History teaching in Finnish general upper secondary schools: Objectives and practices

Matti Rautiainen, Eija Räikkönen, Anna Veijola, Simo Mikkonen
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

In Finland, the trend towards a new kind of history teaching emphasizing the understanding of historical knowledge and historical thinking skills began in the mid-1990s, when history teaching objectives were defined much more broadly in the curriculum than previously. In this article, we examine how, in over twenty years since the changes in curriculum objectives were made, general upper secondary school teachers have come to value the curriculum objectives of history teaching and how these have impacted on their teaching. The data for this article were collected by a semi-structured survey in 2016. Using counts, percentages, means, standard deviations and medians, a descriptive exploration was made of history teachers' perceptions of the essential objectives in teaching history and how often they were put into practice in related student activities. To investigate the balance between the objectives the teachers emphasized as the most essential and the teaching methods they actually used, we applied the Kruskal–Wallis test and the Friedman test. According to the results, what the teachers considered essential for teaching history did not correlate with their teaching methods. In addition, according to the results, this state of affairs is still undergoing change; old traditions and new objectives of history teaching are creating tensions. The results were interpreted in the light of the cultural viewpoints of Finnish teaching, the position of matriculation examinations in Finnish general upper secondary schools and the challenges the curriculum is setting for history teachers.
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芬兰普通高中历史教学:目标与实践
在芬兰,一种强调理解历史知识和历史思维技能的新型历史教学趋势始于20世纪90年代中期,当时课程中对历史教学目标的定义比以前广泛得多。在本文中,我们考察了在课程目标改变后的二十多年里,普通高中教师如何开始重视历史教学的课程目标,以及这些目标如何影响他们的教学。本文的数据是2016年通过半结构化调查收集的。使用计数、百分比、均值、标准差和中位数,对历史教师对历史教学基本目标的看法以及这些目标在相关学生活动中付诸实践的频率进行了描述性探索。为了考察教师所强调的最重要的目标与他们实际使用的教学方法之间的平衡,我们采用了Kruskal-Wallis测试和Friedman测试。结果显示,教师认为历史教学中最重要的内容与其教学方法并不相关。此外,根据结果,这种状况仍在发生变化;历史教学的旧传统和新目标正在制造矛盾。这些结果是根据芬兰教学的文化观点、芬兰普通高中入学考试的地位以及课程对历史教师提出的挑战来解释的。
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