Abstract

The purpose of this text is to identify the main strategies of the teaching-learning process, as well as the perceptions of professors during the period of social isolation in the context of the pandemic generated by Covid-19. The study sample consists of 52 professors from the Administration, Accounting, and Economic Sciences courses, working in four higher education institutions in the southern region of Brazil. The survey carried out through a questionnaire comprising 32 questions, collected the respondents' identification, the perceptions of the teaching process, and the teaching-learning strategies used from the insertion of classes remotely as an alternative in the social isolation period. As data treatment, descriptive statistics, and the Mann-Whitney statistical test were used, the analysis is quantitative. The results show that, for 96% of those surveyed, the disciplines took place remotely; 92% indicate pedagogical adaptations, and 76% responded that the institution offered training. The main teaching strategies used in the period of social isolation are: expository classes with the presentation of content on slides (98%); exercises with resolution (90%); case study (69%); and content-oriented research/reading (52%). The statistical analysis shows that professors who used problematization/teaching cases, debates, and games believe they have achieved the teaching-learning objectives. In the perception of 54% of professors, classes held remotely do not represent losses in students' teaching-learning process and have achieved their objectives. In general, the results demonstrate adaptation of face-to-face classes to the remote format. The findings suggest the importance of inserting technologies as teaching strategies, regardless of whether the model is face-to-face or not.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this text is to identify the main strategies of the teaching-learning process, as well as the perceptions of professors during the period of social isolation in the context of the pandemic generated by Covid-19

  • The current scenario of higher education in the face of the social isolation generated by the Covid-19 pandemic, a disease caused by a variation of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus virus, which has a high potential for contagion, motivated the World Health Organization (WHO) to consider the status of the disease for a pandemic (Arora & Srinivasan, 2020; Sun, Qiu, Huang & Yang, 2020)

  • It suggests to students the reflection about knowledge obtained after a reading or exhibition, allowing students to formulate principles in their own words, suggesting their application (Marion & Marion, 2006, p. 42-44)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The current scenario of higher education in the face of the social isolation generated by the Covid-19 pandemic, a disease caused by a variation of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus virus, which has a high potential for contagion, motivated the World Health Organization (WHO) to consider the status of the disease for a pandemic (Arora & Srinivasan, 2020; Sun, Qiu, Huang & Yang, 2020). In the current social context, the face-to-face teaching environment has been affected by government decrees that restrict classes' execution in person This condition required the HEIs to create teaching strategies to adapt the learning environment to the remote/virtual emergency, similar to the distance education model. The research's importance is justified by its reflections on higher education's educational structure in the current scenario established by the Covid-19 pandemic (Arora & Srinivasan, 2020; Sun et al, 2020) These reflexes motivate educators to adopt new perceptions regarding their role in searching for solutions to remedy learning difficulties caused by remote classes' adaptations (Abmes, 2020). The study presents as a differential aspect the professors’ perception regarding the adaptations of learning strategies in the remote emergency context and the impact of remote classes on the teaching process

TEACHING-LEARNING STRATEGIES AND THEIR ASSESSMENTS
Discussion and debate
METHODOLOGICAL PROCEDURES
ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION OF RESULTS
Findings
FINAL CONSIDERATIONS
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