Dissertação
Metodologias ativas no ensino de bioquímica: possibilidades e contribuições
Fecha
2023-03-30Autor
Costa, Maiara Dorneles
Institución
Resumen
Biochemistry is an interdisciplinary science, present in the curriculum of several higher
education courses. Due to the complexity and abstraction of its concepts, many students
perceive it as a challenging discipline, especially those belonging to the first semester of
undergraduate courses. As a result of the coronavirus pandemic, teaching biochemistry began
to take place online, bringing new challenges to students and teachers. This fact brought the
need to investigate new methods capable of improving the remote teaching of biochemistry.
Active methodologies are student-centered approaches, which awaken students' autonomy,
motivation and provide meaningful learning. In this way, they are presented as an important
tool to assist in the remote teaching of biochemistry. The objective of this study was to
evaluate the contributions of different active learning strategies in the biochemistry teachinglearning process of undergraduate students between the period before and after the Covid-19
pandemic. To this end, questionnaires were used to investigate the perception of first-semester
students in a remote biochemistry course in relation to different learning strategies using
active methodologies: games, Peer instruction and interactive whiteboard. This work also
presents experience reports of graduate students from the graduate program in Biological
Sciences: Toxicological Biochemistry (PPGBTox) at the Federal University of Santa Maria,
who used active methodologies as a didactic tool in oriented teaching internships. The use of
active learning strategies in the teaching of biochemistry brought satisfactory results in
relation to motivation, participation during classes and engagement with the contents, in faceto-face and remote classes, both for students and professors. In general, active methodologies
contributed to a better acceptance of biochemistry content, facilitating the teaching-learning
process.