Litcius/Paper detail

How pre-service teachers perceive their 21st-century skills and dispositions: A longitudinal perspective

Teemu Valtonen, Nhi Hoang, Erkko Sointu, Piia Näykki, Anne Virtanen, Johanna Pöysä‐Tarhonen, Päivi Häkkinen, Sanna Järvelä, Kati Mäkitalo, Jari Kukkonen

2020Computers in Human Behavior162 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Research-based discussions about 21st-century skills are currently needed; 21st-century skills refer to skills that today's students are expected to possess for successful future careers. The ways students perceive these skills or what kind of dispositions they have in this regard are significant. This paper provides an overview of the development of pre-service teachers' perceived 21st-century skills and dispositions. The quantitative data was collected in three phases during 2014, 2015, and 2016 at three Finnish universities. The number of respondents at each measurement point varied from 209 to 267. Data were analysed using latent growth curve modeling. The study focuses on students' perceptions of three areas related to 21st-century skills: learning skills, collaboration dispositions, and skills to use ICT. The results show that the three areas evolved in different ways. Learning skills and collaboration dispositions show up as yearly assessments that remain at the same level, with small differences among respondents, unlike skills to use ICT with bigger yearly changes. The measured areas also appear as separate entities throughout the bachelor's studies, with small or non-significant correlations. These results reveal important new perspectives on how pre-service teachers perceive 21st-century skills and how perceptions evolve during teacher education.

Topics & Concepts

Bachelor21st century skillsPsychologyPerspective (graphical)PerceptionSkills managementPedagogyInformation and Communications TechnologyPoint (geometry)Mathematics educationMedical educationGeographyPolitical scienceComputer scienceMathematicsArtificial intelligenceLawGeometryMedicineNeuroscienceArchaeologyDigital literacy in educationInnovative Teaching and Learning MethodsEducational Strategies and Epistemologies