1 / 11

Introduction to Action Research

Learn about the nature of action research, its distinctive features, and its differences from other research methods. Explore the characteristics, dimensions, and validity factors of action research, as well as different varieties of action research.

shafer
Download Presentation

Introduction to Action Research

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. Introduction to Action Research Action and Case Research in Management and Organizational Contexts

  2. Learning Objectives • To understand the nature of action research; • To sample the different styles of action research; • To identify the differences of action research from other methods.

  3. What is distinctive about Action Research (AR) • It is interventionist – it seeks to change the situation under investigation (for the better); • It has a distinctive world view; • It is collaborative – investigation with not on.

  4. Characteristics of Action Research • Participation and democracy • Human Flourishing • Deals with practical issues • Deploys knowledge-in-action Bradbury and Reason (2001), page 2.

  5. Dimensions of a participatory world view • Meaning and purpose are important • Practical being and acting are fundamental • Extended epistemology • Relational ecological form Bradbury and Reason (2001), page 7.

  6. Extended epistemology • An epistemology is a way of knowing, