THE STATE OF ART ABOUT BLACK CHILDREN IN ANPED PRODUCTIONS (2007-2019)
Main Article Content
Abstract
This article aims to analyze the theme of black children in the production of national meetings of the National Association of Graduate Studies and Research in Education (ANPED) in the period from 2007 to 2019. Therefore, it is configured in quantitative and qualitative approaches, in which we carry out survey of articles in Working Groups 07, 13 and 21. The focus of the research is concentrated in the period from 2007 to 2019, which corresponds to the last 10 national meetings of that Association. The data analysis was based on Bakhtin's Discursive Dialogism (2011). Regarding the results, we found 17 (seventeen) scientific works that deal with black children, who present the history of black childhood, public policies, pedagogical practices, the elaboration of racial identities, quilombola education and ethnic-racial relations. We conclude that the number of works on black children is still small considering the universe of work of the WGs, requiring the expansion of productions that deal with the theme in the area of education.
Article Details
Copyright Statement
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication, with work simultaneously licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License CC-BY 4.0 which allows the sharing of the work with acknowledgment of the authorship of the work and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are authorized to enter into additional contracts separately for non-exclusive distribution of the version of the work published in this journal (eg, publishing in institutional repository or book chapter), with acknowledgment of authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are allowed and encouraged to post and distribute their work online (eg in institutional repositories or on their personal page) at any point before or during the editorial process, as this may lead to productive changes as well as increase impact and citation of published work (See The Effect of Free Access).