The Internet is increasingly present in the daily lives of young people, being an important tool when thinking about education. With the advances in computing and mobile telephony, consultations on the network represent a fundamental stage of learning in any area of human knowledge. In fact, the Internet currently represents an extension of the physical environment of the classroom, allowing access to information almost instantly. In this scenario, Blended Learning emerges as a development involving active methodologies that are based on a mix between traditional and virtual teaching, making the student the main protagonist of their learning process. In this context, the #Adote Project, developed with high school students, inserted in the "Adopt a Microorganism" strand, and also applied to higher education students, with Basic Microbiology discipline, offered to USP Dentistry course students, in the "Adopt a Bacterium". The project has as its base and objective the use of Facebook® as an educational platform, where posts and discussions are carried out, mediated by researchers, undergraduate and graduate students. The purpose of this work was to verify if the Blended Learning developed through the #Adote project proves to be effective for the students' learning. In addition, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the project needed to be applied to the remote emergency model, due to the suppression of face-to-face activities at USP. As a result, the assessment of student performance in this new teaching-learning format has become a new objective of this work. The evaluation methodology used was based on questionnaires, applied at different times, which allowed a careful evaluation of the results achieved. After analyzing the students' responses, it was possible to conclude that, even in an emergency format, the teaching methodology employed led to an increase in the richness of the discourse on microbiology topics. Similar results were achieved with students undergoing training in the hybrid and remote models, which allowed for a gain in learning, an increase in content and a decrease in conceptual errors. As the main conclusion of the presente work, the fact that the methodology used in the #Adote project, in its two aspects, proved to be an important tool for the teaching-learning process in topics related to microbiology.