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Summary
The publication presents the results of a case study of which
the objective was to answer the following question: What is the
effect of various forms of practice-related teaching in the general
basic subjects on the outcome that various student types gain from
the teaching?
The study is part of a research project, which concludes with
the following report entitled: “Is it possible to learn theory in
practice? A theoretical and empirical analysis of practicerelated
teaching within the vocational education programmes”
(Aarkrog, 2007).
The content and design of the study
At the outset, the three elements of the study are defined:
Forms of practice-related teaching
Outcome of the teaching
Student types
Based on interviews with teachers of the general basic subjects
about how they relate their teaching to practice, various forms
of practice-related teaching were defined using the following
two variables:
The first variable concerns the relation between theory and
practice, where the distinction goes between theory-based and
practice-based teaching. During theory-based teaching, the
students tend to learn theory working in their classrooms or in
laboratories, and practice is included either as examples of the
theory or – in science – via experiments. During practicebased
teaching, the students solve tasks or problems via one
form of practice or another, for instance in the college/school
workshop or perhaps in an outside location, and theory is
included as a tool in solving the tasks/problems or theory is learnt via the solutions of the tasks/problems. During this
study, we focused on practice-related teaching, where the
intention is that the students learn theory by solving the
tasks/problems in practice.
The other variable describes the spectrum between two
extremes: teacher-controlled instruction and students’
independent work. Teacher-controlled instruction means
instruction where the teacher formulates the tasks or experiments
that the students are expected to carry out and/or where
the teacher instructs the students extensively in, for instance,
problems solving. By students’ independent work, we mean
learning situations where the students themselves work with
solving tasks/problems and where the teacher functions as an
adviser or consultant.
Crossing the two variables provides the opportunity of
formulating four forms of practice-related courses:
- Courses that are theory-based and prioritise teachercontrolled
instruction
- Courses that are theory-based and prioritise students’
independent work
- Courses that are practice-based and prioritise teachercontrolled
instruction
- Courses that are practice-based and prioritise students’
independent work
A central result of the study is that no example of the third
form of practice-related teaching was found. This is particularly
significant, as this form of teaching has proved particularly
attractive for the students within the vocational education
programmes.
The outcome that students gain from their teaching includes
their motivation to learn theory and their learning outcome.
The following three levels are used to describe the students’
learning outcome:
- Can the students retell what they have learnt?
- Have the students understood what they have learnt?
- Can the students use what they have learnt?
The student types included in the study represent either end of
the spectrum in terms of proficiency in the basic subjects, i.e.
the stronger and weaker students respectively.
The following four assumptions form the basis of the study:
- The students are better motivated to learn theory in
practice-based than in theory-based teaching.
- The students’ understanding of theory develops better in
theory-based than in practice-based teaching.
- Teacher-controlled instruction has a positive effect on the
students’ ability to understand theory, while students’
independent work does not necessarily have the same
effect.
- The stronger students can benefit from the practicerelated
teaching, which prioritises students’ independent
work, while the weaker students need the instruction to
be teacher-controlled in order for them to benefit.
The results of the study
- Teaching that clearly relates to practice makes sense to
stronger and weaker students alike. The relation to
practice is particularly clear when the students work with
theory in connection with practical tasks or problems.
Generally, the students would prefer to work with practical
tasks in the workshop rather than theory in the classroom.
Thus, the students are motivated to learn when
they work in situations closely resembling practice as is
the case in practice-based teaching.
- Form affects outcome: the form of teaching – which in
this project means whether the practice-related teaching
is theory or practice-based – has an effect on the students’
outcome of the teaching, as they learn different things via the two forms. While the students getting
theory-based teaching learn theory, practice-based
teaching provides experience in, for example, taking
measurements in practice. Working in practice does not
necessarily provide a faster understanding of theory. In
fact, practice-based teaching can take time away from
learning the theory rather than supporting it. Compared
with practice-based teaching, the forms of theory-based
teaching in this study are best suited when the objective
is that the students are to learn theory.
- Stronger and weaker students alike do not generally
attach great importance to whether their teaching is
theory or practice-based; what is important to them is
whether their teacher helps them or not. In practicebased
teaching, the students are – to a much greater
extent – left to their own devices than in theory-based
teaching. This means that even though both stronger and
weaker students are motivated by working in practice and
would therefore be expected to prefer practice-based
teaching, particularly the weaker students criticise this
form of teaching for being founded too heavily on the
students’ independent work.
- While the stronger students seem to benefit from the
practice-related teaching, irrespective of whether it is
theory or practice-based and irrespective of whether it
prioritises teacher control or the students’ independent
work, the same cannot necessarily be said for the weaker
students. One reason is that these students need to
practise basic skills, such as arithmetic.
