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Mind the gap! Do practitioners and researchers live in parallel universes?. Linking research and practice John Oversby, Reading. Overview. What is the problem? Previous research Formation of a teacher researcher group Teacher-researcher group principles Evidence of success First outcomes
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Mind the gap! Do practitioners and researchers live in parallel universes? Linking research and practice John Oversby, Reading
Overview • What is the problem? • Previous research • Formation of a teacher researcher group • Teacher-researcher group principles • Evidence of success • First outcomes • Moving on • Challenges • Impacts
What is the problem? • Perceived notion that researchers output is not helpful, and can not be found! • Perceived notion that teachers do not value research. Solution Linking research and practice is a human relationship matter and best solved co-operatively!
Previous research • The gap first reported by Dewey in 1903 and continuing ever since • Most of the studies focus on Nursing! • Interventions include Journal Clubs, Professional articles
Bridging the Gap BetweenResearch and Practice - Davis S (2007) Davis SH (2007) Bridging the gap between research and practice: what’s good, what’s bad and how can one be sure? Phi Delta Kappan 88 568-578 Problems with researchers • Many of us have simply lost touch with the day-today complexity of human interactions in schools. • Academics often write for the wrong audience. • Academics frequently use “hit and run” tactics. • Academics can be an arrogant bunch. • Not all research is good research.
Bridging the Gap BetweenResearch and Practice - Davis S Problems with practitioners • The seductive power of silver bullets and gurus. • Exaggerated attributions of causality and misconceptions about chance. • Presumed associations in different contexts. • Wishful thinking for success. • Generalizing from nonrandom and small samples. • Generalizing from perceptions and self-reported data.
Bridging the Gap BetweenResearch and Practice - Davis S What to do • Empirical research looks at only a part of the picture • Useful evidence comes in many forms, not only quasi-experimental • Anecdotal evidence can be useful, even if it is not research!
The Gap Between Research andPractice Revisited - Korthagen FAJ (2007) Korthagen FAJ (2007) The Gap Between Research and Practice Revisited Educational Research and Evaluation 3, pp. 303 – 310 • gap between professional cultures • need for researchers and practitioners to build joint communities • One cause has to do with teachers’ prior knowledge of how subjects should be taught based on their own experiences. • Human beings are fairly inflexible and resistant to change. • A cognitive stance is not enough, feelings and emotion play an essential part. • Teaching is complex (‘teachers are often expected to accomplish complex and conflicting goals’) • Even experts differ on how to bridge the gap!
The Gap Between Research andPractice Revisited - Korthagen FAJ (2007) What can be done? • Develop partnerships between universities and schools (Professional Development Schools) • Instigate teacher research • Individual coaching and mentoring (a professional mediator) • Self-study research by teacher educators on how they bridge the gap - insider research • Reinforced by Vanderlinde and van Braak (BERJ, 2009) on the role of teacher educators as mediators
A literature review Broekkmann & Van Hout-Wolters (2007) • Broekkamp, H. & Van Hout-Wolters, B. (2007) The gap between educational research and practice: a literature review, symposium and questionnaire, Educational Research and Evaluation, 13, 203–220. • 1. Educational research yields few conclusive results; or educational research does not provide valid and reliable results that are confirmed through unambiguous and powerful evidence. • 2. Educational research yields few practical results; or educational research is limited in practical use. • 3. Practitioners believe that educational research is not conclusive or practical; or educational research is not meaningful for teachers. • 4. Practitioners make little (appropriate) use of educational research; or practitioners do not have the skills to use educational research results.
Community of Professional Practice Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly. (Etienne Wenger, 2006)
Formation of a teacher researcher group • Reading PGCE course (in early 90s) explicitly based on education research-based evidence and taking part in active education research. Teachers and mentors explicitly embedded in a research ethos. • A group of new science teachers and mentors requested a group to continue this research ethos in their everyday work. • Some financial and mentoring support through the Best Practice Research Scheme (BPRS). • John Oversby invited to convene the group
Teacher-researcher group principles • Respect for research-based evidence • Respect for each other independent of experience and employment • Critical approach to existing research aimed at improved understanding of research evidence and research methods • Encouragement to take part in research in the classroom • Focus on high standards of reliability, validity and analysis
Evidence of success • Attendance and engagement consistent. Conferences of 40-60. • Outputs of research based on chemical education (mainly aspects of signs, symbols and equations) • Documentary evidence of high levels of satisfaction • Some members representing group at national and regional conferences • Changes to Schemes of Work, lesson plans and activity
Moving on or outward • First research was on chemical equations • What are notebooks for? The views of pupils, teachers, senior management and parents • What is revision? Is revision effective? • What is effective homework? • Modelling: • In ecology • In explaining sound
Challenges • Sponsorship (RSC, ASE) • Place and time to meet • Maintaining interest and managing turnover • Writing up findings
Impacts • Classroom practice • Long term group sustainability • Conferences
What next? • Reproduction - workshop at ASE (5.Jan.13) on how to set up a science teacher-researcher group through metacognitive modelling • Network of groups to maintain sustainability if one fails • Presentations of Mind the Gap
Member comments - examples • 1. What is the extent of your involvement with PALAVA? I attend meetings whenever I can • 2. What influenced your decision to attend PALAVA? A desire to remain in contact with current research with teachers and John • 3. For you, was PALAVA valuable? Yes, because I am able to listen to what is current in science education research and hear practising teachers experiences, concerns and the research they are engaged in and would like to pursue. • 6. What have you taken from PALAVA sessions? inspiration • 7. What could have improved/ increased what you gained? Regular attendance at meetings • 9. Do you have any other comments? The group is led/steered/motivated by John in a way that allows all attendees to contribute or not. It is a supportive, collaborative and non threatening environment, good forum for exchange of ideas.
Bridge the gap project • Teacher educator thinking about sessions • Teacher response to requests to read/take part in research • Successful methods of mediating research • Interventions to engage with research • Large scale (EU FP7?) funding for international work • Funding will need to cover meetings, salaries for members and researchers. • Rough estimate 750K over three years