Collaborative active learning: Bioimpedance and anthropometry in higher education

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Abstract

Research in the health sciences devotes much attention to overweight and obesity and, consequently, to body composition. In recent years, traditional body measures have been questioned as efficient variables in health sciences due to the fact that they cannot give information about body fat mass. Our aim is to teach how to analyze body composition through anthropometry and bioelectrical impedance analysis to our "Physiology of Vegetative and Reproductive Functions" students, who are studying for their degree in Biology. We proposed project-oriented-learning to promote collaborative interactions among students. Fifty-two students voluntarily formed five groups; they worked with the concepts of basal metabolic rate and body composition from a theoretical point of view and later transformed these concepts into a practical perspective by preparing a manuscript in groups with objectives proposed by our teaching team. In this research, we show a collaborative educational scenario for university students in which students are tutored from a constructivist perspective to promote social interactions, resulting in new knowledge acquisition.

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Bravo, R., Ugartemendia, L., Cubero, J., Uguz, C., & Rodríguez, A. B. (2018). Collaborative active learning: Bioimpedance and anthropometry in higher education. Advances in Physiology Education, 42(4), 605–609. https://doi.org/10.1152/advan.00106.2017

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