The importance of understanding the learning process when trying to improve public engagement with health research

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    The importance of understanding the learning process when trying to improve public engagement with health research - Presentation Transcript

    1. Maria Elizabeth Gastal Fassa Anaclaudia Gastal Fassa Neice Müller Xavier Faria The importance of understanding the learning process when trying to improve public engagement with health research 5 a CRE Outubro,2008
    2. Human being wonders, thinks, and learns
      • It is a natural part of being human to look at the world around us and wonder  to build questions
      • It is a natural part of being human try to make sense of all we see, hear, notice  to search for answers
      • It is a natural part of being human to learn  to harvest data, to compare, to classify, to conclude
      • Life is learning, we only survive if we learn  if we research
    3. Learning is essential to survive
      • to make sense of the environment to be able to deal with it
      • for the own sake of the mind functioning
      • Stimuli are the mind’s nutrition. If a human being does not have this nutrition he/she perishes (as the child in hospitalism)
    4. Sometimes learning does not occur
      • This natural feature of the human being, the impulse for learning, is sometimes distorted
        • when it is overruled
          • there is no space
          •  for the own sake of the mind functioning
      •  to make questions
    5. Sometimes learning does not occur
      • This natural feature of the human being, the impulse for learning, is sometimes distorted
        • when the information is transmitted, is imposed
          • there is no space
          •  to make sense of the environment
          •  to search for answers myself
      • The human being does not learn  does not harvest data, compare, nor classify, does not conclude
    6. Learning is a construction
      • learning requires
        • effort / willingness  it is not a neutral act
          • a question that awakes the natural sense of wonder, the natural impulse to make sense
          • a question with which for some reason I identify myself
      • Learning requires motivation / engagement
    7. Learning / Engagement
      • Learning requires engagement  without engagement it is only possible to repeat mechanically some algorithms
      • Engagement is a learning process  the engagement arises as part of the knowledge construction
      • It is like two faces of the same coin
    8. Teaching / Learning
      • Traditional education
        • each one plays own role inside fixed rules
          • fixed and universal curriculum
          • evaluation through tests
        • stereotyped behaviors
          • teacher teaches what he/she already knows
          • student hear and answer what is expected
          • There is no dialogue, no space for surprise, creation
      • Teacher pretends to teach and student pretends to learn, there is no real learning
    9. Teaching / Learning
      • Participatory education (Paulo Freire / Montessori)
        • Student builds own knowledge
        • Teacher organizes environment, stimuli, learning opportunities
        • Teacher and students are learning partners and lifelong learners
        •  Different power distribution. Different distribution of active roles. Different process’ subject.
    10. Scientific knowledge communication / traditional culture communication
      • Scientific knowledge communication
        • think about grand parents’ time
          • classrooms
          • conference hall
              • front pulpits
              • low level audience seats
              • one person exposing his/her abstract knowledge
      • There is not engagement, there is not knowledge building
      • Similar to traditional education
      • Still the most common
    11. Scientific knowledge communication / traditional culture communication
      • Traditional culture communication
        • people sit in a circle at the same level
        • opportunities for eye contact
        • personal experience reported through stories
        • emotion communicated
      • There is engagement and knowledge building
      • Similar to the new participatory approach for scientific communication, as the “scientific cafés”
    12. Teaching / Learning
      • Human beings are not teachable
          • Human beings starve for learning
    13. Amount of available information
        • It would be impossible for each human being to make the whole path humanity walked in the knowledge evolution, to master all available information
        • The process of building fundamental concepts, universal values of culture, not having those superimposed, is the basis for understanding any other piece of human knowledge
        • Using the basis of the fundamental concepts and universal values for critical thinking, it is possible to make any part of this knowledge a personal property/feature through engagement and learning
    14. What makes people engage and learn?
        • Person must be subject in the learning/engagement process. Both are processes of subjectivity construction
        • The process must be self-referenced, people need to have the opportunity to identify themselves with it
        • Engagement and learning are personal construction, they are effective only from inside, does not work from outside
      • Engagement and learning imply incorporation, appropriation, “make it mine”
    15. Transforming information into personal knowledge
      • One way to transform information in personal knowledge is acting over the information
        • bringing it to our ground
        • comparing universal data with our community’s data
        • comparing stories with the ones we know from people around us
      •  Researching in our community, building opinion and making decisions, choices
    16. Difference between academic research and engaged learning
      • Academic research
          • is universal, impersonal, general
          • the number included in the research is anyone
          • no one sees oneself as that specific number
      • Engaged learning
          • self-referred, particular,
          •  the number is myself, my students, persons with names and faces
    17. What we are doing
      • Working with rural teachers
      • chosen topic: Pesticides
        • a teachers’ real concern
        • a teachers’ experiential knowledge
    18. Methodology
        • dialogue based on the teachers knowledge about their community and the researcher team knowledge about the universal aspects of the issue
          • r esearch chain
        • research team  representative teachers  teachers in the schools  students  community
          • every chain’s link will follow all research steps
        • to build a question  to create an instrument  to collect data  to analyse data  to write report
      • Everyone will be a responsible participant that will have voice to construct a process that is cultural, sociological, political and economical
    19. Actions resultants from teacher’s research
        • To divulgate research’s findings and promote better
        • practices when using pesticides these chain will develop
        • activities
        • interventions
        • printed materials
        • videos
        • radio programs
    20. First question
      • What is the profile of pesticides use in my community?
      • To become engaged the person needs to identify him/herself with the issue. The “number” is myself, is my student…
      • The question makes the focus self-referenced
      • It is important to be aware that from this general question can arise different specific questions that will be the central question of the research of one of the chain’s link.
      • We need to be “glocals”.
      • Contextualize the research to the
      • community.
    21. Teacher research
      • Bridge between the global knowledge and the local context
      • Focus on question of the community’s specific interest
      • Turns the research from
        • “ general”, not referring to anyone that is next to me
        • to an issue referred to people with faces and names
      •  Teacher researches own reality
    22. Research  word that scares
      • Research is a state of mind
        • completely aware
        • willing to live entirely the present
        • willing changes, searching solutions instead of “letting it be”
      • In some sense everybody researches ➠ children research incessantly
      • Children knows how to approach father or mother
        • “ maybe = no” and “eventually = yes”
      •  Research gives us control over our environment
    23. Demystifying...
      • Every teacher
        • has questions
        • searches for solutions
        • tries strategies
        • takes conclusions
        • researches, even not writing the report …
      •  in the same way as mothers and cookers and everybody who loves their own work do
    24. Demystifying...
      • Good teachers
        • Observe the student
        • Analyze his/her needs
        • Adjust the curriculum to meet these needs
      •  Teacher research is a natural extension of the good pedagogical practice. So, we begin where the teachers have ground
    25. Teacher research
      • Systematic process to
        • discover essential questions
        • gather data
        • analyze them to answer the questions
          •  personal and real questions
      My question Answer makes difference in my daily life
    26. Teacher Research
      • In relation to public engagement, aims
      • deeper reflection
      • better comprehension of the reality
      • better comprehension of the students
      • the habit of systemic thinking
      • the habit of writing thoughts and observations to compare and follow processes
      • to be a learning model to the students, involving students in research
    27. Reports on teacher research
      • Similar to good literature
      • Rich in anecdotes and personal stories
      • Immediate, first-person tone
      • Metaphors as a way to highlight key findings
      • Stories as critical tools to illuminate deeper theories or subterranean processes
      •  These are reports that teachers read and information they use in their classrooms!
    28. Teacher’s interest to be a “bridge”
      • To be heard
      • To have voice in the decisions that affect their community
      • To better support their community in the search for life’s quality
        • Numbers are the base for the government decisions
        • Quantitative reports are not useful as model, they do not promote identification
      •  Many times stories can be completed with quantitative tables
    29. Social interest in having teacher as “bridge”
      • Human beings  “story tellers” learn and pass on culture through stories
      • Attitudes are modeled only in a “personal” and meaningful context
      •  Teachers are able to integrate research findings important for our communities in personal and meaningful contexts ➠ transforming them in stories, making them attractive for public engagement
    30. Student research
      • Learning through project = through research
        • excellent outcomes
      • Students questions
        • naturally personal and in the context
        • can be inserted in the curriculum
    31. Teacher research/ student research
      • Search answers through research
      • Write reports on their process
    32. Teacher’s research outcomes
      • engagement of teachers and students on health research
      • community’s use of research findings for bettering people life  best practices when using pesticides
      • empowerment of teachers and students
        • the generalization of an attached to reality, investigative, critical and systematic approach to other relevant issues in the community
        • understanding about the potential impact of health research on the improvement of their life
        • more openness to use other scientific knowledge
      •  Teacher’s research is a powerful tool that will bring teacher to another level of thinking and will be available to these teachers from now on to continue researching
    33. “ Glocal” research leads to changes in attitudes
      • Reasons why teacher research brings changes
        • the teacher natural leadership
        • the teacher and research integration in the context
        • his/her direct relationship with his/her students
      • The teacher will translate his/her conclusions to the community not only with numbers,
        • but also with the tissue of the life of the observed
        • with stories
    34. “ Glocal” research leads to changes in attitudes
      • Reasons why student research brings changes
        • the question is personal and contextualized
        • the adolescents are building attitudes and behaviors and will stand on their discoveries for this building
        • they are open minded
        • they have influence over their parents behavior and ideas
    35. Education / public engagement
      • education fosters public engagement
      • public engagement fosters education
        • promoting critically and systemic thinking
        • bringing thinking to a formal level
      • All children should fulfill their own potential
      • Children engagement with research and children health awareness, since very little, foster a formal level of thinking
        • Leading to education equity ➠ health equity
      • Obviously we would not see the results in short term, but these results would be incredibly worth
    36. Thank you! Maria Elizabeth Gastal Fassa [email_address]

    + wellcome.trustwellcome.trust, 11 months ago

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