35 results on '"Francesco Arcidiacono"'
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2. Editorial: Discourse, conversation and argumentation: Theoretical perspectives and innovative empirical studies, volume II
- Author
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Antonio Bova, Carlo Galimberti, Francesco Arcidiacono, and Lise Haddouk
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argumentation ,communicative interactions ,conversation ,discourse ,psychology ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2023
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3. Editorial: Inclusive schools for a diverse world: Psychological and educational factors and practices harming or promoting inclusion at school
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Sabine Pirchio, Francesco Arcidiacono, and Ylenia Passiatore
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inclusive education ,teachers ,social inclusion ,special educational needs ,learning difficulties ,students ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2022
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4. Editorial: Qualitative Methods for Studying Groups
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Francesca Alby, Francesco Arcidiacono, Maria Fernandes-Jesus, Terri Mannarini, Laura Lucia Parolin, and Liisa Voutilainen
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groups ,qualitative methods ,constructivist epistemology ,emic point of view ,situatedness ,action-research ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2022
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5. Editorial: Discourse, Conversation and Argumentation: Theoretical Perspectives and Innovative Empirical Studies—Volume I
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Francesco Arcidiacono, Antonio Bova, Carlo Galimberti, and Lise Haddouk
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argumentation ,communicative interactions ,conversation ,discourse ,psychology ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Published
- 2021
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6. The Dilemma of Inclusive Education: Inclusion for Some or Inclusion for All
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Äli Leijen, Francesco Arcidiacono, and Aleksandar Baucal
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inclusive education ,special education ,public discourse ,argumentum model of topics ,dialogue ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In this paper, we intend to consider different understandings of inclusive education that frame current public and professional debates as well as policies and practices. We analyze two – somewhat opposing – discourses regarding inclusive education, namely, the “inclusion for some” – which represents the idea that children with special needs have a right to the highest quality education which can be delivered by specially trained staff, and the “inclusion for all” – which represents the idea that all children regarding their diverse needs should have the opportunity to learn together. To put the two discourses in a dialogical relation, we have reconstructed the inferential configurations of the arguments of each narrative to identify how the two definitions contribute to position children with and without special needs and their teachers. The results show the possibilities to bridge the two narratives, with respect to the voices they promote or silence, the power relations they constitute, and the values and practices they enact or prevent.
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- 2021
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7. Identifying teachers’ general pedagogical knowledge: A video stimulated recall study
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Liina Malva, Francesco Arcidiacono, and Äli Leijen
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Stimulated recall ,05 social sciences ,Mathematics education ,050301 education ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Context (language use) ,Psychology ,0503 education ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Education - Abstract
Teachers’ general pedagogical knowledge (GPK) has been emphasized as an important factor in pupils’ learning, although a gap appears when describing this concept in the context of school practices....
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- 2021
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8. Work-family conflict and facilitation among teachers in Israel and Switzerland
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Antonio Bova, Francesco Arcidiacono, Giuseppe Melfi, and Ina Ben-Uri
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family ,Teacher education ,Work–family conflict ,Culture ,Settore M-PSI/06 - PSICOLOGIA DEL LAVORO E DELLE ORGANIZZAZIONI ,Context (language use) ,Sample (statistics) ,Education ,Argumentation theory ,argumentation ,0502 economics and business ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Work-family conflict ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Educational psychology ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Work-family facilitation ,Settore M-PSI/04 - PSICOLOGIA DELLO SVILUPPO E PSICOLOGIA DELL'EDUCAZIONE ,Work (electrical) ,Facilitation ,teacher ,Psychology ,Attribution ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management - Abstract
In this paper, we examine the attitudes toward integrating work and family in a sample of 247 teachers in Switzerland and Israel. More particularly, we focus on the national context’s role in mediating the relations between professional and private spheres. The data were collected by a questionnaire implemented and administered in the two countries. The analysis reveals differences between Israeli and Swiss teachers regarding the importance of attribution to life roles and their attitudes toward conflict and facilitation. Findings suggest new insights into the consideration of cultural elements in shaping the teachers’ attitudes toward the integration of family and work.
