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Craft and Technology Education Curriculums and Students’ Attitudes towards Craft and Technology in Finland, Slovenia, Estonia and Iceland

Craft and Technology Education Curriculums and Students’ Attitudes towards Craft and Technology in Finland, Slovenia, Estonia and Iceland


Title: Craft and Technology Education Curriculums and Students’ Attitudes towards Craft and Technology in Finland, Slovenia, Estonia and Iceland
Author: Autio, Ossi
Jamsek, Janez
Soobik, Mart
Þorsteinsson, Gísli
Ólafsson, Brynjar
Date: 2017-09
Language: English
Scope: 169-184
University/Institute: Háskóli Íslands
University of Iceland
School: Menntavísindasvið (HÍ)
School of Education (UI)
ISBN: 978-88-94885-31-6
Series: Le Ragioni di Erasmus;1
Subject: Technology education; Craft education; Attitudes towards technology; National curriculum
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/889

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Citation:

Autio, O., Jamsek, J., Soobik, M., Thorsteinsson, G. & Olafsson, B. (2017). Craft and Technology Education Curriculums and Students’ Attitudes towards Craft and Technology in Finland, Slovenia, Estonia and Iceland. Le Ragioni di Erasmus, 1: Ricerche e intersezioini scientifiche. Per l’educazione nel presente: le scienze umane, l’internalizionalizzazione, le reti, l’innovazione. Geat, M. & Piccione, V. A. (eds.). Roma: Roma Tre-Press, 169-184.

Abstract:

The research is based on a comparative study of craft and technology education curriculums and students’ attitudes towards craft and technology in Finland, Slo-venia, Estonia and Iceland. The study was undertaken by the Helsinki University, University of Ljubljana, University of Tallinn and University of Iceland during years 2012-2015. A literature review was completed, in order to examine and compare the curriculums of craft and technology education in Finland, Estonia and Iceland. In addition, a quantitative survey was subsequently distributed to 864 school students in Finland, Slovenia, Estonia and Iceland. It consisted of 14 questions, which aimed to ascertain students’ attitudes towards craft and technology. The survey showed substantial differences in students’ attitudes towards craft and technology education in the three countries: these differences may be explained by differences in the national curriculums, the different pedagogical traditions and cultural differences in the field of technology. However, for deeper understanding, the quantitative findings need to be examined further with different research methods.

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CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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