Objects to Learn about and Objects for Learning 1. Группа авторов

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The objects chosen to tell a story materialize the elements and characters of the plot, thus becoming “catalysts” for writing. “The objects, through their materiality and the actions they stimulate, give a real character to situations that the child struggles to represent to him/herself because it calls for such a high level of abstraction” (written by Bruno Hubert in Chapter 2).

      Chapters 1, 3 and 4 of Volume 1 examine foreign languages: second languages (Chapters 1 and 4) and additional languages (Chapter 3), respectively.

      Chapter 1 (Élise Ouvrard) investigates the contribution of work carried out around children’s English-language picture books and their handling in Modern Foreign Languages (MFLs) sessions in elementary cycle 3, and considers what their instrumentation may involve. It compares approaches of beginners and experts in order to analyze the entries into reading enabled by these approaches, and underlines what is gained through material contact with these picture books: an affective environment and an emotive learning experience. It is an invitation to training so that the introduction of these books can become a real entry into foreign language literacy.

      Finally, in Chapter 5 (Laurent Moutet), the term “language” refers not to French or to another national language, but to a different semiotic system: graphic language. This graphic language, which makes it possible to visualize a mathematical relationship between the quantities of the system being studied, plays a very important role in scientific and technological education, particularly for the content and the school level being considered here (special relativity in a 12th grade science major). The graphic that is constructed with the pupils and then used (Minkowski diagram) takes on the status of a “graphic object” that enables the pupils to reason on concepts that are often counterintuitive. This chapter thus illustrates the fundamental role played by graphic representations in conceptualization.

      Part 2 of Volume 1 – Objects and Early Learning

      There is one segment of education that cannot manage without objects for learning and to learn about: it is kindergarten, in which the ubiquity of objects of all kinds could be described as an invariant of this first school. In fact, as early as 1886, Pauline Kergomard, founder of this institution devoted to early learning, wrote:

      While it is incontestable that objects are plentiful in kindergarten and that they are used in early learning, their role often receives little attention or analysis from educators and researchers. The second part of this work, devoted to objects and early learning, sets out to shed some light on very diverse objects.

      Posters, which are also objects positioned at the interface of materiality and symbolism, are widely used in kindergarten classrooms, generally with no consideration being given to their role in pupil learning and the difficulties they can pose from a didactic point of view. In Chapter 7, Elisabeth Mourot studies the way in which kindergarten pupils from contrasting social backgrounds construct the meaning of didactic posters. Based on interviews in which pupils are confronted with this kind of material, she puts forward configurations of social interpretative subjects, according to the pupils’ ability to symbolize and use language in its evolutionary function.

      Conversely, other objects are found less often in kindergarten or elementary school classrooms, such as robots, but are worthy of attention in order to understand the use made of them by the pupils and the skills and knowledge they help to develop. Olivier Grugier and Sandra Nogry show in their testimony (Chapter 8) how elementary school pupils seize upon small robots (BeeBots) and manage to program instructions to generate their movements. Analysis of the sessions observed reveals the essential role of certain artifacts in teachers’ guidance. A comparison of three different class levels (pre-school, first grade and fourth grade) shows a learning progression in computer science and technology.

      Part 1 of Volume 2 – Objects and Representations of Space and Time

      Space and time, brought together in Part 1 of Volume 2, may suggest a familiar disciplinary split, illustrated by geography and history. This is not the case, however, even if, because of the groupings made during the compilation of the work, objects to learn about/objects for learning in geography are placed together here.

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