STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND

This paper is basedon a comparative study of craft and technology education curriculums andstudents’ attitudes towards craft and technology in Finland, Estonia andIceland. The study was undertaken by the Helsinki University, University ofTallinn and University of Iceland in the year 2012. Even thoug...

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Main Authors: AUTIO, Ossi, SOOBIK, Mart, THORSTEINSSON, Gisli, OLAFSSON, Brynjar
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: ISRES Publishing 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/epess/issue/30314/332800
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spelling ftdergipark2ojs:oai:dergipark.org.tr:article/332800 2023-05-15T16:44:51+02:00 STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND AUTIO, Ossi SOOBIK, Mart THORSTEINSSON, Gisli OLAFSSON, Brynjar 2014-05-31T00:00:00Z application/pdf https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/epess/issue/30314/332800 unknown ISRES Publishing ISRES Organizasyon Turizm Eğitim Danışmanlık Ltd. Şti. https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/332098 https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/epess/issue/30314/332800 Volume: 1, Issue: 96-100 2587-1730 The Eurasia Proceedings of Educational and Social Sciences attitudes towards technology,technology education,handicraft,pedagogical traditions info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2014 ftdergipark2ojs 2020-08-27T18:51:02Z This paper is basedon a comparative study of craft and technology education curriculums andstudents’ attitudes towards craft and technology in Finland, Estonia andIceland. The study was undertaken by the Helsinki University, University ofTallinn and University of Iceland in the year 2012. Even though, theorigins of craft education in Finland, Estonia and Iceland have manysimilarities, the Estonian and Icelandic national curriculum place greateremphasis on design and innovation, whereas the Finnish national curriculumfocus on the development of students’ personalities and gender issues. Aquantitative survey was subsequently distributed to 493 school students inFinland, Estonia and Iceland. The questionnaire consisted of 14 questions,which aimed to ascertain students’ attitudes towards craft and technology. Thesurvey showed substantial differences in students’ attitudes towards craft andtechnology education in the three countries. In addition, significantstatistical differences were found between boys and girls. These differencesmay be explained by differences in the national curriculums and the differentpedagogical traditions. However, these findings need to be examined furtherthrough research. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland DergiPark Akademik (E-Journals)
institution Open Polar
collection DergiPark Akademik (E-Journals)
op_collection_id ftdergipark2ojs
language unknown
topic attitudes towards technology,technology education,handicraft,pedagogical traditions
spellingShingle attitudes towards technology,technology education,handicraft,pedagogical traditions
AUTIO, Ossi
SOOBIK, Mart
THORSTEINSSON, Gisli
OLAFSSON, Brynjar
STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND
topic_facet attitudes towards technology,technology education,handicraft,pedagogical traditions
description This paper is basedon a comparative study of craft and technology education curriculums andstudents’ attitudes towards craft and technology in Finland, Estonia andIceland. The study was undertaken by the Helsinki University, University ofTallinn and University of Iceland in the year 2012. Even though, theorigins of craft education in Finland, Estonia and Iceland have manysimilarities, the Estonian and Icelandic national curriculum place greateremphasis on design and innovation, whereas the Finnish national curriculumfocus on the development of students’ personalities and gender issues. Aquantitative survey was subsequently distributed to 493 school students inFinland, Estonia and Iceland. The questionnaire consisted of 14 questions,which aimed to ascertain students’ attitudes towards craft and technology. Thesurvey showed substantial differences in students’ attitudes towards craft andtechnology education in the three countries. In addition, significantstatistical differences were found between boys and girls. These differencesmay be explained by differences in the national curriculums and the differentpedagogical traditions. However, these findings need to be examined furtherthrough research.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author AUTIO, Ossi
SOOBIK, Mart
THORSTEINSSON, Gisli
OLAFSSON, Brynjar
author_facet AUTIO, Ossi
SOOBIK, Mart
THORSTEINSSON, Gisli
OLAFSSON, Brynjar
author_sort AUTIO, Ossi
title STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND
title_short STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND
title_full STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND
title_fullStr STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND
title_full_unstemmed STUDENTS’ ATTITUDES TOWARDS TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION IN FINLAND, ESTONIA AND ICELAND
title_sort students’ attitudes towards technology education in finland, estonia and iceland
publisher ISRES Publishing
publishDate 2014
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/epess/issue/30314/332800
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Volume: 1, Issue: 96-100
2587-1730
The Eurasia Proceedings of Educational and Social Sciences
op_relation https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/332098
https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/epess/issue/30314/332800
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