and
objectifying it in both the learning process
and the construction of new knowledge.
Consequently, a complex discursive
movement guided by the constitutive
dialogic principle of that articulation that
transits from systematized knowledge
(TEU) and social/local knowledge (TEL).
Each one of these time-spaces is
constituted by its inherent ideologies that
reveal their tensions and conflicts.
In this regard, we share the
Bakhtinian notion that words once they are
said are inevitably inhabited by other
voices in such a way that every discourse
in recollecting the already said is open to
the incorporation of new voices in an
interactive process between the discourse
that precedes the saying and the discourse
to come. Therefore, it is assumed that
words enunciated by students in their
reports dispute different meanings thus
allowing the observation of signs of
ideological struggle.
Enunciations under analysis were
divided into two themes that appeared
more frequently in the students reports,
characterizing their relation with the
educational practice in the countryside
schools. These themes were: teacher
knowledge centered on the “how to”;
tensions between school knowledge and
lived knowledge.
Teacher knowledge centered on the
“how to”
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1305
Enunciations collected under this
theme refer to the close attention paid by
students in LPEC to the issue of teaching
methods in countryside schools. At times,
the attention to that dimension of teaching
at times holds a positive nature, at other
times, a negative one. Focusing on these
discourses helps understanding the
conception of education underlying a
discourse in which the teaching method,
that is, the how to, juxtaposes the what do
to do, why to do it, whom to do it with.
What histories of education are at the basis
of such discourses?
E1
xv
:
Even though content is the the
teacher’s basic instrument, it is
interesting to highlight that its
socialization occurs under a careful
thinking of the subjects’ day-to-day
so students can reflect critically
following the theoretical frame
necessary for thinking the reality in
which they are involved. In other
words, the teacher makes an effort to
contextualize content by bringing
examples from the media, daily
examples from the students’ lives
especially when it concerns youth,
thus dialoguing with their lived
experiences and previous knowledge
in an interdisciplinary manner using
elements of other disciplines to
construct the philosophical thinking
(I. S. S. S. / VI TEL, 2014
xvi
)
xvii
.
E2:
Although the teacher used just the
textbook in her classes, in three
moments she brought examples from
the activities to the students’ reality,
which caused greater participation by
the students in giving examples, also
these examples were in the number
of two or three, soon the teacher
asked students to answer two
questions from the textbook, when
she ended the interactive dialogue in
the classroom (M. E. C. G./ IV TEL,
2011)
xviii
.
E3:
Following the content and the lesson
plan, the teacher when working with
texts starts by orally reading it,
introducing reflexive questions, then
moving to the interpretation
questions in the book, that is when
students sit together and copy and
answer, mostly it happens like this.
Grammar studies follows the almost
same method, studying concepts
from the content after explanation by
examples, doing the exercises,
individual activity in class where
students copy the questions from the
book onto their notebooks and
answer them afterwards. There are
times when the textbook questions
are replaced by questions written by
the teacher. While students are
silently answering the questions, the
teacher prepares something for later
and when the time is up, questions
are corrected or left for the next
class. Generally, this is how classes
occur three days a week (A. C. S. D. /
IV TEL, 2011)
xix
.
E4:
Watching the students’ classroom
routine, I noted that the in one class
teacher was using as the main
support materials the textbook, the
board and chalk. Usually, teachers
write the content on the board,
explain it, students write it down and
answer activities and afterwards
return it for the teachers to correct.
(M. R. J./III TEL, 2009).
The curricular activity that generated
the reports from which enunciations 1 to 4
were extracted is named Teaching
Internship for Systematic Observational
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
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v. 3
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sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
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Research. That activity consists of
observing and registering school
knowledge and methods developed in
countryside schools. In spite of the
diversity of aspects to be observed by
LPEC students during the observation and
registering stage in the internship, the
reports show that their emphasis most
frequently lies on the teaching method
used by the school teacher. The sustained
attention to teaching methodology
produces the effect of searching for related
meanings, in other words, it is necessary to
investigate the historical conditions that
guide students to choose as center of their
observations the methods used by the
teacher in the classroom.
