Objectives
The course aims is to solidify the objectives acquired in Seminar I, in a perspective of greater autonomy of the doctoral students, in the work development leading to their thesis.
The specific objectives of Seminar II are:
To deep reflection and debate on recent or ongoing research in health and technologies;
To provide clues and theoretical-methodological references for the work leading to individual theses;
To develop argumentation and scientific communication skills, either through participation in seminar sessions presented by invited speakers, or through the presentation of the work to be elaborated in the scope of the thesis construction.
General characterization
Code
531037
Credits
6
Responsible teacher
Professor Doutor André Rosário
Hours
Weekly -
Available soon
Total -
Available soon
Teaching language
Portuguese
Prerequisites
Not applicable
Bibliography
A disponibilizar em cada um dos seminários, pelo docente responsável.
Teaching method
The teaching methodology consists essentially of participating in seminar sessions presented by teachers and researchers and organized by the doctoral students themselves, covering the area of research that they develop.
These seminars are not only expositive in nature, but seek to promote interaction and discussion of the topics addressed among the participants.
Evaluation method
The assessment of learning (continuous and exam) consists in a paper synthesizing each seminar content, enriched with the respective critical appraisal, as well as resulting from the public presentation evaluation, as well as the written document of the thesis progress report:
a. 1 summary report of the seminar sessions: 25%
b. 1 Thesis progress report: 50%
c. Oral presentation of the work: 25%
Subject matter
1. Cycle of seminars or lectures on current research in health and technologies: a. Guest speaker sessions b. Sessions co-organized by doctoral students
2. Winter School II:
a. Presentation, reflection and debate about the state of the art of doctoral research subjects;
b. Discussion of doctoral research progress reports.
Programs
Programs where the course is taught: