Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva
Data de Publicação: 2012
Tipo de documento: Dissertação
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da PUC_SP
Texto Completo: https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/16679
Resumo: The expression correspondence between verbal and nonverbal behavior has been used to refer to the accuracy with which the individual reports what he did. Several studies have been conducted in this area, observing precisely the discriminative stimulus that should control the verbal response to later compare it with the verbal report. The present research aimed to investigate whether the manipulation of contingencies can affect the correspondence between doing and saying in a natural situation involving academic tasks; whether there is a relationship between the correction of the task made by the child and his or her history of success or error; and if the fact that the reporting behavior of the children occurs in a group affects the correspondence. To meet this objective, the children did exercises in the classroom given by the teacher and then, in another room, did the correction with the experimenter, who wrote the correct answers on the board where each child had to correct (mark right or wrong) their own exercise. After this correction, the child reported to the experimenter if he or she made the exercises correctly or not. Depending on the phase of the study, the child received tokens exchangeable for adhesives. In the Individual Baseline and Group Baseline phases, no contingency was planned for the reports; in the Group Reinforcement of the Correspondence and Individual Reinforcement of Correspondence, all correspondent reports were reinforced. Besides those, there was a Non-contingent Reinforcement session, in which the children won all the tokens and exchanged for the stickers before they started the report. During Individual Baseline sessions, it was observed that, in general, the number of correspondent reports was much greater than the non-correspondent reports, despite the significant number of the latter. Comparing this result to the group sessions, it can be observed that the number of error reports diminished substantially, increasing the number of non-correspondent reports of being right. For most participants, it was not possible to reverse the number of non-correspondent reports in the Reinforcement of Correspondence phases. The data from this research indicate that, in general, the different arrangements of reinforcement contingencies presented by the researcher were less effective in controlling the report than the contingencies involved in the groups in which the reports were made. Only a few participants seem to have been less affected by the presence of colleagues and more by the contingencies arranged by the experimenter. Moreover, when the participants were exposed to different experimental conditions, they had not only their report about academic tasks affected but also the corrections made by them
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spelling Pereira, Maria Eliza Mazzillihttp://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K4229537Y9Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva2016-04-29T13:17:44Z2012-05-282012-05-04Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva. How children report their academic performance? A study on do-say correspondence in a school situation. 2012. 51 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Psicologia) - Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2012.https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/16679The expression correspondence between verbal and nonverbal behavior has been used to refer to the accuracy with which the individual reports what he did. Several studies have been conducted in this area, observing precisely the discriminative stimulus that should control the verbal response to later compare it with the verbal report. The present research aimed to investigate whether the manipulation of contingencies can affect the correspondence between doing and saying in a natural situation involving academic tasks; whether there is a relationship between the correction of the task made by the child and his or her history of success or error; and if the fact that the reporting behavior of the children occurs in a group affects the correspondence. To meet this objective, the children did exercises in the classroom given by the teacher and then, in another room, did the correction with the experimenter, who wrote the correct answers on the board where each child had to correct (mark right or wrong) their own exercise. After this correction, the child reported to the experimenter if he or she made the exercises correctly or not. Depending on the phase of the study, the child received tokens exchangeable for adhesives. In the Individual Baseline and Group Baseline phases, no contingency was planned for the reports; in the Group Reinforcement of the Correspondence and Individual Reinforcement of Correspondence, all correspondent reports were reinforced. Besides those, there was a Non-contingent Reinforcement session, in which the children won all the tokens and exchanged for the stickers before they started the report. During Individual Baseline sessions, it was observed that, in general, the number of correspondent reports was much greater than the non-correspondent reports, despite the significant number of the latter. Comparing this result to the group sessions, it can be observed that the number of error reports diminished substantially, increasing the number of non-correspondent reports of being right. For most participants, it was not possible to reverse the number of non-correspondent reports in the Reinforcement of Correspondence phases. The data from this research indicate that, in general, the different arrangements of reinforcement contingencies presented by the researcher were less effective in controlling the report than the contingencies involved in the groups in which the reports were made. Only a few participants seem to have been less affected by the presence of colleagues and more by the contingencies arranged by the experimenter. Moreover, when the participants were exposed to different experimental conditions, they had not only their report about academic tasks affected but also the corrections made by themA expressão correspondência entre comportamento verbal e não verbal tem sido utilizada para se referir à acurácia com que o indivíduo relata o que fez. Diversos estudos nessa área têm sido realizados, observando-se precisamente o estímulo discriminativo que deveria controlar a resposta verbal para, posteriormente, compará-lo com o relato verbal. A presente pesquisa teve como objetivo investigar se a manipulação de contingências pode afetar a correspondência fazer-dizer em uma situação natural, envolvendo tarefas acadêmicas; se há relação entre a correção da tarefa, feita pela criança, e seu relato de acerto ou de erro; e se o fato de o comportamento de relatar das crianças ocorrer em grupo afeta a correspondência. Para atender a tal objetivo, as crianças realizavam exercícios em sala de aula, passados pela professora, e, em seguida, numa outra sala, faziam a correção dos mesmos com a experimentadora esta escrevia na lousa as respostas corretas e cada criança corrigia (marcava certo ou errado) seu próprio exercício. Terminada a correção, a criança relatava à experimentadora se havia acertado ou errado cada um dos exercícios. Dependendo da fase do estudo, a criança recebia fichas trocáveis por adesivos, segundo diferentes critérios. Foram realizadas fases de Linha de Base Individual e de Linha de Base em Grupo, em que nenhuma contingência foi planejada para os relatos; fases de Reforçamento da Correspondência em Grupo e de Reforçamento da Correspondência Individual, em que todos os relatos emitidos de forma correspondente foram reforçados; e uma sessão de Reforçamento Não Contingente, na qual as crianças ganharam todas as fichas e as trocaram por adesivos antes de iniciar o relato. Durante as sessões de linha de base individual, foi possível observar que, de maneira geral, o número de relatos correspondentes foi muito maior que o de relatos não correspondentes, apesar do número expressivo destes últimos. Se comparado esse resultado ao das sessões de grupo, observa-se que o número de relatos de erro diminui substancialmente, aumentando o número de relatos de acerto não correspondentes. Para grande parte dos participantes, não foi possível reverter o número de relatos não correspondentes nas fases de Reforçamento da Correspondência. Os dados obtidos neste estudo apontam que, de modo geral, os diferentes arranjos de contingências de reforçamento dispostos pela experimentadora foram menos efetivos no controle do comportamento de relatar das crianças do que as contingências dispostas pelos grupos em que os relatos foram feitos. Apenas alguns poucos participantes parecem ter sido menos afetados pela presença dos colegas e mais pelas contingências programadas pela experimentadora. Além disso, quando os participantes foram expostos a diferentes condições experimentais tiveram não só o seu relato sobre tarefas acadêmicas afetado, como também as correções feitas por eles mesmosCoordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superiorapplication/pdfhttp://tede2.pucsp.br/tede/retrieve/35410/Ana%20Carolina%20Ceneviva%20Macchione.pdf.jpgporPontifícia Universidade Católica de São PauloPrograma de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Psicologia Experimental: Análise do ComportamentoPUC-SPBRPsicologiaComportamento verbalCorrespondência verbalRelação fazer-dizerAnálise do comportamentoAmbiente naturalDesempenho acadêmicoVerbal behaviorVerbal correspondenceDo-say relationBehavior analysisNatural environmentAcademic performanceCNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA::PSICOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALComo crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolarHow children report their academic performance? A study on do-say correspondence in a school situationinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da PUC_SPinstname:Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP)instacron:PUC_SPTEXTAna Carolina Ceneviva Macchione.pdf.txtAna Carolina Ceneviva Macchione.pdf.txtExtracted texttext/plain100127https://repositorio.pucsp.br/xmlui/bitstream/handle/16679/3/Ana%20Carolina%20Ceneviva%20Macchione.pdf.txtd1bd500b9bbb32f16c23814b558b224fMD53ORIGINALAna Carolina Ceneviva Macchione.pdfapplication/pdf574461https://repositorio.pucsp.br/xmlui/bitstream/handle/16679/1/Ana%20Carolina%20Ceneviva%20Macchione.pdfbaab3de17acd1d0c877ec805b1b1e4c3MD51THUMBNAILAna Carolina Ceneviva Macchione.pdf.jpgAna Carolina Ceneviva Macchione.pdf.jpgGenerated Thumbnailimage/jpeg1943https://repositorio.pucsp.br/xmlui/bitstream/handle/16679/2/Ana%20Carolina%20Ceneviva%20Macchione.pdf.jpgcc73c4c239a4c332d642ba1e7c7a9fb2MD52handle/166792022-04-27 17:20:06.875oai:repositorio.pucsp.br:handle/16679Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertaçõeshttps://sapientia.pucsp.br/https://sapientia.pucsp.br/oai/requestbngkatende@pucsp.br||rapassi@pucsp.bropendoar:2022-04-27T20:20:06Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da PUC_SP - Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP)false
dc.title.por.fl_str_mv Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
dc.title.alternative.eng.fl_str_mv How children report their academic performance? A study on do-say correspondence in a school situation
title Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
spellingShingle Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva
Comportamento verbal
Correspondência verbal
Relação fazer-dizer
Análise do comportamento
Ambiente natural
Desempenho acadêmico
Verbal behavior
Verbal correspondence
Do-say relation
Behavior analysis
Natural environment
Academic performance
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA::PSICOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL
title_short Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
title_full Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
title_fullStr Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
title_full_unstemmed Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
title_sort Como crianças relatam seu desempenho acadêmico? estudo de correspondência fazer-dizer em situação escolar
author Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva
author_facet Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva
author_role author
dc.contributor.advisor1.fl_str_mv Pereira, Maria Eliza Mazzilli
dc.contributor.authorLattes.fl_str_mv http://buscatextual.cnpq.br/buscatextual/visualizacv.do?id=K4229537Y9
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva
contributor_str_mv Pereira, Maria Eliza Mazzilli
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Comportamento verbal
Correspondência verbal
Relação fazer-dizer
Análise do comportamento
Ambiente natural
Desempenho acadêmico
topic Comportamento verbal
Correspondência verbal
Relação fazer-dizer
Análise do comportamento
Ambiente natural
Desempenho acadêmico
Verbal behavior
Verbal correspondence
Do-say relation
Behavior analysis
Natural environment
Academic performance
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA::PSICOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Verbal behavior
Verbal correspondence
Do-say relation
Behavior analysis
Natural environment
Academic performance
dc.subject.cnpq.fl_str_mv CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA::PSICOLOGIA EXPERIMENTAL
description The expression correspondence between verbal and nonverbal behavior has been used to refer to the accuracy with which the individual reports what he did. Several studies have been conducted in this area, observing precisely the discriminative stimulus that should control the verbal response to later compare it with the verbal report. The present research aimed to investigate whether the manipulation of contingencies can affect the correspondence between doing and saying in a natural situation involving academic tasks; whether there is a relationship between the correction of the task made by the child and his or her history of success or error; and if the fact that the reporting behavior of the children occurs in a group affects the correspondence. To meet this objective, the children did exercises in the classroom given by the teacher and then, in another room, did the correction with the experimenter, who wrote the correct answers on the board where each child had to correct (mark right or wrong) their own exercise. After this correction, the child reported to the experimenter if he or she made the exercises correctly or not. Depending on the phase of the study, the child received tokens exchangeable for adhesives. In the Individual Baseline and Group Baseline phases, no contingency was planned for the reports; in the Group Reinforcement of the Correspondence and Individual Reinforcement of Correspondence, all correspondent reports were reinforced. Besides those, there was a Non-contingent Reinforcement session, in which the children won all the tokens and exchanged for the stickers before they started the report. During Individual Baseline sessions, it was observed that, in general, the number of correspondent reports was much greater than the non-correspondent reports, despite the significant number of the latter. Comparing this result to the group sessions, it can be observed that the number of error reports diminished substantially, increasing the number of non-correspondent reports of being right. For most participants, it was not possible to reverse the number of non-correspondent reports in the Reinforcement of Correspondence phases. The data from this research indicate that, in general, the different arrangements of reinforcement contingencies presented by the researcher were less effective in controlling the report than the contingencies involved in the groups in which the reports were made. Only a few participants seem to have been less affected by the presence of colleagues and more by the contingencies arranged by the experimenter. Moreover, when the participants were exposed to different experimental conditions, they had not only their report about academic tasks affected but also the corrections made by them
publishDate 2012
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2012-05-28
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2012-05-04
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2016-04-29T13:17:44Z
dc.type.status.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.type.driver.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesis
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dc.identifier.citation.fl_str_mv Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva. How children report their academic performance? A study on do-say correspondence in a school situation. 2012. 51 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Psicologia) - Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2012.
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://tede2.pucsp.br/handle/handle/16679
identifier_str_mv Macchione, Ana Carolina Ceneviva. How children report their academic performance? A study on do-say correspondence in a school situation. 2012. 51 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Psicologia) - Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, São Paulo, 2012.
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