1 / 12

Quality Research in Education

Quality Research in Education. Madeleine Arnot Faculty of Education University of Cambridge. Democratic Values, Gender and Citizenship. The context Initial premises Democratic research: themes The language of research Quality criteria, levels and relevance

rheron
Download Presentation

Quality Research in Education

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quality Research in Education Madeleine Arnot Faculty of Education University of Cambridge

  2. Democratic Values, Gender and Citizenship • The context • Initial premises • Democratic research: themes • The language of research • Quality criteria, levels and relevance • The conditions of educational research • The challenge

  3. The Context • Bengt Molander, Professor of Philosophy, Norwegian University of Science and Technology Trondheim. • Stefan Hopmann, Professor of School and Educational Research, University of Vienna. • Madeleine Arnot, Professor of Sociology of Education, University of Cambridge.

  4. Initial premises • The research is capable of being internationally recognised by peers as making an original contribution to the field of knowledge. • The research offers high level conceptual thinking and/or rigorous, ethical, empirical investigations into education. (c) The research provides strong, sound evidence on which to base educational policy and practice.

  5. Democratic Research Themes Citizenship Spaces and Values • Teachers’ political values, civic society, national identities, global contexts Pedagogic Research • Democratic learning, classroom research and participatory, democratic pedagogies Social Inequalities • Social class, race and ethnicity, identity research, gender theory, social exclusion. Democratic Values • Integrative research and international debates about democracy

  6. The Language of Research • What is the major scholarly intellectual contribution (or result) so far? • What (empirical/conceptual) challenges did you face and how did you meet that challenge? • Were any of your findings unexpected? • What is particularly valuable/important about your research for the international field? • How do you intend to make your results accessible nationally and internationally?

  7. Democratic Values, Gender and Citizenship • International and future prospects strengthened by interdisciplinarity. • National reform agenda is strong but can be too normative, with strong safety nets. • Possibilities of a Swedish school of thought about educating for democracy within globalised knowledge economy. • Larger studies needed, wider audiences for research

  8. Some findings • Strong normative culture taking democratic values and curricular for granted. • Seeming lack of familiarity with language of research or lack of engagement with research epistemology and methodology. • Narrow national audience with reliance on doctoral outputs.

  9. Rigour Originality Significance Criticality Reflexivity Impact Quality Criteria

  10. The Conditions of Educational Research • The need to fund ‘high quality basic research’ • The need for research to‘correspond to the needs within teacher training and professional pedagogic activities’. • Research would need to build research capacity across educational institutions.

  11. The challenges • How best can educational research serve the educational community? • What is the best way to promote research cultures amongst teacher education? • What is the proper place for graduate research? • How might internationally recognised research be encouraged? • What other ways can high quality educational research be promoted?

  12. Defining the Quality of Research • Is the model appropriate for the culture and political goals of Swedish educational faculties and teacher training institutions? • How does such a goal mesh with the national imperatives of restructuring educational teaching and research communities? • What are the implications of this model for promoting research in the educational community?

More Related