Focusing on the materiality of
enunciations 1, 2, 3 and 4, it is seen that
future teachers watch the teaching practice
questioning, confronting and evaluating it
according to what they consider to be a
transformative and coherent to the specific
needs of countryside subjects.
In their representations, the teacher
in primary countryside schools is
characterized as the one who 1) is limited
to the use of the board, chalk and the
textbook as exclusive pedagogical
support to teaching (I noted that the in
one class teacher was using as the main
support materials the textbook, the board
and chalk.); 2) seldom uses examples
from students’ daily lives or resorts to
research to produce knowledge
(Although content is the only instrument
used by the teacher, who little stimulates
investigation or research, at first I do not
see the activities involving projects or
group actions, I also did not noted the
exploration of local knowledge such as
oral stories, local knowledge or popular
tales); 3) follows a linear application of
didactic activities (Usually, teachers write
the content on the board, explain it,
students write it down and answer
activities and afterwards return it for the
teachers to correct).
These negative representations are
found in many writings by LPEC students.
At the same time, these evaluations
delineate representations by the students
concerning the “good educator” in the
countryside such as in enunciation 1: it is
interesting to highlight that its
socialization occurs under a careful
thinking of the subjects’ day-to-day so
students can reflect critically following the
theoretical frame necessary for thinking
the reality in which they are involved”. The
same positive observation is seen in
enunciation 2: she brought examples from
the activities to the students’ reality”.
The excerpts show that the
methodological practice is the main aspect
observed by students. That relevance is
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1307
permeated with meanings that at times
attribute the choice of this or that method
to the success or failure of the teaching-
learning process. By placing in the
enunciative scene proposals that aim to
improve the educational process they are
analyzing, students seem to distance
themselves from the negative image of the
observed teacher, while they also
(re)construct for themselves the image of
an educator aware of the life stories of the
subjects in the countryside.
Enunciations centered on the
discourse of action (the teacher did that or
did not do that) rather than on the
understanding of why theses actions were
realized, promotes the debate on the
Pedagogy of Competences (Ramos, 2012)
as a strong tendency in the field of teacher
education and well discussed in the official
documents that guide education in Brazil.
Revisiting the discourse of the other, that
of the competences, is necessary in a
degree that aims to overcoming discourses
of pedagogic competences, since analyzing
discourses means considering the social
and historical dimensions of the texts in
order to examine the process of discursive
constitution as well as emerging
representations.
The notion of competence became
very popular in the 1990s especially after
the educational reforms occurred in Brazil
to attend the demands of the process of
productive restructuring of capital. In that
pragmatic conception of teaching,
emphasis is placed on the valorization of
subjectivities and individual
differentiation. Thus, the emphasis
students’ discourse place on the “how to”
as the main dimension of teacher’s
education might implicate the logic of
competences, specially if those
enunciations are not taken throughout their
degree as objects of reflection. Therefore,
dialogue between the many voices that
sustain the discourse enabled by LPEC
students’ reflections allow insight into
conceptions and pedagogical
representations upon which the educational
processes started in primary school are
based.
Naturally, these students discourses
dialogue with LPEC academic discourse
which has been fiercely criticizing
conceptions of teaching that take the
textbook as the exclusive source of
information for the primary school teacher.
This dialogical relation enables the
observation in the students’ discourse of
the textbook as a “villain” in the teaching-
learning process by either stripping the
teacher of their autonomy or preventing a
wider approach on the historic, political,
and social context, precisely because they
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1308
do not embrace the themes of the concrete
life of the subjects.
Therefore, LPEC students are
anchored on their academic education to
elaborate their perceptions of the other and,
in that, they show that countryside
education has a very long path to trace
towards problematizing the construction of
new teaching identities in countryside
schools. Therefore, discourses converge to
another theme which we named tensions
between school knowledge and lived
knowledge, to show in the discourses, the
expectations of LPEC students regarding
the transformation of the school and
educational processes lived and practiced
locally.
Tensions between school-knowledge and
lived knowledge
The focus of this session is the
tension denounced by students in their
discourses in respect to the silencing of
subjects’ knowledge regardless of their
school knowledge. Thus, it is seen the
presence of interdiscursive relations
between LPEC students and the project
Countryside Education in the defense of an
indissociable link of University-
systematized content and the subjects’
daily knowledge that are brought into the
school system.
Enunciations 5 and 6 although
produced by students from different classes
belong to the same knowledge axis:
Knowledge, Culture and Identity. Research
from both classes were themes “school
knowledge in teaching practice and school
curriculum aimed at: observing school
knowledge for countryside education,
focusing educational relations and
curricular content practiced…” (Unifesspa,
2014, p. 42).
E5:
In the pedagogic process of the
school I could note the difficulties of
the teachers in planning the teaching,
they follow textbooks to select and
organize knowledge used to educate
students without looking at the
curricular implications of that
attitude, as the didactic material is far
from the reality of these students (C.
M. da C./ III TEL, 2009).
E6:
The knowledge the school presents to
students is exclusively that of the
textbooks, there is not a crossing of
texts with the students’ reality, the
valorization of each student’s culture
and their empiric knowledge is not
taken into consideration in the
classroom. During classes, the
educator used just the textbook and
the notebooks to copy and answer
activities, the evaluations are of a
single type, students answer all
questions and get good grades, if they
cannot answer the questions
according to the educator’s
corrections, they either did not learn
anything or are not capable of
moving onto the next year/grade (L.
S. S. / IV TEL, 2011).
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
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2018
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The textbook is recognized as a
resource that teachers can use in the
process of teaching-learning. However, it
is known that textbooks production from
its origins has been questioned for
attending editorial demands that disagree
with the various pedagogical orientations
concerning educational and cultural
diversity.
Silva (2012) discusses the
fetishization of the textbook and highlights
the overestimation of that didactic resource
in the Brazilian school culture. He argues
that “the status textbooks achieved in
social representations is the result of a
complex history, significant economic
value and ideological and political
implications, especially in the times of the
Brazilian Republic”. (Silva, 2012, p. 803).
Using the textbook as a single
resource without looking at the curricular
implications of that attitude as registered
by the student in Enunciation 5, imposes
limitations on the educational process that
prevent learning subjects from
problematizing their local realities and
interfering with them. Limiting the
construction of knowledge to a single
orientation already present in a textbook,
for a homogenized and unified content,
becomes an obstacle for the development
of educational projects turned to local
realities. Taking the textbook as the only
trigger for knowledge is dooming
countryside schools to precariousness.
Hence, it ought not to be ignored that
limitations in the material conditions of
countryside schools “point to the
contradiction between the discourse of law,
juridical framework and specific
educational policy. (Silva, 2009, p. 348).
In addition to featuring the textbook
as exclusive trigger for learning, the
enunciations also denote the educational
conception predominant in the
methodological practices observed in the
countryside schools researched by the
students, in which the teacher is the central
figure.
E7:
The educator teaches based
exclusively on the textbook, there is
no bibliographic research, nor
approximation of content to the
reality of the subjects, students do not
discuss the texts that are read in
class, do not speak, they just listen to
what the teacher reads or says.
Content systematization happens
through writing activities and
correcting them, students do not
speak, do not have active voice in the
socializations of the activities
particularly because it is harder to
understand texts without something
concrete.
During the in-class observation for
History it was possible to notice the
lack of dialogue between educator-
learner, the methodology consists of
always coming into the classroom,
warning learners of the content to be
studied, ordering students to open the
textbook in the appointed pages and
reading individually and lowly to
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
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answer the activity because the
educator will correct it next class and
“mark” it, not minding whether it is
correct or not. (L. S. S./III TEL,
2011).
As observed, Enunciation 7 brings
representational marks of a discourse that
portrays the permanence of the teacher as
the sole holder of knowledge. Teaching by
the book is thus characterized as silencer of
the school-work relation mediated by
research. It prevails in this form of
teaching and learning:
a) The teacher as sole holder of
knowledge: students do not
discuss the texts that are read in
class, do not speak, they just listen to
what the teacher reads or says…
b) Mechanic and by the book
teaching: The educator teaches
based exclusively on the textbook…
c) Application of
learning/evaluation as the purpose
of the educational process: ... the
educator will correct it next class
and “mark” it, not minding whether
it is correct or not…
Discursive sequences highlighted in
Enunciation 7 point to pedagogical
practices centered in a conception of
teaching that focuses on the teacher as sole
holder of knowledge while student, at the
other end of the process, are positioned as
receivers and reproducers of the
knowledge supposedly “deposited” by
their teacher. Therefore, students do not
discuss the texts that are read in class, do
not speak, they just listen to what the
teacher reads or says”. This seems to be
the state of affairs Countryside Education
wants to overcome in order to develop
another educational logic. Contrary to the
traditional school, discourses suggest a
new educational project in which the
method is aligned with a humanizing
education and part of a wider political
project.
