Navegando por Assunto "Regras descritivas"
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Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Efeitos da exposição continuada a regras descritivas sobre o comportamento escolar de crianças(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2009-09-09) CRAVEIRO, Cíntia Caroline Prado; PARACAMPO, Carla Cristina Paiva; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9018003546303132Children histories have been used as ludic-didactic resource in installation of behaviors. In this literature, these behaviors are usually described in a descriptive rules way, describing general relationships among events.The study analyzed the efects of continued exposure to the descriptive rules presented in children histories about the frequency and time of commitment in pro-study behaviors, in four 7 to 8-years old children. The study had three stages. In the first stage, semi-structured interviews with the children teachers were made to colect some reports about children performance in school activities. In the second stage, cursive registers of children behavior in the classroom were made to identify occurence and frequency of the behaviors reported by the teachers. Then, it was possible to select and categorize the main behaviors to be observed in the study. The selected behaviors were: to Copy and Answer the exercise and to Get visa. The third stage was a base line session and six phases. In the base line session, a register of the occurence of these behaviors were made with the objective to have a base line of the frequency and duration of them. The six phases consisted of reading a child history and a register session of the occurence of the main behaviors. In each phase, a different history was read. It had a descriptive rule describing positive consequences of the selected behaviors and negative consequences of behaviors that didn't match with the selected ones. The results showed that all participants, in the last register session, increased meaningfully the time spent in copying and answering the exercise activities, as well as, the number of times that these behaviors were emitted, in relation to the base line session.They all emitted the Getting visa behavior in the register session. These results sugest that the continued exposure to the descriptive rules in children histories contributed to install or increase the frequency of the Copying and Aswering the exercise and Getting visa, as well as to increase time of commitment of children in these activities.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Efeitos de perguntas e de respostas às perguntas sobre o seguir regras apresentadas em uma história infantil(2013-12) PARACAMPO, Carla Cristina Paiva; ALBUQUERQUE, Luiz Carlos de; MESCOUTO, Wandria de Andrade; FARIAS, Andréa FonsecaThe effects of questions and answers to questions upon rule following were investigated with 15 children, distributed in three groups. In phases 1 and 3, the number of candies given was measured; in Phase 2, a story was told with a rule specifying that who gives goodies has friends to play. The groups differed in Phase 2: for Group 1, the experimenter did not ask questions; for Group 2, questions were asked during the story telling; and for Group 3, questions were asked at the end of the story. From those participants who did not give candies in Phase 1 of groups 1, 2 e 3, 50%, 100% and 100%, respectively, did so in Phase 3. The results of this study suggest that questions and answers interfere with the occurrence of rule following.Item Acesso aberto (Open Access) Efeitos de regras descritivas, presentes em histórias infantis, e de monitoramento sobre o comportamento de ler(Universidade Federal do Pará, 2011-06-07) CARVALLÓ, Bruna Nogueira; PARACAMPO, Carla Cristina Paiva; http://lattes.cnpq.br/9018003546303132The present study assessed the effects of descriptive rules present in four children´s stories and the effect of monitoring on the emission and engagement time of reading behavior in eight children. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with the teachers and responsible with the objective of collecting reports on the children´s performance in reading activities in school and domestic contexts, respectively. There were also interviews with the children, which had the objective of identifying their preferences among the activities worked in the Activity Choice sessions. The participants were divided in two experimental conditions. Each experimental condition was composed by three phases (Pre-test, Test and Post-Test). The Pre-Test and Post-Test phases were equivalent to four sessions of Activity Choice. The Test phase consisted to four story reading sessions interspersed with four Activity Choice sessions. The stories presented descriptive rules showing the advantages of the emission of reading behavior and the disadvantages of the non-emission of this behavior. Each Activity Choice session corresponded to the presentation of six different activities (Playing, Drawing, Painting, Cutting and Pasting, Modeling and Reading). The participants´ free choice among the activities and their engagement time were registered. The two conditions differed in the Test and Post-Test phases. In Condition I, the experimenter was absent during the Activity Choice sessions. In Condition II, the experimenter was present during the Activity Choice session. All participants, regardless of experimental condition, increased the time to engage in the activity of the Read the Pre-Test for the Test Phase and all participants remained engaged in this activity during the Post-Test. The results suggest that the continued exposure to the stories was efficient in increasing emission and engagement time of the reading behavior in children, with this behavior being supervised or not.