Abstract

The emergence and widespread of antibiotic-resistant pathogenic microorganisms are of great individual and societal relevance. Due to the complex and multilayered nature of the topic, antibiotic resistance (ABR) is the object of concern for several scientific fields, such as microbiology or medicine, and encompasses a broad range of political, economic, and social aspects. Thus, the issue related to antibiotic-resistant bacterial diseases offers an excellent platform for designing and implementing the teaching and learning of socio-scientific issues (SSI). We created a SSI-based curriculum unit for use in secondary science classrooms by developing a collaborative partnership between education researchers and microbiologists. This classroom environment allows students to explore and negotiate ABR as a societal and scientific phenomenon. For this purpose, we leveraged role-playing within the SSI-based unit as a productive context for engaging students in learning opportunities that provide multiple perspectives on ABR and the complex interplay of its accelerators. This case-based paper describes Austrian school students’ experiences from their participation in a SSI-embedded role-playing classroom environment and subsequent activities that included a mini congress with a poster presentation and a panel discussion. An open-ended questionnaire-based assessment tool was used to examine the situational characteristics of the students’ work. To assess students’ contributions, we applied a qualitative content analysis design and identified cognitive and affective outcomes. The students’ learning experiences demonstrate that they considered the content – the social complexities of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and associated diseases – exciting and very topical. The students perceived that learning about ABR is relevant for their future and involves both individual and societal responsibility for action. Although the curriculum unit and its assignments were described as labor-intensive, it became apparent that the role-playing setting has the potential to inform students about multiple stakeholder positions concerning ABR. Concerning the promotion of science practices, almost all students claimed that they learned to organize, analyze, evaluate, and present relevant information. Moreover, the students affirmed that they learned to argue from the perspective of their assigned roles. However, the students did not clarify whether they learned more through this SSI-based classroom instruction than through conventional science teaching approaches.

Highlights

  • Science education and practice aim to support society in acquiring skills that enable citizens to make well-informed decisions and form evidence-based opinions on current societal challenges (Dawson and Venville, 2010; Osborne, 2010)

  • Antibiotics are often given without professional oversight, are taken by people with viral infections, are given as growth promoters in animals, or are used to prevent diseases in healthy animals (Ventola, 2015)

  • Information and educational campaigns have been launched in several countries to increase antibiotic awareness (Cross et al, 2017)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Science education and practice aim to support society in acquiring skills that enable citizens to make well-informed decisions and form evidence-based opinions on current societal challenges (Dawson and Venville, 2010; Osborne, 2010). Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a pressing and capacious problem in the field of Science|Environment|Health pedagogy (Zeyer and Dillon, 2019). As the primary form of AMR, antibiotic resistance (ABR) occurs when bacteria adapt and increasingly acquire resistance to antibiotic agents to which they were formerly susceptible (Depardieu et al, 2007; Davies and Davies, 2010; Blair et al, 2015). ABR and AMR, respectively, are a consequence of natural adaptive selection by a genetic mutation (Andersson and Hughes, 2010). It allows bacteria, those frequently found in healthcare settings, to resist the noxious effects of specific antibiotic agents (Alekshun and Levy, 2007). Numerous previously deadly infectious diseases have turned into non-life-threatening inconveniences in the antibiotic era, this outstanding scientific progress is jeopardized (Carlet et al, 2012; Ventola, 2015)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call