Undergraduate students anchored by
their academic readings expand their
analytical horizon by resorting to academia
discourses to corroborate their reflections
in a dialogical reflation between the world
of knowledge and the lived world without
losing sight of the association of academic
knowledge to the students’ social life and
to the pedagogical representations that are
at the basis of the discursive chain.
There are other marks in that
enunciation that denote the inefficiency of
the mere transmission of knowledge based
on the unilateral and authoritative teaching:
the methodology consists of always
coming into the classroom, warning
learners of the content to be studied,
ordering students to open the textbook in
the appointed pages and reading
individually and lowly to answer the
activity because the educator will correct it
next class and ‘mark’ it. It is important to
highlight the silencing of alterity: “students
do not speak, do not have active voice in
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
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the socializations of the activities
particularly because it is harder to
understand texts without something
concrete”. In that scenario, both teacher
and students miss the opportunity to
dialogically share knowledge. That seems
to be the issue appointed and discussed by
students in their reports. According to
Freire, dialoguing is a necessary practice
for the teacher mediator, as it articulates
the learners’ experiences to their world and
existence.
Dialogue is thus an existential
necessity. And since dialogue is the
encounter in which the united
reflection and action of the
dialoguers are addressed to the world
which is to be transformed and
humanized, this dialogue cannot be
reduced to the act of one persons
"depositing" ideas in another, nor can
it become a simple exchange of ideas
to be "consumed" by the discussants.
(Freire, 2005, p. 89)
xx
.
Due to the complexity of the
educational process strongly marked by
pedagogical and social variables that
involve it, LPEC students understand that
it cannot be conducted outside the
dialogical interaction of school and life,
school and society as demanded by an
emancipatory project.
Final Considerations
Based on the Bakhtinian thought
specially on discursive dialogism, that is,
the correspondence of one discourse to
another, reports analyses made possible to
learn themes that are translated in voices
that participate in the students’ educational
processes, pointing at the life that comes
into university, reclaiming new educational
objects as well as academic relations that
suggest new barriers to be transgressed.
Assuming the notion of dialogism as
structuring part of the process of
knowledge construction, it was possible to
discern in the students’ discourse their
relation with the theoretical-
methodological bases of their graduation
which provide them in the evaluation of
the other, with the awareness that
countryside schools still hold strong ties to
the hegemonic and homogenizing
pedagogic tradition. The evaluation present
in the LPEC reports suggest that as a
domain that requires further investigation
and enquiry by an emancipatory
educational project.
Although students’ observations
cause important shifts in the image of
school teachers to an image aligned with
principles of Countryside Education there
are contradictions that must be brought up
in the educational debate. For instance, the
attention students dedicated almost
exclusively to the teachers’ methodologies
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
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as a fixed point in the educational process
needs to be problematized since
countryside schools are much more than
the school itself, which demands that other
dimensions of the process must also
occupy the discursive scene to prevent the
mere and simple instrumentalization of
teachers’ actions in countryside schools.
Two complementary paths of
investigation are thus opened by the
students’ reports: the homogenizing school
tradition present in countryside schools and
the educational history of LPEC students
centered on the how to of the school. Both
point to the necessity of further
problematization of the degree.
References
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em educação do campo. In Oliveira, D. A.,
Duarte, A. M. C., & Vieira, L. M. F.
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condição docente. Belo Horizonte:
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http://www.scielo.br/pdf/tce/v15n4/v15n4a
17 Acesso em 03 de março de 2017.
Costa, E. M., & Monteiro, A. L. (2012).
