Aprendizagem significativa no ensino inclusivo
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REVISTA DE ENSEÑANZA DE LA FÍSICA, Vol. 33, no. 2 (2021) 28
Axt (1988) warns of the fact that concepts approached in schools, and which should have supposedly been
assimilated by teachers throughout their academic training, have a deficient or incomplete learning. This fact can lead
to erroneous concepts, to deformed knowledge, which prevents a good teaching and school learning, since the
contradictions found in these teachers and which should have been resolved as graduating, are at the same level as
the student. Linked to this poor formation, the author points to the low level of education practiced in schools, due
to the low demands of both teachers and students. Anastasiou and Alves (2015) ask whether only the language used
by the teacher to communicate with students during the delivery of a standardized Physics class is sufficient for
students to absorb the content in a meaningful way. Silva et al. (2015) warn of the situations of teachers who have
never had direct and in-depth contact with the daily life of the visually impaired, if they encounter classes in which
this student is present. On the other hand, the curricular deficit of undergraduate courses in Physics in offering
mandatory subjects on the theme of Inclusive Education, specifically visual impairment, has serious consequences for
teacher training as well as in the preparation of classes, since many teachers make use an educational method called
by Camargo (2016) model “40 + 1”. In this model, the class is prepared for the average of forty visionary students, and
another is rethought for the visually impaired student. By following this pattern, according to Souza and Ferreira
(2019), it is possible to notice that this visually impaired student is not adequately included in Physics classes, since
most students in the classroom, the visionaries, are prioritized. On the other hand, the teacher's activities tend to
increase due to the need to prepare two different classes on the same subject. The authors draw attention to the fact
that the integration of the student in the class via the educational system does not always mean inclusion in the
pedagogical process.
Although item III of article 59 of the Law on the Guidelines and Basis for National Education- LDB (Brasil, 1996)
argues that students and teachers should be provided with adequate training, this is not the reality of undergraduate
courses in Physics, especially undergraduate courses in which is faced with the theme about visual impairment, as
pointed out by the works carried out by Silva et al. (2015). They warn of the lack of studies on visual impairment in
the subjects of the Physics course.
According to the Census of Basic Education of the State of Rio de Janeiro 2019 (Brasil, 2019), there was a 37.3%
increase in enrollments for Special Education between the years 2015 and 2019. When compared to the same years
for High School, growth jumps to 104%. Unfortunately, these increases do not follow the structure of the Brazilian
educational system, because if we select the age group of 4 to 17 years old who are enrolled in common classes and
without access to specialized care, between 2015 and 2019, there was an increase of 4% of these students. For those
who have access to specialized education, the increase was only 3.3%. These data indicate the challenges to be faced
by the bodies responsible for educational policies, especially by teachers who occupy a prominent position in the
educational process.
Inserted in the scope of a monograph work concluding a degree course in Physics and concomitantly being one of
the central focuses of a research group at UFRRJ focused on Physics Teaching in High School, it was possible to glimpse
this educational framework, where several aspects and situations, especially with regard to the visually impaired, are
present in the teaching and learning process. Based on this survey, the development of inclusive methodological
strategies that can assist both high school physics teachers and students, whether visionary or not, was included in
our studies, with a focus on promoting inclusive teaching and learning and valuing the intellectual capacity of the
visually impaired student. In this sense, we started the elaboration of a didactic sequence involving a set of
Multisensory Kits that can support the Potentially Significant Teaching Units (PSTU) insofar as they are a facilitator for
the assimilation of the contents, according to the molds of the Significant Learning Theory ( SLT) by David Ausubel
(Flores-Espejo, 2013; Moreira, 2012), in addition to valuing and defending Inclusiveness. According to SLT, the
apprentice constitutes the fundamental part in the teaching-learning process insofar as he must actively participate
in the knowledge construction process and his predisposition to relate the new knowledge to his cognitive structure
in a non-arbitrary and non literal way. The teacher is responsible for assuming a teaching methodology based on the
use of Potentially Significant Learning Materials (PSLM) to generate new meanings, promoting the anchoring of new
information in the student's cognitive structure. One of the first kits to be made is a Sensory Tactile Material (STM),
which addresses the study of Newtonian Mechanics Free Body Diagram, constructed with low cost material and where
the information will be printed in braille and in high relief characters that can be used by both visually impaired
students and visionaries. We hope that at the end of the project, the kits produced and the Potentially Significant
Teaching Units (PSTU) proposed in this work will help teachers and students in a classroom, and serve as inspiration
for other topics in Physics to be approached in a similar way, as they have enormous potential for inclusion and a
powerful facilitator of meaningful learning.
The article is structured in the sections a) Introduction; b) Educational Background of Visually Impaired People in
Brazil; c) Projects with Tact Sensory Materials in Rio de Janeiro; d) Free Body Diagram; e) The Theory of Meaningful
Learning; f) A Roadmap for Sensory Tactile Materials; g) Discussions; h) Conclusions.