Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future

Digital skills are a prerequisite today for working, studying, civic participation, and maintaining social relationships in our digitalised technical world. These skills are also important both as a general goal and an instrument for learning. This study briefly presents the aims that are related to...

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Main Authors: Meri-Tuulia Kaarakainen, Suvi-Sadetta Kaarakainen, Antero Kivinen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies 2018-09-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
Online Access:https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/2520
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spelling doaj-99a6a37a489e421892add67f4f7253b62020-11-25T00:07:03ZengNordic Journal of Science and Technology StudiesNordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies1894-46472018-09-016110.5324/njsts.v6i1.2520Seeking Adequate Competencies for the FutureMeri-Tuulia Kaarakainen0Suvi-Sadetta Kaarakainen1Antero Kivinen2Research Unit for the Sociology of Education, University of TurkuResearch Unit for the Sociology of Education, University of TurkuResearch Unit for the Sociology of Education, University of TurkuDigital skills are a prerequisite today for working, studying, civic participation, and maintaining social relationships in our digitalised technical world. These skills are also important both as a general goal and an instrument for learning. This study briefly presents the aims that are related to digital skills of the Finnish curricula, and explores, using a large sample (N = 3,206) of Finnish upper secondary school students, these young people’s digital skills and their distribution. The study provides new insights into the state of these skills and differences found in them and focuses on the relationship between these results and the students’ present educational choices and future study/employment intentions. The actual variability of digital skills among upper secondary students is one of the main findings of the study. On the same educational level, it was found that digital skills vary enormously, particularly for students’ current educational choices and their future intentions. Digital skills are also distinctly associated with age for 15 to 22-year-olds. At the same time, gender alone appears to have no prominent effect on the level or adeptness of upper secondary school students’ digital skills. https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/2520
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meri-Tuulia Kaarakainen
Suvi-Sadetta Kaarakainen
Antero Kivinen
spellingShingle Meri-Tuulia Kaarakainen
Suvi-Sadetta Kaarakainen
Antero Kivinen
Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future
Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
author_facet Meri-Tuulia Kaarakainen
Suvi-Sadetta Kaarakainen
Antero Kivinen
author_sort Meri-Tuulia Kaarakainen
title Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future
title_short Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future
title_full Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future
title_fullStr Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future
title_full_unstemmed Seeking Adequate Competencies for the Future
title_sort seeking adequate competencies for the future
publisher Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
series Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies
issn 1894-4647
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Digital skills are a prerequisite today for working, studying, civic participation, and maintaining social relationships in our digitalised technical world. These skills are also important both as a general goal and an instrument for learning. This study briefly presents the aims that are related to digital skills of the Finnish curricula, and explores, using a large sample (N = 3,206) of Finnish upper secondary school students, these young people’s digital skills and their distribution. The study provides new insights into the state of these skills and differences found in them and focuses on the relationship between these results and the students’ present educational choices and future study/employment intentions. The actual variability of digital skills among upper secondary students is one of the main findings of the study. On the same educational level, it was found that digital skills vary enormously, particularly for students’ current educational choices and their future intentions. Digital skills are also distinctly associated with age for 15 to 22-year-olds. At the same time, gender alone appears to have no prominent effect on the level or adeptness of upper secondary school students’ digital skills.
url https://www.ntnu.no/ojs/index.php/njsts/article/view/2520
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AT suvisadettakaarakainen seekingadequatecompetenciesforthefuture
AT anterokivinen seekingadequatecompetenciesforthefuture
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