ALVES, E. M.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7595073286448394; ALVES, Edivaldo Miguel.
Resumen:
Geography, a science whose object of study is geographical space, the social
configuration of individuals and their relationship with this space, is responsible for
analyzing the actions of organized movements based on the demands and needs of
the groups that make up society as a whole. This research arises from concerns
expressed in my personal, academic and professional experiences regarding the
absence of social movements in geography textbooks. In this way, our research,
developed within the framework of PROFGEO/UFCG, aimed to produce concept
maps, constructed by high school students under the mediation of the teacher, as a
didactic resource aimed at meaningful learning based on the mediation of learning
during the teaching-learning process. The aim is also to understand the potential
capacity of concept maps in the learning of the students taking part in the research. To
this end, we used the qualitative method in the context of participant research. The
content covered was "The role of contemporary social movements in the municipality
of Sapé-PB". We used questionnaires to characterize the research subjects and to
guide the pedagogical intervention in the classroom. Analysis of the textbook adopted
by the state of Paraíba showed that social movements are dealt with in a brief,
descriptive and in-depth manner, with a focus on sociology. They do not relate to or
discuss the categories of space and territory, which are fundamental to the work of
these movements, characterized as socio-spatial and socio-territorial, and to
Geography. This has highlighted the need to adopt a methodology that addresses
social movements from the perspective of geography and contributes to the
development of didactic material for elementary school teachers that can be used in
the classroom as a means for meaningful learning. In this way, the theory of learning
mediation proved to be a viable and efficient option, since it was shown that the
experiment of building and using the conceptual map in the classroom effectively
contributed to the students' meaningful learning, to the extent that we verified the
broadening of the conceptual horizon and the meanings expressed in the analysis of
the questionnaires, in the dialog circles, in the debates and in the oral presentations of
the maps built.