Agendas, influences, and capability: perspectives on practice in design and technology education.
Date
2019Author
Doyle, Andrew
Seery, Niall
Canty, Donal
Buckley, Jeffrey
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
A philosophical shift in policy now situates the development of technological
capability as the focus of Irish technology education. Internationally, the effectiveness of
curricular reform in the discipline has previously been called to question, as the legacy of
the preceding vocational craft subjects has been seen to throttle the evolution of practice in
aligning with emergent policy. As Irish technology education shares this vocational heritage,
this research seeks to explore the effectiveness of policy change through an investigation
of current practices in the discipline. Specifically, this research seeks to explore the
alignment of teachers’ perceptions of practice in terms of the focus of learning activities
and educational outcomes as prescribed by curricula. A methodological framework was
developed to explore teachers’ (n = 15) perceptions, ecologically rooted in the tasks and
activities they use to teach in their classrooms. The results suggest a misalignment between
what teachers conceive as important to the discipline, and their enacted practices. The
paper unpacks the contentions surrounding this misalignment and discusses factors which
appear to influence teachers’ perceptions, forming a greater understanding of what influences
practice in the discipline.
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: