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Featured researches published by Piet Ankiewicz.


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 1999

Assessing South Africa Learners’ Attitudes Towards Technology by Using the PATT (Pupils’ Attitudes Towards Technology) Questionnaire

Susan van Rensburg; Piet Ankiewicz; Chris Myburgh

The PATT (Pupils’ Attitude Towards Technology) questionnaire, as validated for the USA, was used to assess and analyse South African learners’ attitudes towards technology. The responses of 500 girls and 510 boys, from the Gauteng Province in South Africa, were analysed using a principal component and a principal factor analysis. The explained variance was rather low and indicated that the questionnaire needed adaptation for the South African context. The outcomes of the research were positive in that there were no significant differences regarding the gender attitudes that ‘technology should be for all’ and that ‘technology makes contributions to society’. The fact that girls have a stronger gender discrimination view related to themselves regarding technology needs to be addressed in future curriculum development issues.


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 1995

The planning of technology education for South African schools

Piet Ankiewicz

One of the recommendations made in the discussion document,A Curriculum Model for Education in South Africa (CUMSA), which was released by the Department of National Education in 1991, is that technology education should be offered for the first nine years of pre-tertiary education as a compulsory subject and for the last three years as an optional subject. This paper aims to locate technology education in the context of the sociopolitical and economic background to education in South Africa and to assess to what extent it meets the emerging aims and needs of education. Further aims are to propose a rationale for the teaching of technology at school level in South Africa, to suggest possible broad aims for the teaching of technology, to outline the nature and character of technology education relevant to the South African situation and to propose a possible methodology for technology education in South Africa. The conclusion is reached that technology education can make an important contribution to South African education if the so-called ‘technological process’ is the major emphasis as this can be transformative and promote quality education.


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 2001

Assessing the Attitudinal Technology Profile of South African Learners: A Pilot Study

Piet Ankiewicz; Susan van Rensburg; Chris Myburgh

Various instruments measuring either technological literacy or pupils’ attitudes towards technology are available. Recent research has emphasised that these instruments have not been validated for the South African context, yielded invalid and unreliable data for this specific context, and should therefore be adapted (Ankiewicz, Myburgh & Van Rensburg, 1996; Van Rensburg, Ankiewicz & Myburgh, 1996a, 1996b, 1999).The concept technology profile refers to learners’ knowledge and understanding of technology, their awareness of it, their values and attitudes towards technology, and their technological capability. It also refers to the extent to which these aspects have become part of the learners’ personality, beliefs, perceptions and behaviour. At the PATT (South Africa) Conference, held during October 1996, the developments regarding the design of an Attitudinal Technology Profile (ATP) questionnaire to evaluate the effects of curricula on the technology profile of learners in South African schools, were reported. At the time of the conference, the ATP questionnaire still had to be applied in order to establish its reliability and validity (Ankiewicz et al., 1996, p. 90). This article reports on this application of the ATP questionnaire.A quantitative pilot study was undertaken among 439 South African learners in Grades 9 and 10 in the Gauteng Province in the Johannesburg/Soweto area to determine their attitudinal technology profile. Differences among the learners with regard to their exposure to Technology Education, as well as gender differences, were also investigated. The conclusion is that the ATP questionnaire provides more reliable and valid results than its western counterpart that have been applied in South Africa.


African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education | 2015

The development and use of an instrument to investigate science teachers' views on indigenous knowledge

Annelize Cronje; Josef de Beer; Piet Ankiewicz

Science teachers in South Africa and globally experience difficulties with the integration of indigenous knowledge into their science lessons—a requirement of many science curricula. One of the reasons for this may relate to the views teachers hold about indigenous knowledge. Such views can form a barrier against successful inclusion of indigenous knowledge in the science classroom. It was, therefore, deemed useful to investigate teachers’ views on indigenous knowledge. This article reports on the development of a theoretical framework, and a questionnaire derived from it, to investigate teachers’ views on indigenous knowledge. The researchers were informed by the framework developed by Lederman, Abd-El-Khalick, Bell and Schwartz regarding the nature of science (NOS) and their views-on-the-NOS questionnaire. A qualitative study was done to develop and validate the views-on-the-nature-of-indigenous-knowledge instrument (VNOIK). The findings indicate that the VNOIK instrument is suitable to determine a wide range of views of science teachers on the nature of indigenous knowledge. We found that South African science teachers held mainly a partially informed view on the nature of indigenous knowledge. The new instrument can be used to measure the effect of a short learning programme and to identify further development needs of science teachers in addressing the tenets of science and indigenous knowledge effectively in the classroom.


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 2006

Some Implications of the Philosophy of Technology for Science, Technology and Society (STS) Studies.

Piet Ankiewicz; Estelle De Swardt; Marc J. de Vries


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 2003

The Essential Features of Technology and Technology Education: A Conceptual Framework for the Development of OBE (Outcomes Based Education) Related Programmes in Technology Education

Vassy Reddy; Piet Ankiewicz; Estelle De Swardt; Elna Gross


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 2010

A process-based assessment framework for technology education: a case study

Elsabé van Niekerk; Piet Ankiewicz; Estelle De Swardt


South African Journal of Education | 2007

An industry-sponsored, school-focused model for continuing professional development of technology teachers

Werner Engelbrecht; Piet Ankiewicz; Estelle De Swardt


International Journal of Technology and Design Education | 2004

A Synergy between the Technological Process and a Methodology for Web Design: Implications for Technological Problem Solving and Design

Maria Jakovljevic; Piet Ankiewicz; Estelle De Swardt; Elna Gross


South African Journal of Education | 2001

Indicators of creativity in a technology class: a case study

S. Vandeleur; Piet Ankiewicz; A.E. De Swardt; Elna Gross

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Estelle De Swardt

University of Johannesburg

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Elna Gross

Rand Afrikaans University

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Maria Jakovljevic

University of South Africa

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Josef de Beer

University of Johannesburg

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Chris Myburgh

Rand Afrikaans University

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Ann Miiller

Rand Afrikaans University

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Annelize Cronje

University of Johannesburg

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Elizabeth Steyn

Rand Afrikaans University

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