Kategorier: Alle - diversidad - sexualidad - inclusión - grupos

av ANGIE JENNIFER CASTA�O BETANCOURT 3 år siden

335

DIVERSIDAD SEXUAL Y INCLUSION SOCIAL

La diversidad sexual y la inclusión social son conceptos que abarcan una amplia gama de identidades y orientaciones sexuales, así como el reconocimiento y la aceptación de estas diferencias en la sociedad.

DIVERSIDAD SEXUAL Y INCLUSION SOCIAL

DIVERSIDAD SEXUAL Y INCLUSION SOCIAL

Type in the name of the multiple-perspectives text.

Example: Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson

QUE SIGNIFICAN

Identify an important issue from the text that is being presented from different angles. Type it in.

Example: Jesse's drawing talent.

GRUPOS DE DIVERSIDAD SEXUAL

Whose character does the third point of view belong to?

Type in his/her name.

Example: Mr. Aarons, Jesse's father.

LGBT, que incluyen a los grupos de lesbianas, homosexuales, bisexuales, transexuales, travestis y trans- géneros.

What does the character think, say or do that suggests their perspective on the issue?

Type in a quote and try to maintain the citation format.

Example: 'He would like to show his drawings to his dad, but he didn't dare. (...) He'd thought his dad would be pleased. He wasn't. What are they teaching in that damn school? he had asked.' (Paterson, 2.8)

LESVIANAS:Mujeres que sienten atraccion por otras mujeres

What kind of narration introduces the viewpoint?

Choose an answer:

First person point of view - using the personal pronouns 'I' or 'we'Second person point of view - using the personal pronoun 'you'Third person point of view - using the third-person pronouns 'he', 'she' and 'they'Omniscient point of view - an all-seeing observer tells the story

HOMOSEXUALES: Hombres que sienten atraccion por otro hombre

BISEXUALES:Personas que se sienten atraidos por hombres y mujeres

TRANSEXUALES:Personas que no estan comodos con su sexo y se realizan una transformacion, cambio de sexo

TRAVESTIS: Mujer trans que no a hecho cambio de genero

TRANS GENERO: Persona que realizo el cambio de genero

INCLUSION SOCIAL

Decide on the second point of view

Name the character (it can either be the main character or one of the supporting characters) whose point of view you are presenting.

Example:
Miss Edmunds, Jesse's music teacher.

Son personas que tienen varias identidades ella se determinan por la edad la ubicación el género la ocupación la religión La Raza el estado de ciudadanía orientación sexual discapacidad e identificación de género son personas que son miembros de distintos grupos

Type in a quote that points out the character's position about the issue.

Try to follow a citation format: author's name, chapter, and page.

Example: 'She said he was unusually talented, and she hoped he wouldn't let anything discourage him.' (Paterson, 2. 8)

How is the viewpoint introduced in the story?

Choose an answer:

First person point of viewSecond person point of viewThird person point of viewOmniscient point of view

TIPOS DE INCLUSION SOCIAL

DIVERSIDAD SEXUAL

Decide on the first point of view you are going to present.

Type in the name of the character (it can either be the main character or one of the supporting characters) whose point of view belongs to.

Example: Jesse Oliver Aarons, Jr., the main character of the novel, a fifth-grader living in a rural Southern area.

Son todas las posibilidades que tienen todas las personas al expresar,asumir y vivir su propia sexualidad Asimismo asumir expresiones y tener orientaciones sexuales y cambio de género en cada cultura y en cada persona son diferentes

Type in a relevant quote that highlights the character's point of view towards
QUE SIGNIFICAN.

Try following a citation format: author's name, chapter, and page.

Example: 'Jesse drew the way some people drank whiskey. (...) Lord, he loved to draw. (...) When he was in first grade, he told his father that he wanted to be an artist when he grew up.' (Paterson, 2. 7)

Type of narration

What type of narration introduces the viewpoint?

Choose an answer:

First person point of view - using the personal pronouns 'I' or 'we'Second person point of view - using the personal pronoun 'you'Third person point of view - using the third-person pronouns 'he', 'she' and 'they'Omniscient point of view - an all-seeing observer tells the story