Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline

<p>Philosophy, as a school subject, has been present in secondary education in Mexico and other countries around the world. The teaching of this discipline is usually mediated by the use of school and disciplinary texts, as well as by the intertextual relationships that teachers build in the c...

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Main Authors: Noé Canseco Ramírez, Guadalupe López Bonilla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2019-01-01
Series:Revista Complutense de Educación
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/RCED/article/view/55511
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spelling doaj-0d2b73bb335d479bb73fdca4483d94c82020-11-25T02:15:40ZengUniversidad Complutense de MadridRevista Complutense de Educación1130-24961988-27932019-01-013019310810.5209/RCED.5551155740Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the disciplineNoé Canseco Ramírez0Guadalupe López Bonilla1Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo EducativoUniversidad Autónoma de Baja California Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo Educativo<p>Philosophy, as a school subject, has been present in secondary education in Mexico and other countries around the world. The teaching of this discipline is usually mediated by the use of school and disciplinary texts, as well as by the intertextual relationships that teachers build in the classroom. In this sense, teachers are an essential part of this process since they can enrich or limit the knowledge of the discipline depending on their academic background and teaching experience.</p> <p>In this work we analyze the literacy practices promoted by two philosophy teachers in the classroom in two public secondary schools in Mexico. We use the concepts of intertextuality and cultural capital to analyze the network of meanings that the teacher constructs within the classroom. By intertextuality we consider the transposition of one system of meanings into another, whereby people construct a textual mosaic that becomes evident through their use of texts. By cultural capital we refer exclusively to the academic resources that are acquired through formal education.</p> <p>The research method included ethnographic techniques such as non-participant class observations and in depth interviews, as well as document collection of texts used by the teachers for classroom instruction. We based our analysis on the New Literacy Studies and consider both the visible and hidden elements of the literacy practices observed. The results show that each teacher constructed a network of meanings that is qualitatively distinct, some with ideas rooted at the core of his discipline and others with interdisciplinary connections according to their academic background. In the results we show and discuss examples of each, as well as possible consequences for the teaching of disciplinary literacy in this school subject.</p>http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/RCED/article/view/55511capital culturalintertextualidadliteracidad disciplinarenseñanza secundariaenseñanza de la Filosofía
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noé Canseco Ramírez
Guadalupe López Bonilla
spellingShingle Noé Canseco Ramírez
Guadalupe López Bonilla
Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
Revista Complutense de Educación
capital cultural
intertextualidad
literacidad disciplinar
enseñanza secundaria
enseñanza de la Filosofía
author_facet Noé Canseco Ramírez
Guadalupe López Bonilla
author_sort Noé Canseco Ramírez
title Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
title_short Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
title_full Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
title_fullStr Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Philosophy in secondary education in México: Teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
title_sort teaching philosophy in secondary education in méxico: teachers’ intertextual links of the discipline
publisher Universidad Complutense de Madrid
series Revista Complutense de Educación
issn 1130-2496
1988-2793
publishDate 2019-01-01
description <p>Philosophy, as a school subject, has been present in secondary education in Mexico and other countries around the world. The teaching of this discipline is usually mediated by the use of school and disciplinary texts, as well as by the intertextual relationships that teachers build in the classroom. In this sense, teachers are an essential part of this process since they can enrich or limit the knowledge of the discipline depending on their academic background and teaching experience.</p> <p>In this work we analyze the literacy practices promoted by two philosophy teachers in the classroom in two public secondary schools in Mexico. We use the concepts of intertextuality and cultural capital to analyze the network of meanings that the teacher constructs within the classroom. By intertextuality we consider the transposition of one system of meanings into another, whereby people construct a textual mosaic that becomes evident through their use of texts. By cultural capital we refer exclusively to the academic resources that are acquired through formal education.</p> <p>The research method included ethnographic techniques such as non-participant class observations and in depth interviews, as well as document collection of texts used by the teachers for classroom instruction. We based our analysis on the New Literacy Studies and consider both the visible and hidden elements of the literacy practices observed. The results show that each teacher constructed a network of meanings that is qualitatively distinct, some with ideas rooted at the core of his discipline and others with interdisciplinary connections according to their academic background. In the results we show and discuss examples of each, as well as possible consequences for the teaching of disciplinary literacy in this school subject.</p>
topic capital cultural
intertextualidad
literacidad disciplinar
enseñanza secundaria
enseñanza de la Filosofía
url http://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/RCED/article/view/55511
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