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Browsing by Subject "tekstiilityö"

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  • Leppänen, Meri (2017)
    The goal of the research was to find out how the national craft curricula have evolved during citizen and basic school and how the newest 2014 curriculum posits itself in this historical continuum. The previous literature has mostly focused on time-scales of few curricula, and the longer-scale historical development has not been studied at length. The previous research has focused on themes risen by two separate craft subjects, textile craft and sloyd. My research strives to distill many themes of previous studies into a greater whole. The research is qualitative study and its method is descriptive literary survey. The literature is mostly about newest publications in craft science, pedagogics and sloyd education. Based on this research, the curricula of comprehensive school has developed craft curricula from product-centred to more holistic and process-centric, gave more focus to students' own interest and free choice, and finally in 2010's changed into more gender-neutral form. Craft teaching goals were also developed from gender-based production and maintenance skills of poor citizens into working-class consumer skills. Since 1990's, the curriculum emphasizes stresses hobby and lifestyle themes, creativity, technological understanding and project and design skills.
  • Linkosaari, Tiina (2010)
    The objective of this study was to find out what development targets craft teachers could identify in the comprehensive school classes 1 through 9 after the curriculum of the year 2004 had declared craft education uniform in textile and technical craft. Earlier research had shown that after this curricular reform craft education had been carried out in dissimilar ways in different municipalities and schools. This causes differences in the contents of teaching and thus in learning outcomes on national level. The most problematic situations occur on the 7th grade when the classes contain pupils with very heterogeneous skill levels. My intention is to find general themes in craft education that are significant when considering developmental objectives. The problem was explored by four research questions as follows: What kind of problems have craft teachers confronted during the application of the curriculum 2004, what are the most important objectives and contents in craft for the comprehensive school, how craft education should be arranged in the future and what prerequisites should be considered to generate high quality craft education? The study was carried out by a qualitative research approach. The informants consisted of 21 persons, out of which 15 were textile or technical teachers and six were textile or technical teacher students. The research data was collected in the form of short open narratives, based on a partially structured inquiry. Respectively content analysis was applied for analysis of the narratives. Research results revealed that craft teachers were mainly satisfied in uniform craft and hoped that both textile and technical craft could be compulsory school subjects for both genders. Textile and technical craft should be defined as separate independent school subjects, both of which should be developed with broader and high quality contents. Craft subjects should be allocated more teaching time. Teachers asked for a more logically proceeding curriculum, initiating from the beginning to the end of the compulsory school. It was suggested that this could be done by a qualified subject teacher. A uniform curriculum solution must be found for the whole country.
  • Karisto, Annika (2016)
    Goals. The aim of the study is to find ways to support the execution of complete craft process by examining craft teachers’ understandings of the concept of complete craft process and their ways to put it into practice in craft teaching. To find these ways and to assimilate the concept of complete craft process is topical issue at the moment, because craft teaching should instruct pupils to master the complete craft process according to the aims in the becoming Finnish National Curriculum (POPS 2014). Methodology. The study is qualitative case study. It was implemented by interviewing six craft teachers, which had worked in secondary school. The themes in this focused interview were structured on the strength of the previous surveys, which have defined the concept of complete craft process and suggested ways to support the phases of the complete craft process. These definitions and ways instructed also the content analysis of the transcribed data. There were also used the ways of phenomenology analysis in the examining of teachers’ understandings. Results and conclusions. The teachers defined the complete craft process as pupil-oriented way of making crafts. In their opinion the phases of creation, design, making and reflection can be executed in the same time and repeated during the craft process. The phases can also get different kind of emphasis. Even though all interviwed teachers told a lot of reasons for the execution of complete craft process from the view of learning, some of them found reasons for craft teaching partially for example in teaching craft techniques. The teachers’ ways of support the phases of complete craft process surrounded the themes of pupil-orientation, interactive learning, personal instructing and conceptualization of the complete craft process by documenting the phases. The supporting ways of execution of complete craft process can be divided to teacher’s skills, attitudes ja pedagogic decisions. Pupil-oriented teaching requires that teacher has knowledge about pupils and openness for pupils’ ideas. The teaching should also be done according to the pupils’ skills. The assignments should instruct pupils to master the complete craft process within the limits of the using resources. The formulating of this kind of assignments presumes that teacher acquires the concept of complete craft process as the foundation of craft teaching and motivates pupils by engaging and encouraging them in the craft process.
  • Vähävihu, Elina (2008)
    In this study the researcher wanted to show the observed connection of mathematics and textile work. To carry this out the researcher designed a textbook by herself for the upper secondary school in Tietoteollisuuden Naiset - TiNA project at Helsinki University of Technology (URL:http://tina.tkk.fi/). The assignments were designed as additional teaching material to enhance and reinforce female students confidence in mathematics and in the management of their textile work. The research strategy applied action research, out of which two cycles two have been carried out. The first cycle consists of establishing the textbook and in the second cycle its usability is investigated. The third cycle is not included in this report. In the second cycle of the action research the data was collected from 15 teachers, five textile teachers, four mathematics teachers and six teachers of both subjects. They all got familiar with the textbook assignments and answered a questionnaire on the basis of their own teaching experience. The questionnaire was established by applying the theories of usability and teaching material assessment study. The data consisted of qualitative and quantitative information, which was analysed by content analysis with computer assisted table program to either qualitative or statistical description. According to the research results, the textbook assignments seamed to be applied better to mathematics lessons than textile work. The assignments pointed out, however, the clear interconnectedness of textile work and mathematics. Most of the assignments could be applied as such or as applications in the upper secondary school textile work and mathematics lessons. The textbook assignments were also applicable in different stages of the teaching process, e.g. as introduction, repetition or to support individual work or as group projects. In principle the textbook assignments were in well placed and designed in the correct level of difficulty. Negative findings concerned some too difficult assignments, lack of pupil motivation and unfamiliar form of task for the teacher. More clarity for some assignments was wished for and there was especially expressed a need for easy tasks and assignments in geometry. Assignments leading to the independent thinking of the pupil were additionally asked for. Two important improvements concerning the textbook attainability would be to get the assignments in html format over the Internet and to add a handicraft reference book.
  • Lehtelä, Heli (2018)
    The purpose of this BA thesis is to find how boys who have chosen to study textile work view studying textile work in school. The objective is to find tools with which to develop the teaching of textile work to a more interensting direction regardless of gender. Through the history of school education and even today textile work has been a remarkably genderized subject. In order to raise the stature of textile works and crafts in general it is imperative to seek ways to dismantle its genderization. As the national curriculum of 2014 merges the subjects of textile work and techical work into one subject of crafts it is necessary to find ways to keep students willing to choose textile work as an optional subject. The material of the thesis was gathered in May 2012 by identifying the eighth and ninth grade upper elementary school boys who have chosen textile work as an optional subject in the area consisting of North Karelia, Northern Savonia and Southern Savonia. Twentyfive of such boys could be found in nine communities. After this charting a thematic interview was conducted with thirteen boys in seven communities. The interviews were either single interviews, dual interviews or group interviews. After transcription the interviews were deconstructed by the means of content analysis, thematizing and categorizing themes into main categories. The results indicated a largely positive experience of textile work as a school subject. According to research textile work was considered a more pleasant subject than theoretical subjects, with the permitted socialization with peers being a part of its appeal. In order to keep textile work meaningful to a student it is imperative that the student is able to choose a subject with a concrete meaning and personal importance to work on. Also of importance is that the student is able to utilize a technique best suitable to attain the desired result. Although the common notion of textile work is that of a girls' subject, this kind of genderization is not visible in the everyday life of studies. Students are always individuals reagardless of gender. The teacher is the pivotal part of making the subject they teach a success.