- Published
- 2022
9. VERBAL AND NON-VERBAL FORMS OF ARGUMENTATION AT KINDERGARTEN
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Josephine Convertini
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Nonverbal communication ,Psychology ,Argumentation theory ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2021
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10. Embodied Argumentation in Young Children in Kindergarten
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Josephine Convertini and Francesco Arcidiacono
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Structure (mathematical logic) ,Argumentative ,Public Administration ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Space (commercial competition) ,Science education ,Computer Science Applications ,Argumentation theory ,Education ,problem solving ,Embodied cognition ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Computer Science (miscellaneous) ,Mathematics education ,embodied argumentation ,reasoning ,kindergarten ,science education ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,Gesture ,media_common - Abstract
In kindergarten, children are usually engaged with both verbal activities and non-verbal activities, often requiring the manipulation of physical objects. During technical tasks (e.g., problem solving), children can use argumentation as one of the languages of science that mediates how they interact with the surrounding world. In this paper, we focused on technical tasks in kindergarten in order to understand to what extent activities requiring the manipulation of physical objects also leave space for argumentation. The study involved 25 children engaged in three problem-solving activities requiring the manipulation of Lego® and some recycled materials. To analyze the non-verbal (embodied) side of the argumentative activities, we firstly identified the argumentative structure of each exchange involving the participants. Then, we focused on segments of “incomplete” argumentative dialogues (i.e., presenting only some elements typical of children’s argumentation) by appealing to multimodal representations (speech, gestures, and physical objects). The findings of the study showed that even apparently incomplete exchanges can have an argumentative function generated by non-verbal elements of the interactions. Investigating the role of embodied argumentation during technical tasks in kindergarten can allow teachers to recognize and further develop children’s argumentative resources.
- Published
- 2021
11. Prevention of blatant and subtle prejudices as perceived by students: when teachers have their say
- Author
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Francesco Arcidiacono, Alessandro Bergamaschi, Catherine Blaya, and Jimmy Stef
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Bildungssystem ,Einstellung effect ,Frankreich ,Préjugé ,système éducatif ,élève ,structure sociale ,tolérance ,Schulpädagogik ,Verhalten ,Einflussfaktor ,Sozialstruktur ,Einstellung ,Questionnaire survey ,Discrimination ,Education system ,Fragebogenerhebung ,Empirische Bildungsforschung ,Multivariate Analyse ,L7-991 ,Secondary school ,Prejudice (legal term) ,Migration ,Lehrer ,Engagement ,Education (General) ,Pupils ,Multiculturalism ,Social structure ,%22">Einstellung ,Gymnasium ,Schüler ,Multikulturalität ,France ,Psychology ,Vorurteil ,Erziehung, Schul- und Bildungswesen ,Intervention ,Prävention ,Education ,ddc:370 ,Wahrnehmung ,Prevention ,Teacher ,Pupil ,Education systems ,German academic secondary school ,Diskriminierung ,Toleranz ,Grammar School ,Multivariate analysis ,Perception ,Schulstruktur ,Involvement ,Humanities ,Educational systems - Abstract
Cet article s’intéresse aux préjugés "flagrants" et "voilés" manifestés par 1’858 élèves de collège et de lycée en France au moyen d’une enquête par questionnaire. Une première analyse descriptive permet de repérer les facteurs sociaux et scolaires pouvant influencer la perception par les élèves de l’investissement des enseignant·e·s autour de questions liées à l’immigration. à partir de modèles multivariés, les analyses montrent que lorsque les élèves déclarent que leurs enseignant·e·s abordent les thématiques liées au racisme, aux discriminations et à la diversité culturelle, les attitudes intolérantes baissent. L’analyse causale met en exergue l’existence de facteurs externes facilitant l’appropriation des interventions des enseignant·e·s par les élèves. (DIPF/Orig.), This article focuses on “blatant” and “subtle” prejudices expressed by 1858 lower and upper secondary school students in France, in a self-reported survey. A first descriptive analysis allows to identify the social and school factors that may influence students’ perception of teachers’ involvement regarding issues raised by migration. Multivariate analyses show that when students state that their teachers address issues related to racism, discrimination and cultural diversity, intolerant attitudes decrease. Mediation and moderation models highlight the existence of external factors facilitating the appropriation of teachers’ interventions by students. (DIPF/Orig.)
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- 2021
12. Discourse, Conversation And Argumentation Theoretical Perspectives And Innovative Empirical Studies - Volume I
- Author
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Bova, Antonio, Galimberti, Carlo, Lise, Haddouk, and Francesco, Arcidiacono
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Argumentation ,Conversation ,Psychology ,social interaction ,Discourse ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE - Published
- 2021
13. Editorial: Discourse, Conversation and Argumentation: Theoretical Perspectives and Innovative Empirical Studies-Volume I
- Author
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Antonio Bova, Francesco Arcidiacono, Carlo Galimberti, and Lise Haddouk
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Volume (computing) ,psychology ,communicative interactions ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,BF1-990 ,Argumentation theory ,Epistemology ,Empirical research ,Editorial ,argumentation ,Conversation ,discourse ,Psychology ,conversation ,General Psychology ,qualitative research ,media_common - Published
- 2021
14. START ARGUING TO SOLVE A TASK: PRESCHOOL CHILDREN ALREADY ENGAGED WHEN THE TEACHER PRESENTS THE ACTIVITY
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Josephine Convertini
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Presentation ,Argumentative ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,Dialogical self ,Mathematics education ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Teacher education ,media_common ,Argumentation theory ,Task (project management) - Abstract
Studies of argumentation in education have increased in the last few decades, to analyze how people learn to argue, and how it is possible to improve practices of arguing to learn. Overall, these studies have shown that argumentation at school rarely occurs spontaneously, in contrast to the dialogical practices in informal settings, although the argumentative capacities of young children, even at preschool level, have been already highlighted. Other studies have been specifically devoted to examining the role of teachers in establish the conditions to engage pupils in argumentation: how to present instruction, how to motivate them to argue, how to guarantee a proper collaboration. Although we recognize the interest of looking at the role of the adult (teacher) in designing argumentative activities at school, in this paper we intend to analyze whether the presentation of a task requiring argumentative exchange is taken by children as a useful occasion to start arguing. To attend this goal, we will refer to an interdisciplinary approach, combining the pragma-dialectics and a discursive perspective to analyze the children’s reasoning emerging in the classroom while the teacher is presenting a task. A total of 44 preschool children (3-5 years old) were asked to interact in small groups of two or three people at the kindergarten in order to solve three tasks (to build a tunnel, a bridge and an hourglass – by using different materials) supposed to solicit argumentative exchanges among the participants. The activities were video-recorded and the interactions transcribed. The qualitative analysis implied two steps: the identification of the argumentative structure of each exchange according to the pragmadialectical approach; and the interpretation of the beginning of the argumentative discussions, through a discursive approach. The findings show that, while the teacher is presenting the task and asking participants to solve it, the children already engage themselves in reasoning about some aspects of the activity (e.g., alternative ways to solve the problem, possible use of other tools, etc.). Beyond expectations, children immediately start to argue about the task, advancing their ideas and comparing the possibilities offered by the available objects. As a consequence, the teacher is requested to re-organize the plan, to consider the children’s argumentative attempts, and to arrange the situation in order to pursue the goal and, at the same time, to take into account the children’s interest. As scientists in the field of teacher education, we suggest that teachers should consider not only their need to set out in advance the setting for the activity to be proposed at school, but also the opportunity to look first at what children already do when engaging in interactions. This will allow a better understanding of the relevance of cognitive-oriented argumentative activities in classroom, in which children can immediately enter and develop arguments even before the teacher manages to present the activity. Further studies should contribute to develop these aspects and to train pre- and in-service teachers to consider such a situation, to analyze it and to implement strategies devoted to favor cognitive argumentation at school.
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- 2020
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15. Transitions in the representation and implementation of a language-learning project within a multicultural context
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Sheila Padiglia, Francesco Arcidiacono, and Céline Miserez-Caperos
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media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Educational psychology ,Context (language use) ,Language acquisition ,Education ,Multiculturalism ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Mathematics education ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Narrative ,Psychology ,Adaptation (computer science) ,0503 education ,Educational program ,Inclusion (education) ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The paper explores the involvement of teachers, children, and parents in a project based on learning a second language (L2) within a multicultural context. The study accounts for the participants’ transitions across school and family and aims to analyze their representations about the implementation and the adaptation of the project. The investigation involves three classes of primary schools—1st and 2nd levels—and two kindergarten classes, for a total of 15 teachers, 169 children aged 3–7 years old, and their families, living in French-speaking areas of Switzerland and representing 20 different nationalities. By combining different data sources (teachers’ and parents’ interviews, ethnographic observations of children’s activities), we explore how participants have implemented an educational program through various adaptations in their transition from a traditional way of teaching/learning L2 to a new model inspired by the Narrative Format. Through an inductive approach and a qualitative analysis of data, we present the main evidences of these transitions, detecting the conditions that facilitate the acquisition of languages and accounting for arguments connected to the heterogeneous, conditional, and context-dependent knowledge within and outside the school.
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- 2018
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16. Intercultural practices and inclusive education in Europe: can migration be a resource for individual and societal development?
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Caterina Fiorilli, Sabine Pirchio, Ylenia Passiatore, Giuseppe Carrus, Francesco Arcidiacono, Fridanna Maricchiolo, Passiatore, Ylenia, Pirchio, Sabine, Carrus, Giuseppe, Maricchiolo, Fridanna, Fiorilli, Caterina, and Arcidiacono, Francesco
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Resource (biology) ,inclusive education ,family and school ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Intercultural practices. Inclusive education . Migration . Acculturation . Family and school ,050301 education ,Educational psychology ,intercultural practices ,Public relations ,migration ,Acculturation ,Education ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Special section ,Societal development ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,business ,acculturation ,0503 education ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
This is an introductory paper to the special section “Multilingual learning and social inclusion of children: The development of educational programmes to connect school and family”.
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- 2017
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17. Towards peer education prevention of school dropout: An exploratory analysis of an action-research study
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Gabriella Colucci and Francesco Arcidiacono
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action-research ,peer education ,Medical education ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Applied psychology ,Psychological intervention ,General Medicine ,Life skills ,dropout ,Focus group ,School dropout ,lcsh:Psychology ,Brainstorming ,qualitative analysis ,life skills education ,Action research ,Psychology ,Dropout (neural networks) ,Peer education - Abstract
This paper presents the exploratory analysis of an action-research into dropout prevention in an Italian secondary school. By taking into account the representations of teachers, students and parents, different activities of peer education have been implemented during the school year in a city of Sardinia in order to promote school success. The study is based on a mixed-methods design, including focus groups with teachers, students and parents, as well as classroom observations. The action-research consists of different interventions: firstly, the participants’ representations of school dropout have been collected; then, a specific program of peer education has been proposed through activities of role-playing, simulations, brainstorming, and improvement of life skills (during training meetings with the participants). Thereafter, the action-research has been qualitatively analysed, with the findings indicating possible directions of re-creating school practices that could have potential benefits in preventing dropout.
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- 2017
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18. Collaborative Relationships Among Couples: Frames of Interaction During Everyday Household Activities
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Francesco Arcidiacono
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couples ,060201 languages & linguistics ,family ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Oral communication. Speech ,06 humanities and the arts ,collaboration ,BF1-990 ,Argumentation theory ,argumentation ,P95-95.6 ,0602 languages and literature ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,household activities ,Social psychology - Abstract
The analysis of collaborative exchanges of couples during their household activities is at the core of this paper. Although the management of responsibilities around household tasks is a potential source of contention within the decision-making process about home activities, another complementary perspective considers practices of communication during household activities as ways to build or reinforce the family educational processes. Our goal is to capture these daily interactions as indicators of collaborative relationships among couples, exemplifying how communicative exchanges contribute to the creation of frames for family participation in routines. In the first part of the paper, a review of issues regarding the division of labor within the family setting will be introduced in order to examine how these aspects relate to the ongoing negotiation of responsibilities and expectations between women and men. Thereafter, the methodological design of the study will be presented, as well as the qualitative analysis of data based on the argumentative topic model. A discussion of participants’ responsibilities in household tasks will be presented as indicators of their collaborative relationships during everyday activities. Lastly, implications for family studies will be highlighted in order to illustrate how family members ascribe meanings during routines.
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- 2016
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19. The dialogic construction of justifications and arguments of a seven-year-old child within a ‘democratic’ family
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Clotilde Pontecorvo
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060201 languages & linguistics ,Cultural Studies ,Linguistics and Language ,Dialogic ,Argumentative ,Literature and Literary Theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Socialization ,Assertion ,050301 education ,06 humanities and the arts ,Directive ,Language and Linguistics ,Democracy ,Epistemology ,Argumentation theory ,0602 languages and literature ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The paper focuses on arguing and reasoning processes occurring at dinnertime family conversations. Our goal is to highlight the interplay between two sides of argumentative practices: the justification as social need to provide evidences for an assertion; the dialogic function of argumentation that refers to the goals arguers want to achieve during discussions. Through the analysis of a case study we discuss a sequence in which a child resists his father’s directive by an elaborated argumentative strategy in order to achieve his goal. Results show how participants engage in opposing the other’s standpoint and are socialized to argumentative dialogues.
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- 2016
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20. Activity-bound and activity-unbound arguments in response to parental eat-directives at mealtimes: Differences and similarities in children of 3–5 and 6–9 years old
- Author
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Antonio Bova and Francesco Arcidiacono
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Argumentative ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Critical discussion ,Appeal ,Parent-child interaction ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,humanities ,Discursive skills ,Education ,Argumentation theory ,Developmental psychology ,Consistency (negotiation) ,Age groups ,Argumentation ,Mealtime ,Quality (business) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,health care economics and organizations ,3304 ,media_common - Abstract
Previous works have investigated argumentative skills of young children referring to the number of arguments and counter-arguments advanced by children as the sole indicator to assess their capacities. Hitherto, less attention has been paid to analyze the strategies adopted by children of different ages in family interactions. This study investigates the argumentative types used by children aged 3–5 and 6–9 years to refute parental eat-directives during mealtime conversations, and whether participants refer to activity-bound/-unbound arguments within the two age groups. To analyze video-recorded meals of Swiss and Italian families, we employed the pragma-dialectical ideal model of critical discussion as tool to examine sequences in which children advance different types of arguments to support their refusal to parental eat-directives. Findings highlight differences and similarities in the two groups of children: mostly, both younger and older children use activity-bound arguments such as quantity and quality of food in response to parental directives; on the contrary, only children aged 6–9 years use activity-unbound arguments (adult-expert opinion and appeal to consistency) to refute the parental eat-directives. Results show how the construction of and engagement in argumentation are embedded in and shape social activities, and how argumentative skills are valued to participate in family interactions.
