LITERATURE FOR CHILDREN
LETTERATURA PER L'INFANZIA
A.Y. | Credits |
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2023/2024 | 5 |
Lecturer | Office hours for students | |
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Stefania Carioli | Friday from 5 pm, online, by appointment (stefania.carioli@uniurb.it) |
Teaching in foreign languages |
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Course with optional materials in a foreign language
English
This course is entirely taught in Italian. Study materials can be provided in the foreign language and the final exam can be taken in the foreign language. |
Assigned to the Degree Course
Date | Time | Classroom / Location |
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Date | Time | Classroom / Location |
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Learning Objectives
The course aims to provide students with basic knowledge on the main cultural and historical-literary paths of children's literature, as well as on pedagogical and psycho-pedagogical references regarding the evolutionary lines of early childhood, which specifically concern reading.
The specific learning objectives are:
- Knowledge and understanding the complexity of children's literature
- Knowledge and understanding of traditional fairy tales and their variants
- Evaluate the literature for children that promotes and generates otherness and empathic relationships
- Apply the interpretative tools of the plurality of expressive modes of children's literature
- Knowledge and understanding of childhood portraits
- Understanding the importance of adopting an attitude characterised by an attentive gaze and an observational posture in the context of early childhood
- Knowledge and understanding of the importance of the care to be devoted to the time (a fundamental pedagogical variable) dedicated to stories / reading
- Knowledge and understanding of the importance of the environment as a "third educator" (spaces, structures, and furnishings)
- Knowledge and understanding of the importance of listening as comfort, safety, and acceptance of children's expressions
- To be able to communicate the centrality of storytelling and reading aloud
- Knowledge and knowing how to use the variety of text types that make up the current panorama of narratives aimed at children, including digital ones
- Knowledge resources for children's literature made available on the internet (archives, collections, online libraries, catalogues, websites of children's literature publishing houses, ...), knowing how to evaluate and use them for their own updating
- Making judgements to critically evaluate the children's editorial productions, including the digital ones.
Detailed information and materials will be indicated and / or made available on the Moodle platform.
Program
The program is divided into three main parts: one part is dedicated to the theoretical and foundational aspects of children's literature, studied in depth during lessons and in the study texts; one part is dedicated to the fairy tale, with reference to the indicated collections; another part is aimed at analysing contemporary children's literature and the reading at daycare and preschool.
The course includes 20 lessons of 2 hours each, according to the following scheme:
- Introduction, presentation of the course, and materials.
- Complexity of children's literature, interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives, imaginary, and control processes.
- Focus on the fairy tale genre, on metaphors and themes involving childhood, its history, and the icons of childhood identity. Reading and comparison between different versions of two traditional fairy tales taken from the following collections: Charles Perrault (1697) Contes de ma mère l'Oye; Carlo Collodi (1876) The fairy tales; Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm (1812).
- Metaphors and themes, childhood history, icons of childhood identity (in Dickens, Burnett, Milne, ...).
- The subversive voice. From Collodi to Rodari. Taboo themes. Vladimir Propp. To get the stories wrong.
- Children's literature to promote emotional-affective relationships Reading with the little ones. The importance of reading aloud. The child who listens. The need for narratives. The stories between fiction and biography. Debate on the «first books», in the presence of Rodari and Munari (1972). Evidence and confirmation of recent neuroscientific studies.
- Fundamental pedagogical variables in the context of early childhood education services: "time" for short stories and reading for pleasure; "space / environment" as a "third educator". The educational alliance with families to promote reading aloud and the centrality of storytelling. Children's literature as an observer of childhood; self-observation; listening to the expressions of the children.
- Children's literature, reading with children. Overview of Early Childhood Narratives. Lullabies, nursery rhymes, and poems. Rhymes and onomatopoeias. Silent book / wordless picturebook, picture books, wimmelbuch (teeming books), audio books, digitised books (ebooks), book apps.
- Literature for children, multimodality, and implications for reading. The websites of particularly prestigious publishing houses for children to guide in the current publishing landscape.
- Information on the activity with the chosen picture book. Course summary.
Bridging Courses
None.
Learning Achievements (Dublin Descriptors)
- Knowledge and understanding - Knowledge and understanding of the theoretical and foundational aspects of children's literature and fairy tales from the perspective of classical and contemporary authors
- Applying knowledge and understanding - Knowledge and understanding applied to the preparation of educational paths of literature for children and reading theoretically motivated on the basis of the specific framework of services for early childhood;
- Making judgments - Autonomy of judgment as the ability to critically grasp / compare / relate themes and representations of childhood in children's literature; and autonomy of judgment as the ability to evaluate / select quality narrative proposals
- Communication skills - Communication skills such as expressive mastery and properties of specific language as well as awareness of a specific attention to the quality of communication in the narrative context
- Learning skills - Ability to learn as the ability to independently and critically re-elaborate proposed texts and materials, showing the acquisition of interpretative tools that allow a problematic and non-mnemonic approach to the complexity of the discipline also seen in an interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspective.
Teaching Material
The teaching material prepared by the lecturer in addition to recommended textbooks (such as for instance slides, lecture notes, exercises, bibliography) and communications from the lecturer specific to the course can be found inside the Moodle platform › blended.uniurb.it
Supporting Activities
Attending and non-attending students will have the opportunity to carry out formative assessment tests, which will serve as a self-assessment tool. The formative assessment tests will be carried out online and will not lead to any suspension of the teaching activity of the course.
Teaching, Attendance, Course Books and Assessment
- Teaching
Lesson; critical reading and analysis of printed and digital materials; watching videos, movies.
- Innovative teaching methods
The face-to-face teaching method will be enriched with debates and insights, starting with the viewing of videos (also in English) on the most recent studies on reading and on the "first books" for children.
- Attendance
Attendance is not obligatory.
- Course books
Theoretical study texts, as indicated below:
- Bernardi M. 2016. Letteratura per l'infanzia e alterità. Incanti, disincanti, ambiguità, tracce. Milano, Franco Angeli. From p. 9 - to p. 68; from p. 86 - to p. 127; from p. 131 - to p. 199.
- Carioli S. 2023. Connessioni. Viaggio tra le narrazioni per l’infanzia e l’adolescenza sull’onda trasformativa del digitale, Milano, Franco Angeli. Introduzione: from p. 9 - to p. 15; CAP 2: Exercices de… molteplicità nella letteratura per l’infanzia e l’adolescenza from p. 46 to p. 73; CAP. 4. Riflessi “di ritorno” dei media elettronici e digitali sulle pagine stampate from p. 97 - to p. 148; CAP 6. Scenari interattivi odierni from p. 180 - to p. 195.
Carioli S. 2021. Crescere lettori nell’attuale “mondo da leggere”: fra riflessioni pedagogiche e intenti democratici, in M. L. Albano, S. Carioli, A. Mazzini, A. Sorgente, Storie, letture e racconti tra pagine e rete. Narrazioni digitali ed intrecci pedagogici, Avellino, Edizioni Sinestesie, 2021, from p. 29- to p. 47. Available at <https://www.edizionisinestesie.it/libri/storie-letture-e-racconti-tra-pagine-e-rete-narrazioni-digitali-ed-intrecci-pedagogici/>, <https://ita.calameo.com/read/00586432867bc4cde683c?page=1>
Fairy tales taken from the following collections, as per the indications provided on Moodle and during the lessons:
Charles Perrault (1697) Contes de ma mère l'Oye (Racconti di mamma Oca)
Carlo Collodi (1876) I racconti delle Fate
Jacob e Wilhelm Grimm (1812) Tutte le fiabe
Italo Calvino (1956) Fiabe italiane raccolte dalla tradizione popolare durante gli ultimi cento anni e trascritte in lingua dai vari dialetti
The following chapters taken from Grammatica della fantasia (1973) by Gianni Rodari:
15. Le fiabe popolari come materia prima
33. Il bambino come protagonista
34. Storie «tabù»
38. Il bambino che ascolta le fiabe1 picturebook in English chosen among the following*:
1) Little Bear
2) Where the wild things are
3) My mom
4) Zoo
5) Little blue and little yellow: a story for Pippo and Ann and other children
6) Fish Is Fish
7) Frederick
8) The biggest house in the world
9) Theodore and the talking mushroom
10) The girl in red
11) Erika's story
12) Rose Blanche
13) Each peach pear
14) Guess how much I love you
15) Bark, George
16) Goodnight Moon
17) The dead bird
18) The important book
19) Turtle time: a bedtime story
20) Winnie-the-Pooh (one chapter, of your choice)
21) Beegu
22) Not now, Bernard
23) The tale of Peter Rabbit
24) The English Struwwelpeter, or, Pretty stories and funny pictures
25) The tunnel
26) In the night kitchen
27) Outside over there
28) Michael Rosen's sad book
29) We're going on a bear hunt
30) Mr. Rabbit and the lovely present
- Assessment
The final grade will be given by a written exam with:
- 2 open-ended questions
- 1 cloze
- a part of the activity in the picture book.
Duration of the exam: 50 minutes
Part of the exam is the English transcription of the story narrated in the chosen picture book. The English transcription must be delivered on Moodle (task function) by the date of the exam.
The final evaluation is expressed in thirtieths. Below are the evaluation criteria:
up to 8 points for each of the 2 open answers, based on the correspondence between the relevance and correctness of the answers, the level of critical or comparative reflection, the originality of the line of argument, the correctness of the presentation form, and the adequate use of specific language
up to 6 points for the cloze, based on the number of correct answers
up to 8 points for carrying out the activity on 1 picture book, based on compliance with the following criteria: correctness of the English transcription and information relating to the picture book; depth of analysis of expressive modalities; level of critical or comparative reflection and originality of the argumentative line.
- Disability and Specific Learning Disorders (SLD)
Students who have registered their disability certification or SLD certification with the Inclusion and Right to Study Office can request to use conceptual maps (for keywords) during exams.
To this end, it is necessary to send the maps, two weeks before the exam date, to the course instructor, who will verify their compliance with the university guidelines and may request modifications.
Additional Information for Non-Attending Students
- Teaching
There are no differences compared to what is expected for attending students. For non-attending students, it is particularly recommended to consult the detailed information and materials that will be indicated and / or made available on the Moodle platform. It is also particularly recommended that students carry out the on-going formative assessment tests as a self-assessment tool. The methods of carrying out these tests will be announced on the Moodle platform.
- Attendance
The attendance is not obligatory.
- Course books
Theoretical study texts, as indicated below:
- Bernardi M. 2016. Letteratura per l'infanzia e alterità. Incanti, disincanti, ambiguità, tracce. Milano, Franco Angeli. From p. 9 - to p. 68; from p. 86 - to p. 127; from p. 131 - to p. 199.
- Carioli S. 2023. Connessioni. Viaggio tra le narrazioni per l’infanzia e l’adolescenza sull’onda trasformativa del digitale, Milano, Franco Angeli. Introduzione: from p. 9 - to p. 15; CAP 2: Exercices de… molteplicità nella letteratura per l’infanzia e l’adolescenza from p. 46 to p. 73; CAP. 4. Riflessi “di ritorno” dei media elettronici e digitali sulle pagine stampate from p. 97 - to p. 148; CAP 6. Scenari interattivi odierni from p. 180 - to p. 195.
Carioli S. 2021. Crescere lettori nell’attuale “mondo da leggere”: fra riflessioni pedagogiche e intenti democratici, in M. L. Albano, S. Carioli, A. Mazzini, A. Sorgente, Storie, letture e racconti tra pagine e rete. Narrazioni digitali ed intrecci pedagogici, Avellino, Edizioni Sinestesie, 2021, from p. 29- to p. 47. Available at <https://www.edizionisinestesie.it/libri/storie-letture-e-racconti-tra-pagine-e-rete-narrazioni-digitali-ed-intrecci-pedagogici/>, <https://ita.calameo.com/read/00586432867bc4cde683c?page=1>
Fairy tales taken from the following collections, as per the indications provided on Moodle and during the lessons:
Charles Perrault (1697) Contes de ma mère l'Oye (Racconti di mamma Oca)
Carlo Collodi (1876) I racconti delle Fate
Jacob e Wilhelm Grimm (1812) Tutte le fiabe
Italo Calvino (1956) Fiabe italiane raccolte dalla tradizione popolare durante gli ultimi cento anni e trascritte in lingua dai vari dialetti
The following chapters taken from Grammatica della fantasia (1973) by Gianni Rodari:
15. Le fiabe popolari come materia prima
33. Il bambino come protagonista
34. Storie «tabù»
38. Il bambino che ascolta le fiabe1 picturebook in English chosen among the following*:
1) Little Bear
2) Where the wild things are
3) My mom
4) Zoo
5) Little blue and little yellow: a story for Pippo and Ann and other children
6) Fish Is Fish
7) Frederick
8) The biggest house in the world
9) Theodore and the talking mushroom
10) The girl in red
11) Erika's story
12) Rose Blanche
13) Each peach pear
14) Guess how much I love you
15) Bark, George
16) Goodnight Moon
17) The dead bird
18) The important book
19) Turtle time: a bedtime story
20) Winnie-the-Pooh (one chapter, of your choice)
21) Beegu
22) Not now, Bernard
23) The tale of Peter Rabbit
24) The English Struwwelpeter, or, Pretty stories and funny pictures
25) The tunnel
26) In the night kitchen
27) Outside over there
28) Michael Rosen's sad book
29) We're going on a bear hunt
30) Mr. Rabbit and the lovely present
- Assessment
The final grade will be given by a written exam with:
- 2 open-ended questions
- 1 cloze
- a part of the activity on the picturebook.
Duration of the exam: 50 minutes.
Part of the exam is the English transcription of the story narrated in the chosen picturebook. The English transcription must be delivered on Moodle (task function) for the date of the exam.
The final evaluation is expressed in thirtieths. Here below the evaluation criteria:
- up to 8 points for each of the 2 open answers, based on the correspondence to the: relevance and correctness of the answers; level of critical / comparative reflection and originality of the line of argument; correctness of the presentation form and adequate use of specific language
- up to 6 points for the cloze, based on the number of correct answers
- up to 8 points for carrying out the activity on 1 picturebook, based on compliance with the following criteria: correctness of the English transcription and information relating to the picture book; depth of analysis of expressive modalities; level of critical / comparative reflection and originality of the argumentative line.
- Disability and Specific Learning Disorders (SLD)
Students who have registered their disability certification or SLD certification with the Inclusion and Right to Study Office can request to use conceptual maps (for keywords) during exams.
To this end, it is necessary to send the maps, two weeks before the exam date, to the course instructor, who will verify their compliance with the university guidelines and may request modifications.
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