Methodological approach to face sudden virtuality: Didactic tools offer and reception by trial and error
Keywords:
modality, strategies, reception, communicationAbstract
This work describes the different strategies proposed during the first semester course in first-year university chemistry subjects in the context of the virtual modality imposed by Covid-19 pandemic. The adaptations implemented in order to modify the face-to-face dictation to the virtual modality are detailed, as well as the modifications in the strategies used depending on the reception observed in the student body and its results. The aim was to reflect on the aspects that define the success of these strategies considering the inevitable process of adaptation to university life that all first-year students go through, in addition to the virtual modality imposed for the 2020 course and its dynamics and implications. In this sense, we concluded that bilateral teacher-student communication and the appropriation of the learning construction process are critical factors in promoting a successful academic path.
References
Coulon. A. (1995) Etnometodología y Educación. Barcelona: Paidós.
Frigerio, G. y Diker, G. (2004). La transmisión en las sociedades, las instituciones y los sujetos. Un concepto de la educación en acción. Buenos Aires: Noveduc.
Gluz, N. (2011). Admisión a la universidad y selectividad social. Cuando la democratización es más que un problema de “ingresos”. Buenos Aires: UNGS.
Malinowski, N. (2008). Diferenciación de los tiempos estudiantiles e impacto sobre el proceso de afiliación en México. Revista Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Niñez y Juventud, 6(2), 801-819.
Pierella, M. P. (2018). El primer año de universidad desde la perspectiva de los profesores. Políticas de recepción, enseñanza y curriculum. Espacios en blanco. Revista de Educación, 28, 161-181.
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2021 Daniela Alejandra Nichela, Juan Manuel Cabrera
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.