Close menu

SURE

Sunderland Repository records the research produced by the University of Sunderland including practice-based research and theses.

Primary Design and Technology: Perceptions and practice

Bell, D, Martin, M, Wooff, David and McLain, M (2016) Primary Design and Technology: Perceptions and practice. PATT32 Conference Proceedings . Delph Univeristy, Utrect, The Netherlands, pp. 86-94.

Item Type: Book

Abstract

Design and technology is recognised in many countries as a valuable subject in developing children?s knowledge and skills about materials, as well as decision making through creative design processes. As such it makes a unique contribution to a child?s general education and provides a foundation for future work with all forms of technology across professional and personal lives. However in England and Wales, the countries where the subject was first conceived, following educational policy change and the subject?s exclusion from the English Baccalaureate, design and technology is persistently required to justify its place within the curriculum (DATA 2011). Amid concerns that primary teachers are insufficiently trained to teach design and technology (DATA 2015) and set within the context of primary education and building upon findings from earlier research (Bell et al. 2016), which sought to establish the range of design and technology work currently being undertaken in primary schools, this paper presents next phase research findings. Constructivist grounded theory (Charmaz 2006) is the adopted method, and drawing upon empirically grounded data, this paper explores the attitudes and perceptions of primary school teachers. Participants were encouraged to reflect upon their own experience, to establish if they believe they received sufficient subject specific training. Work then explores their perceptions, to determine if they perceive that their personal subject knowledge has a direct impact upon the breadth and quality of work undertaken. Emergent findings are discussed in relation to the value placed upon of design and technology, and findings suggest that curriculum delivery is compromised where teacher confidence is low. Future work will seek to investigate teacher perceptions further, aiming to explore the correlation between teacher?s personal subject knowledge and the quality and creativity of work undertaken in design and technology, with a particular focus upon how knowledge is constructed and understanding developed.

[img]
Preview
PDF
PATT Conference Paper Primary Design and Technology Perceptions and Practice.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (340kB) | Preview

More Information

Depositing User: David Wooff

Identifiers

Item ID: 9838
URI: http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/9838
Official URL: https://www.iteea.org/File.aspx?id=39504

Users with ORCIDS

ORCID for David Wooff: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6284-7149

Catalogue record

Date Deposited: 17 Sep 2018 15:37
Last Modified: 18 Dec 2019 16:07

Contributors

Author: David Wooff ORCID iD
Author: D Bell
Author: M Martin
Author: M McLain

University Divisions

Faculty of Education and Society
Faculty of Education and Society > School of Education

Subjects

Education > Primary Education
Education

Actions (login required)

View Item (Repository Staff Only) View Item (Repository Staff Only)