نبذة مختصرة : Perceiving students, science students especially, as mere consumers of facts and information belies the importance of a need to engage them with the principles underlying those facts and is counter-intuitive to the facilitation of knowledge and understanding. Traditional didactic lecture approaches need a re-think if student classroom engagement and active learning are to be valued over fact memorisation and fact recall. In our undergraduate biomedical science programs across Years 1, 2 and 3 in the Faculty of Health at QUT, we have developed an authentic learning model with an embedded suite of pedagogical strategies that foster classroom engagement and allow for active learning in the sub-discipline area of medical bacteriology. The suite of pedagogical tools we have developed have been designed to enable their translation, with appropriate fine-tuning, to most biomedical and allied health discipline teaching and learning contexts. Indeed, aspects of the pedagogy have been successfully translated to the nursing microbiology study stream at QUT. The aims underpinning the pedagogy are for our students to: (1) Connect scientific theory with scientific practice in a more direct and authentic way, (2) Construct factual knowledge and facilitate a deeper understanding, and (3) Develop and refine their higher order flexible thinking and problem solving skills, both semi-independently and independently. The mindset and role of the teaching staff is critical to this approach since for the strategy to be successful tertiary teachers need to abandon traditional instructional modalities based on one-way information delivery. Face-to-face classroom interactions between students and lecturer enable realisation of pedagogical aims (1), (2) and (3). The strategy we have adopted encourages teachers to view themselves more as expert guides in what is very much a student-focused process of scientific exploration and learning. Specific pedagogical strategies embedded in the authentic learning model we have developed include: (i) ...
Relation: https://eprints.qut.edu.au/90637/28/15INTED-FULLPAPER-OBRIEN-1179.docx; https://eprints.qut.edu.au/90637/29/90637.pdf; http://library.iated.org/view/OBRIEN2015PED; O'Brien, Mark (2015) Pedagogical tools designed to promote engagement and active learning in the biomedical sciences and allied health disciplines. In Gomez Chova, L, Candel Torres, I, & Lopez Martinez, A (Eds.) INTED2015 Proceedings. International Academy of Technology, Education and Development (IATED), Spain, pp. 4422-4429.; https://eprints.qut.edu.au/90637/; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation
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