PEREIRA, K. S. N.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/3033908584468690; PEREIRA, Kimberlly Saiwry Nunes.
Abstract:
This master's research focuses on the concepts of literary reading held by teachers working in
public nurseries. Its main goal is to analyze the literary reading concepts of teachers in these
educational spaces within the municipal education network of Campina Grande, Paraíba. The
objectives include understanding the literary reading rituals organized by the teachers, the
works read to the babies, mapping the spaces used for literary reading, and identifying the
criteria they use to select literary works to read to the babies. The qualitative research was
inspired by ethnographic insights (Mattos, 2011; Green, 2005) and conducted in three public
nurseries serving babies in Campina Grande. Six nursery teachers participated and were
interviewed through semi-structured interviews. Data was also generated through observation
and video recording moments when teachers read literary works in the nurseries. Field notes
were used for data recording. The data produced was processed through the methodological
procedure of triangulation (Flick, 2019), and for the analysis of the interviews, we used the
premises of the content analysis technique (Bardin, 1977; 2006). As the theoretical framework
of the research, we adopted studies grounded in the perspective of the Sociology of Childhood
(Corsaro, 2011; Rocha, 2008; Sarmento, 2008), contributing to the discussion presented. We
address the concept of teaching (Texeira, 1996, 2007; Tardif, 2012; Santos, 2021; Nóvoa,
1992), teaching with babies (Campos, 2008; Drumond, 2019; Mantovani; Perani, 1999;
Bitencourt, 2022; Barbosa, 2010) and studies of children's literature (Aguiar, 2001;
Cademartori, 2010; Baptista, 2018; Reyes, 2010). As a result, we found that the teachers
recognize the importance of literary reading and storytelling, promoting this interest through
events they organized and creating rituals. They organize themselves by performing different
roles, allowing babies to participate and interact with literary reading in the nursery's daily
routine. We observed that the notion of literary reading as a way to calm babies guides the
teachers' pedagogical practices. We also identified that children's literature was more present
through oral narrative through storytelling in the first semester.
In contrast, in the second semester, pedagogical practices involving reading literary works to
children intensified. We highlight an agreement between academic knowledge and practical
experience regarding the criteria for selecting literature books. Thus, children's access to
children's literature is a reality in these pedagogical practices, and the babies showed interest
and participation in various ways, such as babbling, speaking, body movements, gestures,
attempting to grab the book, and flipping through the pages, thereby broadening their
experiences with literary works.