Educación formal y desarrollo de las destrezas de razonamiento y deliberación. Un estudio en alfabetización de adultos

The present article discuss the role of culture in shaping cognitive processes in hu¬man beings.Analyzing data fromTranscultural Psychology andAdult Literacy research we argue that theories which stress the role of maturation in the development of cognition fail in understanding the nature of human...

Full description

Autores:
Sánchez-Medina, José A.
Caia-Carrillo, María J.
Tipo de recurso:
Article of journal
Fecha de publicación:
1999
Institución:
Universidad Católica de Colombia
Repositorio:
RIUCaC - Repositorio U. Católica
Idioma:
spa
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.ucatolica.edu.co:10983/23051
Acceso en línea:
https://hdl.handle.net/10983/23051
Palabra clave:
FORMAL EDUCATION
ADULT LITERACY
DEVELOPMENT OF SKILLS
EDUCACIÓN FORMAL
ALFABETIZACIÓN DE ADULTOS
DESARROLLO DE HABILIDADES
Rights
openAccess
License
Derechos Reservados - Universidad Católica de Colombia, 1999
Description
Summary:The present article discuss the role of culture in shaping cognitive processes in hu¬man beings.Analyzing data fromTranscultural Psychology andAdult Literacy research we argue that theories which stress the role of maturation in the development of cognition fail in understanding the nature of human cognition. To support these ideas we conducted a research in an adult educational program to show that reason¬ing skills develop with educational experience.We analyze the reasoning skill through debates, a kind of practice that allows us to study reasoning in a everyday setting. Data shows that reasoning skills change in a very wide way as the educational expe¬rience of subject increase. Subjects more experienced in school tend to build argu¬ments in the debate using a more decontextualized discourse and implementing explanations as structure of their reasoning process. Low experienced subjects show higher preferences to contextulaized forms of discourse and using descriptions as core of their arguments.These data are discussed in light of the heterogenity theory of verbal thinking.