Procampo: uma política de formação
inicial para o docente do campo. In Anais
XVI ENDIPE - Encontro Nacional de
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- Campinas.
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17. ed. Rio de Janeiro: Paz e Terra.
_____. (1981). Ação Cultural para a
liberdade e outros escritos. Rio de Janeiro:
Paz e Terra.
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histórica: uma visão humana da construção
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S. S., & Kramer, S. (Orgs.) Ciências
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Bakhtin (pp. 26-38). São Paulo, Cortez.
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& Sá, L. M. S. (Orgs.). Licenciaturas em
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Campo, Marabá.
i
Bakhtin, M. (1981) Discourse in the Novel. The
dialogic imagination: four essays. Ed. Michael
Houlquist. p. 291.
ii
The first Brazilian edition of Marxism and the
Philosophy of Language dates back to 1929. The
cited edition is from 2006. Due to the debate on the
authorship of this work, the double reference
Bakhtin/Voloshinov was chosen.
iii
In the original: mas situado em sua relação com
o contexto histórico-social, portanto, na pesquisa, o
que acontece não é um encontro de psiqués
individuais, mas uma relação de textos com o
contexto”.
iv
In the original: o enunciado não diz tudo,
devendo o analista buscar os efeitos dos sentidos e,
para isso, precisa sair do enunciado e chegar ao
enunciável através da interpretação”.
v
Bakhtin, M., & Voloshinov, V. (1973). Marxism
and the Philosophy of Language. NY: Seminars
Press.
vi
In the original: A Educação do Campo surgiu em
um determinado momento e contexto histórico e
não pode ser compreendida em si mesma, ou
apenas desde o mundo da educação ou desde os
parâmetros teóricos da pedagogia. Ela é um
movimento real de combate ao atual estado de
coisas: movimento prático, de objetivos ou fins
práticos, de ferramentas práticas, que expressa e
produz concepções teóricas, críticas a determinadas
visões de educação, de política de educação, de
projetos de campo e de país, mas que são
interpretações da realidade construídas em vista de
orientar ações/lutas concretas.
vii
Until June 2013, the Marabá University Campus
[Campus Universitário de Marabá] presently
Unifesspa, was part of UFPA.
viii
REUNI was instituted by the Presidential Decree
6,096, 24 April 2007 and integrates the group of
actions by the Federal Government for the Plan for
Educational Development, through the Ministry of
Education and Culture.
ix
In the original: O acúmulo conquistado por essa
construção histórica possibilitou a concepção do
curso de Licenciatura Plena em Educação o Campo
(LPEC), que, desde 2009, tem ofertado uma turma-
ano. Ainda que a institucionalização do curso no
interior da Unifesspa represente a convergência a
uma política nacional de Educação do Campo, ela
responde, mais concretamente, às demandas do
movimento de Educação do Campo na região,
especialmente como parte da luta pela Reforma
Agrária”.
x
In the original: “tendo o exercício e a busca da
interdisciplinaridade como princípio pautado para a
formação dos educandos”.
xi
In the original: “... a intencionalidade maior é a de
contribuir com a construção de processos capazes
de desencadear mudanças na lógica de utilização e
de produção de conhecimento no campo”.
xii
In the original: processo de desestabilização de
uma ordem dada e de desnaturalização de uma
forma curricular (a disciplinar) que é histórica, mas
passa a ser assumida como a única possível no
trabalho com o conhecimento”.
xiii
In the original: no caso da proposta de formação
por áreas, não são as disciplinas o objetivo central
do trabalho pedagógico com o conhecimento. Este
trabalho se dirige a questões da realidade como
objeto de estudo, tendo como base a apropriação do
conhecimento científico acumulado. Colocam-se,
então, indagações epistemológicas sobre a própria
concepção de conhecimento, de ciência e de
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
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2018
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pesquisa. Indaga-se de que forma o trabalho
pedagógico pode garantir o movimento entre
apropriação e produção do conhecimento e a
articulação entre conhecimento e processo
formativo como um todo permanente entre o
conhecimento que a ciência ajuda a produzir e as
questões atuais da vida. Os fenômenos da realidade
atual precisam ser estudados em toda a sua
complexidade, tal como existem na realidade, por
meio de uma abordagem que conta de
compreender totalidades nas suas contradições, no
seu movimento histórico”.
xiv
Some institutions adopt Time-school and time-
community. In spite of the appearance of such
terms in some excerpts in the Pedagogical Project
for LPEC/Unifesspa, university time-space and
local time-space were presently chosen as they are
more recurrent in the document.
xv
The identification of the excerpts extracted from
the Reports was conventionalized by naming them
Enunciation “E” numbered according to the order
of presentation (E1, E2, E3 successively).
xvi
Each student was identified by the initial of their
name followed by the local time-space (TEL) and
the class year.
xvii
In the original: “Apesar do conteúdo ser o único
instrumento de base do professor é interessante
destacar que o trabalho de socialização do mesmo
dar-se sob um cuidado de pensar o cotidiano dos
sujeitos de forma que os alunos possam refletir de
maneira crítica com essa fundamentação teórica que
se faz necessária para pensar a realidade a qual
estão envolvidos. Ou seja, um esforço do
professor de contextualizar o conteúdo trazendo
exemplos da mídia, exemplos cotidianos que
perpassa pela vida dos alunos, principalmente,
quando se trata da juventude, dialogando com suas
experiências de vida e com os conhecimentos
prévios dos alunos de forma interdisciplinar usando
elementos de outras disciplinas na construção do
pensamento filosófico”.
xviii
In the original: “Embora a professora usasse
somente o livro didático nas aulas, em três
momentos ela trouxe exemplos da atividade para a
realidade dos alunos, nestes momentos houve uma
participação maior dos alunos, dando exemplo,
também esses exemplos foram dois ou três, logo a
professora pediu para os alunos responderem as
duas questões do livro, neste momento finalizou o
diálogo interativo na sala.
xix
In the original: Seguindo o conteúdo e o plano
de aula, o professor quando vai trabalhar texto
começa com a leitura oral do mesmo, introduz
perguntas reflexivas, depois passa para as questões
envolvendo interpretação propostas no livro, onde
os alunos se sentam juntos e vão copiar e responder,
na maioria das vezes é assim que acontece. Com o
estudo da gramática, a metodologia é quase a
mesma, estudo dos conceitos do conteúdo após a
explicação por meio de exemplos, realizar o
exercício, vem a atividade individual, realizada na
sala, onde os alunos passam as perguntas do livro
para o caderno e em seguida respondem as mesmas.
algumas vezes que as questões do livro são
substituídas por questões da autoria do professor.
Enquanto os alunos respondem silenciosamente as
questões, o professor sempre prepara algo para
depois, e acabado o tempo as questões são
corrigidas ou deixadas para a aula seguinte. Em
linhas gerais esse é o modo como as aulas seguem
os três dias da semana.
xx
Freire, P. (2005). Pedagogy of the oppressed.
Translated by Myra Bergman Ramos. 30th
anniversary. Ed. NY: The Continuum International
Publishing Group.
Article Information
Received on April 30th, 2018
Accepted on May 25th, 2018
Published on December 23th, 2018
Author Contributions: The authors were responsible for
the designing, delineating, analyzing and interpreting the
data, production of the manuscript, critical revision of the
content and approval of the final version published.
Conflict of Interest: None reported.
Orcid
Elisvania Nunes Braz
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9440-4361
Nilsa Brito Ribeiro
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9213-1726
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by countryside female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice in countryside
schools
Tocantinópolis
v. 3
n. 4
p. 1294-1315
sep./dec.
2018
ISSN: 2525-4863
1315
How to cite this article
APA
Braz, E. N., & Ribeiro, N. B. (2018). Writings by
countryside female educators on the meanings of
pedagogical practice in countryside schools. Rev. Bras.
Educ. Camp., 3(4), 1294-1315. DOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.20873/uft.2525-4863.2018v3n4p1294
ABNT
BRAZ, E. N.; RIBEIRO, N. B. Writings by countryside
female educators on the meanings of pedagogical practice
in countryside schools. Rev. Bras. Educ. Camp.,
Tocantinópolis, v. 3, n. 4, sep./dec., p. 1294-1315, 2018.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.20873/uft.2525-
4863.2018v3n4p1294