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- 2015
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21. The interplay between parental argumentative strategies, children's reactions and topics of disagreement during family conversations
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Antonio Bova
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060201 languages & linguistics ,Argumentative ,Opposition (politics) ,Analogy ,Argumentation ,Disagreement ,Family ,Parent-child interaction ,06 humanities and the arts ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Education ,Epistemology ,Argumentation theory ,Qualitative analysis ,0602 languages and literature ,Psychology - Abstract
This study aims to explore the interplay between parents' arguments, children's reactions and topics of disagreement during mealtime conversations. Within a data corpus constituted by 30 video-recorded meals of 10 Swiss and Italian families, a corpus of 132 argumentative discussions was selected for a qualitative analysis through the pragma-dialectical approach to argumentation. Findings indicate that both parents and children assume argument schemes related to the object of the disagreement: when the contested standpoints refer to food, arguments are based on a symptomatic relation; when they refer to the behavior of children, parents base their argumentation on a causal and analogy relation, while the children's reaction is typically an expression of further doubt or a mere opposition without providing any argument. The results of this study bring further light on the actual knowledge of argumentative interactions and the interplay between topics of disagreement and the argumentative strategies adopted by family members.
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- 2018
22. A narrative format design to improve language acquisition through social interaction
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Sheila Padiglia
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German ,Research design ,Constructed language ,Social integration ,Social skills ,Pedagogy ,language ,Mathematics education ,Narrative ,Language acquisition ,Psychology ,language.human_language ,Social relation - Abstract
In this paper we present a research design devoted to create opportunities of learning and development through social interaction. The study is part of a EU project called SOFT (School and family together for the immigrant children integration) that aims to favor linguistic and social integration of children through language learning activities that connect families and schools. Cultural and linguistic diversities are considered as elements promoting learning and cooperation among different social actors: children, teachers, parents, researchers and schools. In the present paper, we will discuss two aspects: 1) how the pedagogical design named 'Narrative format' can establish a peculiar social interaction in the classroom and how, in a developmental perspective, it offers a real opportunity of cognitive and social skills improvement; 2) how social interactions between school and families help teachers, pupils and parents to develop an awareness of their roles and a strengthen their collaboration. We have involved 15 teachers and 169 children (aged 3-7 years old) of three classes of primary schools and two kindergarten classes in Switzerland, proposing a design that provides pedagogical materials and activities devoted to teach/learn English and German language. The main questions of our study are the following: How teachers implement the pedagogical design in order to involve children in activities based on an unknown language? How does the narrative format help children learn to speak the new language and to enable the integration between teachers, children and parents? The results of our study show that the design we have implemented can create conditions that facilitate and imitate the natural (informal, discursive) acquisition of languages.
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- 2015
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23. Agency online: trends in a university learningcourse
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Maria Beatrice Ligorio, Francesco Arcidiacono, Maria Antonietta Impedovo, Department of Psychology, Università degli studi di Bari Aldo Moro (UNIBA), Apprentissage, Didactique, Evaluation, Formation (ADEF), Aix Marseille Université (AMU), and Università degli studi di Bari Aldo Moro = University of Bari Aldo Moro (UNIBA)
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Cooperative learning ,[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education ,collaborative learning ,Interpersonal communication ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pedagogy ,Agency (sociology) ,e-learning ,jigsaw effect ,4. Education ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Collaborative learning ,Computer Science Applications ,Blended learning ,Transformative learning ,Agency ,Content analysis ,Computer-mediated communication ,Psychology ,0503 education ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Information Systems - Abstract
International audience; This article aims to investigate how university students perform agency inan online course and whether the collaborative nature of the course affectssuch expression. A total of 11 online web forums involving 18 students(N = 745 posts in total) were qualitatively analysed through the use of acodebook composed of five categories (individual, interpersonal, epistemic,transformative and collective) and several sub-categories purposelydeveloped for the sake of this research. The results show that each categoryfollows a specific path, although two events – the re-mixing of the groups andthe assumption of the peer-tutor role – particularly affected the evolution oftrends. Although this study needs further development, the authors believethat an in-depth understanding of the nature of agency, including how toanalyse it as well as empower it when implementing blended educationalactivities, engages relevant theoretical and pedagogical issues.
