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Action Research. Research in the Social Sciences week 18. Outline. What is action research? Participatory action research Insider action research External action research Why action research? Stages in Action Research Ethics Activity. Key Resources. Journal: Action Research
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Action Research Research in the Social Sciences week 18
Outline • What is action research? • Participatory action research • Insider action research • External action research • Why action research? • Stages in Action Research • Ethics • Activity
Key Resources • Journal: Action Research • McNiff, J & Whitehead, J (2011) All You Need to Know About Action Research, London Sage • McNiff, J, Lomax, P & Whitehead J (eds) (2003) You and Your Action Research Project. • Stringer, E.T. (2007) Action Research. London, Sage.
Action Research “An approach in which the action researcher and a client collaborate in the diagnosis of a problem and in the development of a solution based on the diagnosis” – Bryman
Action Research “Action research is small-scale interventions in the functioning of the real world and a close examination of the effects of such intervention” – Cohen & Manion (1989) Research Methods in Education, p.217
Action Research “The study of a social situation with a view to improving the quality of action within it” – Elliot (1991) Action Research for Educational Change, p.69
Participatory Action Research • Involves people participating in research • Aim is to transform structures, situations or systems in an egalitarian way • Often focuses on oppressed groups and involves non-experts in research
Insider Action Research • Managers engage in research projects in their organisations • Aim to improve systems, organisational learning and managerial change • Managers have knowledge of the system and may act covertly • Difficult to be detached
External Action Research • Researcher is independent of professional context • Researches alongside professional practitioners • Aim is to achieve change & improve practice • Through process of collaboration
Action Research • Origins in education policy research in USA in ‘40s & ‘50s • Became popular in UK in ‘70s • 1980s: teacher centred research became popular • Many teachers dislike educational theory (irrelevant to classroom) • Action research challenges idea that to do research you must be qualified and based at university
Why Action Research? • Used for ‘real situations’ not objective experiments or observations • Can be used for pilot studies toward more traditional research • Circumstances require flexibility • People must be involved • Change must take place quickly • Practitioners lack methodological knowledge
Characteristics • Situational: • Concerned with diagnosing a problem in a specific context and attempting to solve it in that context • Collaborative: • Practitioners and teams of researchers work together on a project • Participatory: • Team members themselves take part directly or indirectly in implementing the research • Self-Evaluative: • Modifications are continuously evaluated within the ongoing situation
Stages in Action Research • Identification and formulation of the problem perceived • Preliminary discussions and negotiations among the interested parties • Review of research literature • A possible modification or redefinition of the initial statement of the problem • Selection of research strategies • Choosing appropriate evaluation procedures • Implementation of the project • Interpretation of the data
Ethical Considerations • Real world situations demand close attention to ethics • All relevant people consulted • Close and open communication throughout • All participants allowed to influence the work • Visible & open to suggestions • Researchers accept responsibility for maintaining confidentially