在技术教育中激励女学生:在STEM技术教育管道中保持并蓬勃发展

V. Knopke, Bernardo LeÏŒn de la Barra
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摘要

学习是一个积极的过程,当学生的动机是自主的时候,学习的效果是最好的。本文将批评影响学生参与技术教育科目的动机因素,重点是高中女生。在解释了技术教育和激励因素之后,该评论将研究由不同作者确定的激励现代青年参与非义务教育的因素。事实上,个人动机和群体动机的起源需要从年轻人如何利用自我价值来参与学校为他们设计的实践中来探索。特别令人感兴趣的是学校采取措施让女性参与以技术为中心的课程。澳大利亚的数据显示,年轻的女性学习者没有通过数学、科学、工程或技术(STEM)课程表达能力,因此也没有参加工程等高等教育课程。该评论采用了女性主义建构主义的观点,并将借鉴2013年在高中进行的研究。早期的研究声称,在学习过程中要制作的人工制品和选择的自由对学生作为技术教育参与者的动机影响最大。对于一些学生来说,这些因素通过扩大他们的反思性和自主性来影响他们的内在动机。通过在材料、技术和产品方面提供明显的自由选择,学生的积极性似乎有所提高。在考察有关青年动机的研究中发现,价值观与个人和群体的兴趣和动机有着千丝万缕的联系。因此,价值观将在中学学生的教育背景下进行探索,重点是技术教育。本文的研究结果将为实践者提供长期改变技术教育项目中女性参与者课堂生态的策略。这些策略并不是要堵住STEM教育管道的漏洞,而是要建立一个性别管道,让女孩们觉得在家里做技术,不管她们的学校或班级是男女同校还是单性别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Motivating female students in technology education: Staying and thriving on the technology education pipeline of STEM
Learning is an active process that functions optimally when student’s motivation is autonomous. This paper will critique elements of motivation that impact on students’ engagement in Technology Education subjects with an emphasis on female students in senior secondary years of schooling. After interpreting Technology Education and motivational factors, the critique will examine elements identified by various authors as those which motivate modern day youth to engage in non-compulsory education. In fact, the origins of personal and group motivation need to be explored in terms of how youth utilise self-values to engage in practices that schools program for them. Of particular interest are the steps taken by schools to engage females in technology centred programs. Australian data show that young female learners are not articulating through to Mathematics, Science, Engineering, or Technology (STEM) classes and in turn not enrolling in tertiary courses such as Engineering. The critique takes a feminist constructionist view and will draw on research undertaken in senior secondary schools in 2013. Earlier studies have claimed that the artefacts to be made and freedom of choice in the learning process had the most effect on the motivation of students as participants in Technology Education. For some students these elements have affected their intrinsic motivation by expanding their reflectivity and feelings of autonomy. By providing an apparent freedom of choice in materials, techniques, and products to be made, student motivation appears to rise. In examining the research studies on what motivates youth - values are seen to be inextricably linked to the interests and motivation of both individuals and groups. Thus, values will be explored in the context of educational settings of students in the secondary years, with a focus on Technology Education. The implications of the findings in the paper will provide practitioners with strategies to alter the ecology of classrooms for female participants in Technology Education programs in the long term. Those strategies are not about plugging the leaks in the STEM education pipeline, but rather about building a gendered pipeline where girls feel at home doing Technology regardless of whether their school or class is co-educational or single-sex.
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