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dc.contributor.advisorOstermann, Ana Cristina
dc.contributor.authorSchnack, Cristiane Maria
dc.date.accessioned2015-07-03T19:09:00Z
dc.date.accessioned2022-09-22T19:15:14Z
dc.date.available2015-07-03T19:09:00Z
dc.date.available2022-09-22T19:15:14Z
dc.date.issued2013-01-14
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12032/58711
dc.description.abstractBased on the theoretical and analytcal framework of the analysis of talk-in-interaction (SACKS, 1992; SACKS; SCHEGLOFF; JEFFERSON, 1974; C. GOODWIN, 1984) and of ethnomethodology (GRAFINKEL, 1967), this ethnographic study (O ́REILLY, 2009) aimed at understanding how two families, named as Catarina ́s family and Mila ́s family, which belong to different social classes, give meaning to their responsibilities concerning the school within the household environment while participanting in the child ́s school rotine. Responsibility originates from the responsive character of our actions (HILL; IRVINE, 1992), which thus qualifies it as intersubjective (OCHS; IZQUIERDO, 2009). The results point to distinct orientations in each family, named here as shared responsibility and divided responsibility. Shared responsibility evidences the centrality of the child and her school universe through the conarration of the child ́s school experiences, the coconstruction of a mutual understanding of the written world and script proposals (EMMISON et al., 2011) by the adults. They also share with school its pedagogical doings of mediating knowledge, through IRF sequences (COULTHARD; SINCLAIR, 1975; GARCEZ, 2006), constituting school and family as an extension of each other (CARVALHO, 2004). Divided responsibility, on the other hand, points to the pursuit of the child ́s autonomy concerning her school tasks and to the distinction between the school and the family ́s social nature, achieved through distribution, maintenance and the explicit negotiation of members ́s responsibilities (FINCH; MASON, 2006), and the crucial distinction between narrator and audience in narratives of school experience. Analyses also evidence the gendered constitution of fatherhood as encompassing the invisible work of organizing school at home (REAY, 2005) in Catarina ́s family, and motherhood as gatekeeper (GOTTZÉN, 2011) of the father ́s participation in Mila ́s family. This gendered work destabilizes normative discourses on paternal participation, especially in low income social classes, in which fathers are seen as managers of the household despite the fact that these households are, increasingly, being financially afforded by women (FONSECA, 2004). This study contributes to the understanding of family participation in the child ́s school trajectory as it proposes that participation is constitutive of the understanding families hold of their responsibilities towards the school, which ends up positioning the school either as a task to be performed or as a right to be offered to the child.en
dc.description.sponsorshipNenhumapt_BR
dc.languagept_BRpt_BR
dc.publisherUniversidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinospt_BR
dc.rightsopenAccesspt_BR
dc.subjectFala-em-interaçãopt_BR
dc.subjectTalk-in-interactionen
dc.titleFormas de participar: responsabilidade (com)partilhada entre escola e família na fala-em-interação social em contexto doméstico-familiarpt_BR
dc.typeTesept_BR


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