SOUZA, E. M.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/0963405441516439; SOUZA, Edileide Maria de.
Resumen:
The current research entitled ‘Tactile cartography for visually impaired students’’
develops from the following question: How can visually impaired children acquire
knowledge related to spatial representation? In order to do so, it goals to assess how is
the approaching and practicing of cartography in the first degrees of school, focusing
the actions of the project called ’Geography Workshops for seers and visually impaired
students’ developed in the sphere of the Geography Academic Unit of Federal
University of Campina Grande/PB. In this sense, it aims to investigate the possibilities
of acquiring cartographic knowledge by children with visual impairments (VI) in the
first degrees of a public school in Campina Grande/PB, while they are inserted in the
environment of inclusion created from their appropriation of real and represented space.
Regarding to specific goals, we sought to analyze the ways of apprehension,
understanding and appropriation of space by students, identifying how cartography teachinglearning
relation is taken for visually impaired students and how the activities proposed to them
support the development of spatial understanding and the learning of cartography. To achieve
the goals, it was used a case study report, supported by qualitative approach. For
empirical data gathering, we observed and assessed the activities of the abovementioned
project. Lastly, these activities made possible the involvement and participation of children,
but at the beginning, they had difficulties following the proposed activities, which
expresses the absence of previous experiences of reflection about the construction and
representation of spatial understanding. What became clear with this work is that is needed
an effective effort along the students in order to make them better interpret these spatial
understanding, both on the real and the representative plane. Therefore, it is concluded that the
use of tactile cartography is fundamental to VI students to overcome the difficulties and
enable the geographical learning.