This article presents the research results in relation to an interdisciplinary teaching
innovation project—Teaching and Learning of Social Sciences and Teaching and
Learning of Natural Sciences—with Early Childhood Preservice Teachers (ECPT) at the
University of Alcalá (Spain) in the pandemic context by COVID-19 during 2020–2021 (N
55): 52 women (94.55%) and 3 men (5.45%) from 20 to 22 years of age. The main research
problem is to know if the ECPT improves the learning to learn competence after a
challenge-based learning (CBL) linked to virtual tour in a museum. The main objective
was to improve the learning to learn competence, during a virtual tour at the Community of
Madrid Regional Archaeological Museum (MAR) (Alcalá de Henares, Spain) for a reflective
training of students to understand problems of the past and present and future global
challenges, promote collaborative and multidisciplinary work, and defend ethics and
leadership. In order to ascertain the level of acquisition of this competence in those
teachers who were being trained, their self-perception—pretest–posttest—of the
experience was assessed through a system of categories adapted from the European
Commission. ECPT worked, in small groups and using e/m-learning tools, ten challenges
and one storytelling cooperatively with university teachers to solve prehistoric questions
related to current situations and problems. Subsequently, two Early Childhood Education
teachers from a school in Alcalá de Henares reviewed the proposals and adapted them for
application in the classroom of 5-year-old boys and girls. The results show an
improvement in this competence in Early Childhood Preservice Teachers: total score
pre-post comparison paired-samples Wilcoxon test result shows a statistically significant
difference (p > 0.001); an evaluation rubric verified the results of self-perception. Second,
we highlight the importance of carrying out virtual museum tours from a challenge-based
learning for the development of big ideas, essential questions, challenges, and activities on
socioeconomic, environmental, and emotional knowledge, skills, and attitudes. Third, this experience shows the insufficient educational adaptation of the virtual museum tour to the
Early Childhood Education stage from a technological and didactic workshops point of
view, but there is a diversity of paleontological and archaeological materials and a
significant sociocritical discourse.