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- 2017
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24. Teachers and Parents Involvement for a Good School Experience of Native and Immigrant Children
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Fridanna Maricchiolo, Giuseppe Carrus, Francesco Arcidiacono, Traute Taeschner, Sabine Pirchio, Ylenia Passiatore, Pirchio, Sabine, Passiatore, Ylenia, Carrus, Giuseppe, Maricchiolo, Fridanna, Taeschner, Traute, and Arcidiacono, Francesco
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strategie di acculturazione ,Social Psychology ,International studies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,pregiudizio etnico ,stile di parenting ,Education ,Style (sociolinguistics) ,Social integration ,acculturation strategies ,Drop out ,Intervention (counseling) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,personalità ,Prejudice (legal term) ,media_common ,personality traits ,ethnic prejudice ,parenting styles ,children adjustment ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,personality traits, ethnic prejudice, acculturation strategies, parenting styles, children adjustment ,adattamento del bambino ,lcsh:L ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,lcsh:Education ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The increased and stable presence of immigrant children in preschools and in primary schools in Italy in the last twenty years, makes more and more important the study of the attitudes and behaviours in teachers, parents and children. As it is known, attitudes and behaviours can strongly influence school experience (relationships and achievements) of children from native as well as from immigrant families. Several international studies and surveys showed that children from immigrant families are more likely to drop out from school much before getting a diploma or a professional qualification (De Witte, Cabus, Thyssen, Groot, & Maassen van den Brink, 2013; Brunello & Rocco, 2012; Anisef, Brown, Phythian, Sweet, &Walters, 2010). The reason for it can be found in their socio-demographic conditions, their insufficient knowledge of the host country language and the inadequacy of educational policies for immigrants. Furthermore, the co-existence in the same school of immigrant children and autochthone children creating a constant intercultural and interethnic contact puts forward the need to handle prejudice development, in view of the social integration of the immigrant children. In this paper we present a study exploring the relationship between personality, educational style and prejudice of parents in native and in immigrant families regarding immigrant children's social integration. Results show important relations among these parents’ characteristics, together with differences between native and immigrant families. These findings could provide a contribution in implementing adequate intervention programmes supporting the school integration of immigrant children.
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- 2017
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25. Interpersonal Argumentation in Educational and Professional Contexts
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Antonio Bova
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Pedagogy ,Interpersonal communication ,Psychology ,Argumentation theory - Published
- 2017
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26. Reading together: The interplay between social and cognitive aspects in argumentative and non-argumentative dialogues
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Francesco Arcidiacono, Aleksandar Baucal, and Nevena Buđevac
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Argumentative ,4. Education ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Dialogical self ,050301 education ,050109 social psychology ,Cognition ,Interpersonal communication ,Social relation ,Developmental psychology ,Cognitive dimensions of notations ,Reading comprehension ,Reading (process) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The aim of this chapter is to consider the intertwining of social and cognitive aspects of learning through interactive activities, in order to explore how the two aspects are interrelated in children’s joint work. Focusing on participants’ talk while they are asked to solve together a reading comprehension task and to agree on a joint answer, we highlight the ways in which the process of dialogical construction of a common answer is influenced by social and cognitive factors. In particular, we problematize the interplay of multiple aspects (cognitive, personal, interpersonal) that structure interactions among peers in order to focus on the regulation of social relations during children’s discussions and its interplay with cognitive dimensions of joint task solving. We show how solving reading comprehension tasks through peer interactions appears as a complex and dynamic phenomenon shaped by the interplay of cognitive, social and personal aspects.
- Published
- 2017
27. 'Is there an equal (amount of) juice?' Exploring the repeated question effect in conservation through conversation
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Francesco Arcidiacono, Aleksandar Baucal, and Nevena Budjevac
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Repeated question ,Externalization ,Conversation analysis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Perspective (graphical) ,Dialogical thinking ,Educational psychology ,Context (language use) ,Conservation ,Education ,Piagetian task ,Conversation ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Piaget's theory of cognitive development ,Qualitative research ,Cognitive psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to highlight and discuss advantages and constraints of different methods applied within the field of children's thinking studies, through the test of the repeated question hypothesis validity, using the conservation of liquid task. In our perspective, the Piagetian interview is an ecologically valid context for externalization and modification of children's thinking. We used an experimental procedure organized in standard and modified tasks, involving primary school children in Serbia. The results of quantitative and qualitative analyses show that the repeated question is not the unique cause of children's misleading in demonstrating to understand conservation. Other dimensions explain why children change their answers when they are tested by the two tasks we used, which offers an insight into the influence of research procedures on children's answers.
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- 2012
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28. Transfer of learning in a boundary crossing training: The case of speech therapists
- Author
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Alexandra Bugnon, Francesco Arcidiacono, and Anne-Nelly Perret-Clermont
- Subjects
training ,learning ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Boundary crossing ,Training (civil) ,Speech therapy ,Transfer ,boundary-crossing ,Qualitative analysis ,Order (business) ,speech therapy ,Pedagogy ,Agency (sociology) ,General Materials Science ,Psychology ,Transfer of learning - Abstract
This study explores the speech therapists’ transfer of learning in boundary crossing from the university to the field, in order to understand how to support students in developing an epistemic agency. Our case concerns the qualitative analysis of student's assignments about academic knowledge and professional experiences in order to explore the change (in epistemic agency and boundary crossing) that takes place within the course. The results show the students’ difficulties to link their former readings with their present observations; the impact of emotions; and the types of expertise they need in terms of educational/therapeutic activities.
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- 2010
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29. Cultural practices in Italian family conversations: Verbal conflict between parents and preadolescents
- Author
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Clotilde Pontecorvo
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Discourse analysis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Socialization ,Educational psychology ,Context (language use) ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Nonverbal communication ,Conversation analysis ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Conversation ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common ,Qualitative research - Abstract
This work studies verbal conflict between parents and preadolescents through analysis of family dinnertime conversations. We move from the assumption that verbal conflict is an educational instrument of interaction and a tool of socialization. The aim of the research is to analyze the participants' strategies in situations of conflict and to highlight the relations between parents and preadolescents in these specific situations. The data collection methodology is mainly ethnographical: videotape recordings of Italian middle class family dinners (the families were selected as being dual career ones with two children) were fully transcribed and codified following the approach of Conversation Analysis. The results of the quantitative (by the use of the log-linear models) and qualitative analyses confirm the importance of verbal conflict in family context as a particular cultural strategy of relationships between parents and preadolescents. The analytical data underline the relations between different aspects of conflict and the pragmatic implications for all family members at dinnertime conversations.
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- 2009
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30. Beyond conflicts: Origin and types of issues leading to argumentative discussions during family mealtimes
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Antonio Bova
- Subjects
Argumentative ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Context (language use) ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,Language and Linguistics ,Ideal (ethics) ,parent-child conflicts ,prescriptions ,requests ,argumentation ,mealtimes ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Developmental psychology ,Critical discussion ,Argumentation theory ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This paper sets out to investigate the issues leading parents to engage in argumentative discussions with their children during mealtimes. Within a data corpus of 30 video-recorded meals of 10 middle to upper-middle-class Swiss and Italian families with a high socio-cultural level, 107 argumentative discussions between parents and children aged from 3 to 9 years old were selected. The approach for the analysis is based on the pragma-dialectical ideal model of a critical discussion. The results show that family argumentative discussions unfold around issues that are generated both by parental prescriptions and by children’s requests. The parental prescriptions largely concern context-bound activities such as having to eat a certain food or the teaching of correct table manners. The issues triggered by children’s requests refer to a wide range of activities, mainly related to the activity of mealtimes but also related to the children’s behavior outside the family context. These results indicate that argumentative interactions between parents and children are not mere conflictual episodes that must be avoided, but they essentially have a broader educational function.
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- 2015
31. Investigating children’s Why-questions: a study comparing argumentative and explanatory function
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Antonio Bova and Francesco Arcidiacono
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Argumentative ,family ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sample (statistics) ,Language and Linguistics ,Argumentation theory ,Developmental psychology ,Argumentation ,Natural (music) ,Conversation ,Function (engineering) ,media_common ,060201 languages & linguistics ,parent-child interaction ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Parent-child interaction ,06 humanities and the arts ,Why-question ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Anthropology ,0602 languages and literature ,conversation ,explanation ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology - Abstract
Questions represent a crucial tool of interaction between parents and children from a very early age. This study aims to investigate which function – argumentative or explanatory – most characterizes Why-questions asked by children to their parents in a natural setting such as mealtimes at home. Why-questions asked by 13 children – eight girls and five boys aged between three and seven years – coming from 10 middle- to upper-middle-class Swiss and Italian families with a high socio-cultural level were analyzed. In the corpus, the explanatory function largely characterizes children’s Why-questions. Questions we observed play fundamentally an educational role, since they favor the acquisition of new information and the transmission from parents to children of parental behavioral models (social behavior). The argumentative Why-questions, less frequently asked by children in our sample, are also important from an educational point of view. By these questions children challenge their parents to make clear the reasons behind their opinions, suggestions, rules and prescriptions, which are often largely implicit. Altogether, the results of this study indicate that both the explanatory and argumentative types of children’s Why-questions have a knowledge-seeking function, that is, children asking such questions are seeking knowledge of something.
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- 2014
32. 'You must eat the salad because it is nutritious'. Argumentative strategies adopted by parents and children in food-related discussions at mealtimes
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Antonio Bova and Francesco Arcidiacono
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Parents ,Argumentative ,Psychology (all) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Quality/quantity ,Social Environment ,050105 experimental psychology ,Argumentation theory ,Critical discussion ,Food Preferences ,Argumentation ,Mealtime ,Vegetables ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Quality (business) ,Family ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Meals ,General Psychology ,media_common ,060201 languages & linguistics ,Parent-child feeding strategies ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Diet ,Italy ,Order (business) ,Food ,0602 languages and literature ,Female ,Energy Intake ,Switzerland ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
At mealtimes, the evaluation of the appropriate (or not appropriate) behavior concerning the food is often assumed as a topic of discourse. The aim of this study is to single out the argumentative strategies used by parents with their children and by children with their parents in order to convince the other party to eat or not to eat a certain food. Within a data corpus constituted by 30 video-recorded meals of 10 middle to upper-middle-class Swiss and Italian families, we selected a corpus of 77 argumentative discussions between parents and children arisen around a food-related issue. Data are presented through discursive excerpts of argumentative discussions that were found within the data corpus and analyzed through the pragma-dialectical model of critical discussion. The results of this study show that the feeding practices in families with young children during mealtimes are argumentatively co- constructed by participants. In most cases parents put forward arguments based on the quality (e.g., very good, nutritious, salty, or not good) and quantity (e.g., too little, quite enough, or too much) of food to convince their children to eat. Similarly, children put forward arguments based on the quality and quantity of food to convince their parents to change their standpoint, although their view on the issue is the opposite of that of their parents.
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- 2013
33. Pragmatics: Quantitative Methods
- Author
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Francesco Arcidiacono
- Subjects
Measure (physics) ,Applied linguistics ,Pragmatics ,Psychology ,Linguistics ,Quantitative linguistics - Abstract
Quantitative research has the goal to conceptualize the reality in terms of variables, to measure these variables, and to study the relationships between them. Keywords: methods; pragmatics; research methods in applied linguistics
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- 2012
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34. METHODOLOGICAL THINKING IN PSYCHOLOGY: STARTING FROM MIXED METHODS
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Eugenio De Gregorio
- Subjects
Management science ,Project commissioning ,Psychology ,Education ,Qualitative research - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to revise the development of the methodological thinking in psychology, underlying the central role of mixed methods. The article is based on a discussion on the main general aspects of mixed methods, in order to show that mixed methods does necessarily produce a new starting point in the mismatch between quantitative and qualitative methods. Through the discussion of these aspects, the paper highlights conditions in which mixed methods can become fruitful instruments of research.
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- 2008
35. Argumentative strategies for conflict management and resolution in Italian and Swiss families
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Francesco Arcidiacono and Antonio Bova
- Subjects
Argumentative ,Argumentation ,Case studies ,Critical discussion ,Discursive interaction ,Family ,Parent-child conversation ,Social Sciences (all) ,Psychology (all) ,case studies ,Style (sociolinguistics) ,Argumentation theory ,argumentation ,Pedagogy ,Corpus based ,General Materials Science ,060201 languages & linguistics ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,parent-child conversation ,06 humanities and the arts ,Resolution (logic) ,16. Peace & justice ,Settore M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Focus (linguistics) ,critical discussion ,0602 languages and literature ,Conflict management ,discursive interaction ,Psychology ,0503 education - Abstract
This study aims to analyze how family members engage themselves in resolving differences of opinion during everyday interactions. In particular, we focus on the argumentative strategies used by parents during dinner conversations at home with their children. Within a data corpus based on video-recordings of family dinnertime interactions, two different excerpts of argumentative discussions among parents and children are presented and qualitatively analyzed. Our analytical approach includes the model of Critical Discussion as the general framework to investigate the family's strategies for conflict management and resolution in different cultures. The results show two specific argumentative strategies adopted by parents with their children: the use of ironic comments, and the admonition of the parent's authority. Besides, differences in the argumentative style between Italian and Swiss families are highlighted.
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