2.6.2. Educational Policy Aspects of Teaching and Learning Digital Skills in Hungary

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In Hungary, the 2012 official National Curriculum (NAT) included digital competences as one of the eight key competences of learners in the public education (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2012). Competent users of technology were defined as individuals who are able to localise and use digital content made available via modern digital devices and are also able to use it critically and ethically in various fields of life, such as communities, work, communication and recreation. This latest, 2020 NAT expanded the necessities of digital competences in the Hungarian public educational system, and schools are now required to teach a new subject, Digital Culture, from grades three to 11 (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2020). Apart from launching a new subject, digital skills were included in the specific descriptions of each key educational stage with prescribed desired achievements, such as by the end of grade four, learners should have achieved using print as well as digital dictionaries appropriate for their age (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2020, p. 305). The 2020 NAT also lists six key achievements learners ought to master as part of their Digital Culture studies (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2020, p. 428), these are:

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  1. digital literacy and problem-solving skills;
  2. preparing for the application and synthesis of the digital competences;
  3. the skill of constructing knowledge from several digital sources;
  4. handling and preventing problematic/dangerous situations as a result of the application of digital devices;
  5. developing autonomous/self-directed user attitude on the levels of the individual, the community and society;
  6. learning how to solve problems with the help of digital devices including choosing, altering, or creating the necessary algorithms to overcome a specific problem.
 

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The 2020 NAT also lists more specific areas that should be included in the subject of Digital Culture. To illustrate these areas, Figure 6 was created.
 

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Figure 6 Topics of the Subject Digital Culture From Grades 3 to 12
Note. Based on the Hungarian Official Gazette (2020, p. 429).
 

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While such an improvement of the National Curriculum is welcome, the extent to which this new subject is able to fulfil its potential remains a question for the future. As seen in Figure 6, some concepts surrounding inclusion are rather enigmatic (e.g., creating algorithms and formal programming languages) and raises the question whether the element is defined or understood the same by various educational environments. Moreover, the extent to which teachers are prepared to teach all aspects of the requirements is a further to be considered.

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In the Hungarian higher educational context, the skills and competences ought to be mastered by learners are detailed in the training and outcome requirements (KKK), out of which one specifically targets Teacher Education majors’ competences (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2013). According to this, all teacher education programmes should vest learners with sufficient digital skills appropriate to their chosen field of education. These include mastering the skill and need to stay updated in the digital fields linked to one’s subjects, knowing and using digital alternatives such as digital coursebooks, and – quite progressively – requires future teachers to be experienced in the digital alternatives of teaching their subjects (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2013). This signals that the KKK acknowledges the fact that digital technologies are expansions of teachers’ sets of skills and should be mastered simultaneously with more traditional, classroom-based teaching approaches. As opposed to the public educational sphere, the KKK regulating teacher educational programmes requires universities to establish and teach those digital competences that are context-sensitive, while their implementation rests with the universities (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2013). Furthermore, in Hungary, the law does not require university teachers in any field to hold any qualifications specific to digital technologies. It only states that 60% of instructors at universities, 45% of instructors in applied science universities, and 33% of college instructors should hold academic ranks (Hungarian Official Gazette, 2011). However, a completely new KKK on teacher education is about to be released and its regulations implemented in the forthcoming years, which might be more specific about these issues.

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The Covid-19 pandemic unquestionably contributed to realising such digital aims, and many universities compiled digital teaching methodological booklets, established, or mandated their digital educational communities or centres to help their students and instructors face the challenges of online education (this is to be further detailed in section 2.7). But several universities within the field of humanities established digital educational or methodological centres well before the pandemic. Some of the reasons for these could be the need to welcome international students, to meet the demands of modern, digital workplaces as well as to offer competitive education in the modern digital age. Browsing through the websites of those higher educational institutions that offer teacher education programmes in the field of humanities, one can find many that refer to the presence of a digital methodological centre that offers informal and/or formal professional development possibilities for instructors and/or learners into digital technologies such as Eötvös Loránd University (https://tkk.elte.hu/category/digitalis-oktatas/); Eszterházy Károly Catholic University (https://uni-eszterhazy.hu/dti); Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary (https://btk.kre.hu/index.php/2015-12-05-09-31-20/kari-kutatocsoportok/796-ikt-kutato-es-tovabbkepzo-kozpont.html); Pannon University (https://dmi.mftk.uni-pannon.hu/); University of Debrecen (https://metk.unideb.hu/hu/bemutatkozas); University of Pécs (https://pte.hu/hu/dot).

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However, less of what specific digital skills development takes place as part of current teacher education masters’ programmes can be established without conducting further empirical research involving interviews with stakeholders and instructors of institutions and applying document analysis of course syllabi. In many cases, document analysis of these programmes reveal some, but by far not everything, about courses that might include digital technologies. Some courses or teaching methodological courses might target digital skills training of university students without including it in their titles, and some courses might be instructed by different teachers all designing their own course syllabus, out of which some might include digital skills development, some might not. Nevertheless, there are some universities that offer compulsory or elective courses into the fields of ICT, such as:

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  • Eötvös Loránd University (n.d.)
    • Modern devices in pedagogy – part of the transversal pedagogical and psychological training module – compulsory course.
  • Eszterházy Károly Catholic University (n.d.)
    • The ICT foundations of the teaching profession – part of the transversal pedagogical and psychological training module – compulsory course.
    • Electronic learning environments – part of the transversal pedagogical and psychological training module – elective course.
  • Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary (n.d.-a; n.d.-b)
    • Developing EFL teachers’ ICT skills – part of the transversal pedagogical and psychological training module – compulsory course.
    • Multimedia communication 1 – part of the Teacher of English Language and Culture training programme – elective course.
  • Pannon University (n.d.)
    • One of the goals of the pedagogical and psychological module is to introduce learners to The roles of pedagogical technology in the effectiveness of education (Pannon University, n.d., p. 3).
  • Pázmány Péter Catholic University (n.d.-a; n.d.-b)
    • Elective course in language pedagogy – one of the elective courses advertised is called ICT in teaching EFL – part of the Teacher of English Language and Culture training programme – one of the advertised courses is compulsory.
    • Modern teaching profession: ICT in the classroom – part of the transversal pedagogical and psychological training module – compulsory course.
  • University of Debrecen (n.d.)
    • ICT in education – part of the transversal pedagogical and psychological training module – compulsory course.
    • Computers and language – part of the Teacher of English Language and Culture training programme – elective course.
 

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To better understand the complexity of integration possibilities into the Hungarian context that goes beyond course titles and outlines, and to see what changes these initiatives have resulted in as well as what major conclusions have been put forward by researchers, the empirical research context will be consulted.
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