2021
DOI: 10.21577/1984-6835.20210073
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Evaluation of Pedagogical Strategies used in the State of Rio de Janeiro for Teaching Chemistry, Physics and Biology in High School During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic

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Cited by 2 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…initiative in order to effectively promote diversity among the members chosen for this affirmative action and thereby increase engagement, as well as the sense of belonging and community of female chemistry professionals of different races, ethnicities, geographic, and socioeconomic backgrounds. Staniscuaski et al 13 conducted a research in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic with 3,345 Brazilian academics (males and females) and identified that nonpharmacological control measures (lockdowns and social distancing) negatively impacted, mainly, female scientists, a fact corroborated by Soares et al, 2,5,10,12 who evaluated the working conditions of chemistry teachers in schools and universities in Rio de Janeiro in the same period. However, even among female academics, an inequality was observed in the face of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic; nonwhite female scientists (Black and Multiracial) are the most strongly impacted on their academic careers and intellectual productivity (regardless of being mothers or not), followed by white female scientists with children and, later, by white female academics without children.…”
Section: An Intersectional Approach To Inequalitiesmentioning
confidence: 89%
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“…initiative in order to effectively promote diversity among the members chosen for this affirmative action and thereby increase engagement, as well as the sense of belonging and community of female chemistry professionals of different races, ethnicities, geographic, and socioeconomic backgrounds. Staniscuaski et al 13 conducted a research in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic with 3,345 Brazilian academics (males and females) and identified that nonpharmacological control measures (lockdowns and social distancing) negatively impacted, mainly, female scientists, a fact corroborated by Soares et al, 2,5,10,12 who evaluated the working conditions of chemistry teachers in schools and universities in Rio de Janeiro in the same period. However, even among female academics, an inequality was observed in the face of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic; nonwhite female scientists (Black and Multiracial) are the most strongly impacted on their academic careers and intellectual productivity (regardless of being mothers or not), followed by white female scientists with children and, later, by white female academics without children.…”
Section: An Intersectional Approach To Inequalitiesmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…17 This DEIR initiative is extremely important because although women in Brazilian chemistry are in practically equal conditions (49%) compared to men, 5,20,21 reflecting almost the same female proportion of the Brazilian population (51.8% of approximately 213 million people), 19 even so, profound gender inequalities are identified concerning the professional prestige obtained (scissors effect, glass ceiling, leaky pipeline) 5 and in the country's territorial distribution, 5,19,20 which became even more accentuated during the COVID-19 pandemic. 5,9,10,12,13 Female Population in Brazil…”
Section: ■ Methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%
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