The Power of Problem Based Learning beyond its Didactic Attributes

  • Hybrid courses with a focus on practice-orientated education and self-guided learning phases are on the rise on the higher education sector. Disciplines in Life Sciences implicate a high degree of practical laboratory expertise. The University of Applied Sciences (UAS) in Vienna, Austria, has thus been endeavoured offering students a high qualitative education integrating hybrid courses based on PBL principles, which consist of on-site (including the transmission of necessary background and practical laboratory training) and off-site (including self-study phases) sessions. As practical laboratory units are central in those courses, the restrictive measures, including the transition to a complete online teaching format due to the first Covid-19-pandemic lock-down, had severe effects on the implementation and the quality of the curriculum. According to surveys made specifically to address this problematic situation, it can be concluded that on-site practical units are fundamental for certain disciplines such as Life Sciences.

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Metadaten
Author:Elisabeth Simböck, Jessica Marksteiner, Thomas Machacek, Katharina Wiessner, Barbara Gepp, Veronika Jesenberger, Anna Weihs, Rita Leitner
Parent Title (English):Journal of Problem Based Learning in Higher Education (JPBLHE)
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Completed Date:2021/12/20
Responsibility for metadata:Fachhochschule Technikum Wien
Release Date:2022/01/03
GND Keyword:COVID-19; Hybrid PBL-methods; Life Science Education; Life Science didactics; Problem-based Learning
Volume:9
Issue:1
First Page:109
Last Page:130
Publish on Website:1
Open Access:1
Reviewed:1
Link to Publication:https://doi.org/10.5278/ojs.jpblhe.v9i1.6342
Department:Department Life Science Engineering
Research Focus:Tissue Engineering & Molecular Life Science Technologies
Projects:Stadt Wien - Call 21 bis 25
Studienjahr:2021/2022
Licence (German):License LogoCreative Commons - CC BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International