Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Teemu Valtonen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Teemu Valtonen.


Computers in Education | 2012

Perspectives on personal learning environments held by vocational students

Teemu Valtonen; Stina Hacklin; Patrick Dillon; Mikko Vesisenaho; Jari Kukkonen; Aija Hietanen

This article focuses on personal learning environments (PLEs). The idea with PLEs is to put students in a more central position in the learning process by allowing them to design their own learning environments and by emphasising the self-regulated nature of the learning. This study describes the structure, functions and challenges of PLEs made by 33 students from vocational and polytechnic level schools in Eastern Finland after the first year of using them. Document and artefact analysis revealed that students built their PLEs for: mirroring the conventional learning environment; as an environment for reflection; as an environment to showcase skills; and as an environment for collaboration and networking. Student reflections indicate that building and using a PLE is a challenging task which requires specific teacher and pedagogical support. Designing a PLE demands both ICT skills and an awareness of ones own learning methods.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2011

Confronting the technological pedagogical knowledge of Finnish Net Generation student teachers

Teemu Valtonen; Susanna Pöntinen; Jari Kukkonen; Patrick Dillon; Pertti Väisänen; Stina Hacklin

The research reported here is concerned with a critical examination of some of the assumptions concerning the ‘Net Generation’ capabilities of 74 first‐year student teachers in a Finnish university. There are assumptions that: (i) Net Generation students are adept at learning through discovery and thinking in a hypertext‐like manner (Oblinger & Oblinger, 2005; Prensky, 2001); and (ii) when they enter the teaching profession, members of this generation will be able to transfer these characteristics into their teaching practices (Prensky, 2001). The research is formulated around an extended framework for student teachers’ technological pedagogical knowledge. The students designed learning modules incorporating the use of information and communication technology (ICT). The learning modules were subjected to document and artefact analysis incorporating concept‐driven coding. Supplementary data were collected through a questionnaire concerned with the students’ adoption of new technologies. The findings suggest that assumptions about Net Generation student teachers’ abilities to adopt and adapt ICT in their teaching are highly questionable and that greater attention should be given to the development of their technological pedagogical knowledge.


Teachers and Teaching | 2017

Preparing teacher-students for twenty-first-century learning practices (PREP 21) : a framework for enhancing collaborative problem-solving and strategic learning skills

Päivi Häkkinen; Sanna Järvelä; Kati Mäkitalo-Siegl; Arto Ahonen; Piia Näykki; Teemu Valtonen

Abstract With regard to the growing interest in developing teacher education to match the twenty-first-century skills, while many assumptions have been made, there has been less theoretical elaboration and empirical research on this topic. The aim of this article is to present our pedagogical framework for the twenty-first-century learning practices in teacher education. We will first review the current status of policy frameworks for the twenty-first-century learning skills. Based on our previous work and current understanding in the field of learning sciences, we will next elaborate the processes and strategies for collaborative problem-solving skills and strategic learning skills to specify current, rather general claims presented regarding the discussion on twenty-first-century skills. We will also provide concrete case examples facilitating strategic learning skills, collaborative problem-solving skills, and the skills to use information and communication technologies in contexts of our previous studies.


Education and Information Technologies | 2016

Pre-service teachers' experiences of ICT in daily life and in educational contexts and their proto-technological pedagogical knowledge

Sini Kontkanen; Patrick Dillon; Teemu Valtonen; Sami Renkola; Mikko Vesisenaho; Pertti Väisänen

Many pre-service teachers are members of the net generation and are expected to be familiar with different ICTs, yet several studies have indicated that they are not necessarily able to use them for teaching and learning. The notion of teachers’ technological pedagogical knowledge (TPK) is central to this concern. In this study we use the responses of 146 pre-service teachers to open-ended questions about the experiences and knowledge of ICT and pedagogy they brought with them when they entered university teacher training. The data were analysed qualitatively with content analysis based on an integrative framework generated from a number of theoretical perspectives. Derived categories and subcategories were used to construct a framework for ‘proto-TPK’ as a basis for establishing a starting point for the coordinated development of TPK with students in their university training and early careers.


Education and Information Technologies | 2017

Insights into Finnish first-year pre-service teachers’ twenty-first century skills

Teemu Valtonen; Erkko Sointu; Jari Kukkonen; Päivi Häkkinen; Sanna Järvelä; Arto Ahonen; Piia Näykki; Johanna Pöysä-Tarhonen; Kati Mäkitalo-Siegl

This study focuses on Finnish pre-service teachers’ perceptions of their twenty-first century skills, especially their learning strategies, collaboration and teamwork, as well as knowledge and attitudes related to ICT in education. The target group consist of 263 first-year pre-service teachers from three universities. The results outline how pre-service teachers perceive their twenty-first century skills, the relationships between different areas of these skills, and the differences among pre-service teachers in terms of perceived skills. The results indicate that the pre-service teachers perceive themselves as skilled learners in terms of learning strategies used as well as collaboration and teamwork. When it comes to understanding how to use ICT in education, they perceived their level of knowledge lower. The strongest variation between respondents was seen in the areas of knowledge and attitudes related to the use of ICT in education.


Education and Information Technologies | 2014

Upper secondary and vocational level teachers at social software

Teemu Valtonen; Sini Kontkanen; Patrick Dillon; Jari Kukkonen; Pertti Väisänen

This study focuses on upper secondary and vocational level teachers as users of social software i.e. what software they use during their leisure and work and for what purposes they use software in teaching. The study is theorised within a technological pedagogical content knowledge framework, the emphasis is especially on technological knowledge and technological pedagogical knowledge. Four hundred thirty seven teachers were surveyed using an online questionnaire with Likert scaled statements and open-ended questions. Results suggest that the number of different types of social software actively used for teaching is small and that the potential of social software as a tool for supporting collaborative learning has not yet been realised. Discussion of the results is framed in the context of teachers’ developing technological pedagogical content knowledge.


Technology, Knowledge, and Learning | 2018

Education Systems in the Digital Age: The Need for Alignment

Deirdre Butler; Margaret Leahy; Peter Twining; Ben Akoh; Yousra Chtouki; Sara Farshadnia; Kanda Moore; Roumen Nikolov; Carlos Pascual; Barbara Sherman; Teemu Valtonen

The focus of Thematic Working Group 1 at EDUsummIT 2017 centred on the need for alignment in education systems and was driven by two key questions relating to (a) if and how all the parts of an education system work together to support the type of learning envisioned in the twenty-first century, and (b) if there is alignment, what is the purpose/vision of that education system and does it meet the needs of its learners. Arising from the discussions held, the group advocated the use of a tool such as the UNESCO framework (ICT competency standards for teachers: competency standards modules, UNESCO, Paris, 2008a; ICT competency standards for teachers: policy framework, UNESCO, Paris, 2011) as a way to conceptualize a systemic approach to reform and to enable policy makers and stakeholders in a system to think about ways in which they can align changes with the goals of any proposed reform. Taking the Irish Education system as an example, this paper illustrates how the UNESCO framework has enabled policy makers in Ireland to adopt a systemic approach to policy formulation which aligns educational strategies across a range of elements “to leverage strengths, coordinate investments, consolidate gains, and advance national development goals and visions” (Kozma in Hum Technol Interdiscip J Hum ICT Environ 1(2):117–156, 2005). To counter the potential danger of a top-down imposition of the UNESCO framework, the group also proposed the Educational Vision and Mission Framework (EVMF) as a tool to support system wide (both top-down and bottom-up) reflection on the purposes of schooling in a rapidly changing world. The group concluded that what is defined as the purpose of education should inform alignment and suggest that application of the UNESCO framework and EVMF could enable the necessary alignment to support the educational, social, and economic transformation necessary for the complex connected global world of today and tomorrow.


BMC Medical Education | 2018

Medical certificate education: controlled study between lectures and flipped classroom.

Nina Tusa; Erkko Sointu; Helena Kastarinen; Teemu Valtonen; Anna Kaasinen; Laura Hirsto; Markku Saarelainen; Kati Mäkitalo; Pekka Mäntyselkä

BackgroundFinnish permanent residents are covered by social security insurance administered by the Social Insurance Institution of Finland. The procedure of insurance is initiated with medical certificate written by the treating doctor. Thus, the doctor must have certificate writing skills accompanied with the knowledge of the content and goals for insurance. Quality certificates are important part of doctors’ professional skills worldwide and most effective teaching methods for learning these should be investigated.MethodsMedical certificate data were collected from two independent courses of fourth-year student taught in autumn 2015 (N = 141) and 2016 (N = 142) in the medical faculty of the University of Eastern Finland. A random sample of 40 students per course was drawn for the analysis. All certificates were analyzed as one sample. This was done to obtain reliable results with internal control group on the differences between two teaching methods, the traditional approach and the flipped classroom (FC) approach, in 2015 and 2016, respectively. The medical certificates were evaluated and scored with a rubric (range: − 4.00–14.25) by two independent experienced specialists.ResultsCompared to students in the traditional classroom, students involved in the FC received significantly higher scores in all relevant sections of the assessed certificates. The mean of the total scores was 8.87 (SD = 1.70) for the traditional group and 10.97 (SD = 1.25) for the FC group. Based on the common language effect size, a randomly selected student from the FC group had an 85% probability of receiving a higher total score than a student from the traditional group.ConclusionIn this study, the FC approach resulted in a statistical significant improvement in the content and technical quality of the certificates. The results suggest that the FC approach can be applied in the teaching of medical certificate writing.


Computers in Education | 2015

The impact of authentic learning experiences with ICT on pre-service teachers' intentions to use ICT for teaching and learning

Teemu Valtonen; Jari Kukkonen; Sini Kontkanen; Kari Sormunen; Patrick Dillon; Erkko Sointu


International Journal of Educational Research | 2010

Net generation at social software: Challenging assumptions, clarifying relationships and raising implications for learning

Teemu Valtonen; Patrick Dillon; Stina Hacklin; Pertti Väisänen

Collaboration


Dive into the Teemu Valtonen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jari Kukkonen

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Dillon

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erkko Sointu

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sini Kontkanen

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kati Mäkitalo-Siegl

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mikko Vesisenaho

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pertti Väisänen

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sari Havu-Nuutinen

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Stina Hacklin

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Susanna Pöntinen

University of Eastern Finland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge