ESS - NEU - Livro, parte de livro ou capítulo de livro
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Browsing ESS - NEU - Livro, parte de livro ou capítulo de livro by Subject "Higher education"
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- Pedagogical and technical-scientific creativity in higher education in health technologies: An action planPublication . Tavares, Diana; Mota, Sandra; Sousa, MariaAfter pandemic period, it is urgent to create a facilitating means of internal cogitation and to identify creative strategies that can overcome the less positive aspects of distance learning. There is an increasingly constant problem—the lack of motivation and identity in the academic-scientific environment with a lack of proactivity and resistance of interaction with others. It is necessary to work with traditional teaching–learning methodologies and create out of the box grafts that are attractive and productive. This year we will implement a set of strategies: clinical cases, health literacy training sessions, cultural tools, escape room and others. We will carry out a diagnostic assessment of knowledge, before and after the intervention; as well as an interview that will allow us to understand the personal evolution and the degree of satisfaction. In this phase, the intention is to share the methodological strategies in a constructive and enriching manner, using creative and active learning methodologies by the teacher.
- Students’ perception of self-efficacy and academic engagement in School of Health of the Polytechnic Institute of Porto: an observational studyPublication . Amorim, Manuela; Tavares, Diana; Lamas, MC; Mota, Sandra; Salgado, Ana IsabelThe intense increase in students in Higher Education, observed in recent decades, has promoted profound changes quantitative and qualitative in demand, frequency, and student profile. In the context of these changes, we conducted a study to evaluate the self-efficacy and academic engagement of students using an online questionnaire. It includes some sociodemographic variables and the Self-Efficacy Scale in Higher Education (AEFS) and University Student Engagement Inventory (USEI). It was possible to verify that students had a score for academic engagement above the average, revealing an overall high level of academic engagement, an indicator of student success. Regarding self-efficacy, the score obtained is above 4 (on a scale of 1 to 5), close to 5, in social interaction, which indicates that these students overall have relatively robust self-efficacy beliefs. In all cases, the low values of standard deviation reveal a good degree of agreement between responses.