Teachers’ pedagogical beliefs in Norwegian school makerspaces

IF 2 3区 工程技术 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH International Journal of Technology and Design Education Pub Date : 2024-07-02 DOI:10.1007/s10798-024-09919-0
Ingrid Holmboe Høibo, Pirita Seitamaa-Hakkarainen, Camilla Groth
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Abstract

In Norway, makerspaces are emerging as new educational contexts across all school levels. This trend is multifaceted as it is inspired by the global maker movement and supported by local initiatives as well as a national policy to create more opportunities to teach digital competencies. The makerspace concept facilitates this in a concrete and innovative way. Although the maker movement is established, the pedagogical foundations of maker activities in educational settings are still being developed. As the movement meets competent teachers and existing learning cultures, there is the potential to create new pedagogical knowledge and educational practices. This study explored teachers’ values and beliefs regarding maker-centered learning in Norwegian schools through qualitative semi-structured interviews with maker teachers from 18 schools. The results indicate that makerspaces in Norwegian schools are initiated and driven by teachers’ interests in the maker movement, which resonates with their learning beliefs. The individuals in question are mostly natural-science teachers inspired by other makers. The learning culture in Norwegian schools, and that found in the maker movement, coincide in many areas. However, there are some compatibility challenges, such as facilitating open-ended learning processes and initiating learning frameworks that allow students to act and learn based on their motivations and ideas. With guidance from the latest curricula, teachers are encouraged to teach toward learning goals, which have been traditionally achieved with structured and predefined activities. In this goal-directed environment, maker teachers struggle to find room for iterative processes, play, and productive failures.

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挪威学校创客空间中教师的教学理念
在挪威,创客空间正在成为各年级学校的新教育情境。这一趋势是多方面的,它受到全球创客运动的启发,并得到地方倡议和国家政策的支持,以创造更多教授数字能力的机会。创客空间的概念以一种具体而创新的方式促进了这一趋势的发展。虽然创客运动已经确立,但在教育环境中开展创客活动的教学基础仍在发展之中。当创客运动与有能力的教师和现有的学习文化相遇时,就有可能创造出新的教学知识和教育实践。这项研究通过对来自18所学校的创客教师进行半结构式定性访谈,探讨了挪威学校教师对以创客为中心的学习的价值观和信念。结果表明,挪威学校的创客空间是由教师对创客运动的兴趣发起和推动的,这与他们的学习理念产生了共鸣。受访者大多是受到其他创客启发的自然科学教师。挪威学校的学习文化与创客运动的学习文化在许多方面不谋而合。不过,也存在一些兼容性方面的挑战,例如如何促进开放式学习过程,以及如何启动学习框架,让学生能够根据自己的动机和想法来行动和学习。在最新课程的指导下,教师被鼓励朝着学习目标进行教学,而传统上,学习目标都是通过结构化和预定义的活动来实现的。在这种以目标为导向的环境中,创客教师努力为迭代过程、游戏和富有成效的失败寻找空间。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
19.00%
发文量
61
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Technology and Design Education seeks to encourage research and scholarly writing about any aspect of technology and design education. Critical, review, and comparative studies are particularly prominent, as are contributions which draw upon other literatures, such as those derived from historical, philosophical, sociological or psychological studies of technology or design, in order to address issues of concern to technology and design education. One of the most significant developments of recent years has been the emergence of technology and design education as an integral part of general education in many parts of the world. Its distinctive curriculum features are technological literacy and capability and it highlights the importance of `knowledge in action'', of `doing'' as well as `understanding''.
期刊最新文献
Adapting engineering design thinking for sustainability The mediating role of creative problem solving between design thinking and self-efficacy in STEM teaching for STEM teacher candidates Technology-enhanced learning practices in studio pedagogy: A scoping review Cultivating ethics sensitivity in design: Impact of integrating ethics within K-12 digital design education Research on K-12 maker education in the early 2020s – a systematic literature review
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