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Articles

Home economics education: exploring integrative learning

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Pages 87-104 | Received 13 Nov 2017, Accepted 27 Dec 2018, Published online: 28 Jan 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Background: The latest curriculum reforms in Finland have shifted the aims of education towards learning how to learn, and the secondary education sector is already required to teach integrative skills. This study seeks to understand how these curricular demands can be fulfilled in the context of the subject of home economics in secondary education through an integrative approach to learning. This approach integrates knowledge from different school subjects to help students gain a broader perspective, thereby helping develop integrative thinkers with interdisciplinary skills. The study adopts the sociocultural learning approach, focusing on the tools used in learning – material tools, psychological tools and other humans as tools.

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to answer the following research question: What kind of tools and pedagogical arrangements support an approach to learning in home economics lessons that integrates other school subjects?

Methods: The data were collected from three Finnish comprehensive schools in the form of audio and video recordings of five different home economics lessons that followed the principles of integrative learning. The collected data set underwent a qualitative content analysis.

Results: The results describe the variations in home economics lessons in terms of their implementation, supportive tools and pedagogical arrangements used in the learning tasks. Analysis indicated that all three kinds of tools – material, psychological and other humans – were used to support the integrative approach to learning. The pedagogical arrangements supporting the integrative approach to learning were identified as differing in terms of who led the integration; whether the integration was based on knowledge, skills, experiences, methods or materials; whether the pupils from different subjects were mixed in a meaningful way; and whether the objectives and themes of the lesson were of an integrative nature.

Conclusion: The study suggests that differences in the integrative implementations of the lessons can complement each other; however, this is the case only if the integrative nature of the lessons is clarified to the pupils.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1. Currently, in Finland, home economics is a compulsory subject taught by subject teachers at the lower secondary level, usually in the seventh grade (pupil aged 13–14 years). After this, pupils can choose home economics as an optional subject according to school-specific guidelines (FNCC Citation2014).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Elli Suninen and the Rachel Troberg Fund.

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