- Thus, the weaker students need the practice-related
instruction to be teacher-controlled, as this form of
instruction has a positive effect on the students’ learning
of theory. The weaker students need the teacher to
explain the theory for them and help them retain the
overview as to how theory and practice hang together.
In brief, the study shows that:
It makes sense for the students if the teaching they receive
in the basic subjects relates to practice in a way that they
recognise. The students prefer to learn by solving practical
tasks/problems and for that reason, they find the practicebased
versions of practice-related teaching (i.e. 3 and 4 on
page 2) particularly attractive. However, as the study shows
that the most prevalent of these by far is form of teaching no.
4 (cp. page 2), which is characterised by a significant element
of students’ independent work, during which time the
teacher’s function becomes that of a supervisor or consultant
and as the study also shows that the teacher’s help, teaching
and ability to explain have a major impact on the students’
satisfaction with and outcome of the teaching, there is a
definite requirement to further develop the practice-related
teaching in the general basic subjects, combining practicebased
instruction with teacher control (cp. form of instruction
no. 3 on page 2).
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København: Danmarks Pædagogiske Universitet.
Undervisningsministeriets temahæfteserie
I denne serie udsender Undervisningsministeriet publikationer om generelle eller mere specifikke
aktuelle emner. Formålet er at skabe debat og inspirere til udvikling i uddannelserne.
2005:
Nr. 1: Frafald i erhvervsuddannelserne – årsager og forklaringer (internetpublikation)
(Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
2006:
Nr. 1: Åbne læringsmiljøer i erhvervsuddannelser – læringsforløb og sammenhænge
(UVM 7-369) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Nr. 2: Praktikuddannelse med elevens læring i fokus – kompetenceudvikling i SOSUuddannelserne
(UVM 7-370) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Nr. 3: Entreprenørskab i de videregående uddannelser. Innovation og iværksætteri
inden for KVU og MVU (UVM 8-049) (Videregående uddannelser)
Nr. 4: Naturfagene i bevægelse. Når folkeskolelærere udvikler undervisning (internetpublikation)
(Grundskolen)
Nr. 5: Vejledning om disciplin, god adfærd og trivsel i folkeskolen – et inspirationshæfte
(UVM 5-470) (Grundskolen)
Nr. 6: Tosprogede børns overgang fra dagtilbud til skole – fokus på den sproglige
udvikling (internetpublikation) (Grundskolen)
Nr. 7: Undervisning i demokrati – inspiration til grundskoler og ungdomsuddannelser
(UVM 5-471) (Grundskolen og ungdomsuddannelser)
Nr. 8: Evalueringskultur på erhvervsskolerne. Hvad, hvorfor og hvordan? (UVM 7-
372) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Nr. 9: De faglige udvalg og den gode praktikoplæring. Styrkelse af erhvervsuddannelsernes
praktikdel (internetpublikation) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Nr. 10: Hold fast! Initiativer til fastholdelse af tosprogede og praktisk orienterede unge i
erhvervsuddannelserne (UVM 7-374) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
2007:
Nr. 1: Introduktion til den nye karakterskala. 7-trinsskalaen og bedømmelser i
erhvervsfaglige uddannelser (dvd og booklet) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Nr. 2: Det bli’r sjovere og sjovere. Bedre erhvervsuddannelser med it (978-87-603-
2650-9) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Nr. 3: Innovationskraft på professionshøjskoler (978-87-603-2654-7) (Videregående
uddannelser)
Nr. 4: Hvis det skal gi’ mening… Elevernes udbytte af praksisrelateret undervisning i
erhvervsuddannelserne (978-87-603-2652-3) (Erhvervsfaglige uddannelser)
Hvordan indvirker forskellige former for praksisrelateret
undervisning i de almene grundfag på forskellige elevtypers
udbytte af undervisningen?
Dette spørgsmål belyses i publikationen, som indeholder
resultaterne af en undersøgelse, der var en del af
forskningsprojektet “Kan man lære teori i praksis? En
teoretisk og empirisk analyse af praksisrelateret undervisning
i erhvervsuddannelserne” gennemført af Vibe
Aarkrog, Danmarks Pædagogiske Universitetsskole og
publiceret i 2007.
Resultaterne af undersøgelsen viser blandt andet, at
- det giver mening for eleverne, når grundfagsundervisningen
relaterer sig til en praksis, de kan genkende
- eleverne foretrækker at arbejde med løsning af praktiske
opgaver
- lærerens hjælp, instruktion og evne til at forklare har
afgørende betydning for elevernes tilfredshed med og
udbytte af undervisningen
- der er behov for at videreudvikle den praksisrelaterede
undervisning i de almene grundfag, med henblik på
at eleverne lærer at anvende teori i praksis.
Denne side indgår i publikationen " Hvis det skal gi' mening…" © Undervisningsministeriet 2007
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