1887
Volume 14, Issue 2
  • ISSN 1387-6740
  • E-ISSN: 1569-9935
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Abstract

This article examines the different positionings that preschool children develop towards the collective narrating of a school field trip to an educational farm in which only about half the class participated. The report of this excursion took place during the morning(the Spanish equivalent to sharing time or news sessions) and organized the children and the teacher in two groups of participants, those who went on the field trip and those who stayed home. I argue that these children displayed four discursive strategies towards the narrative and narrated events: (a) children who participated in the field trip couldorthe rest of the class from their narrative space; (b) children who did not participate in the field trip couldwith orthe narrated events. The episode is discussed as exceptional in a classroom where precisely it has been argued thatconversations play a key role in developing group identity, and shows how children have resources to develop varied stances towards school initiatives and even question the institutional and socio-economic arrangements that configure these activities. ()

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/content/journals/10.1075/ni.14.2.11pov
2005-02-02
2024-04-18
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  • Article Type: Research Article
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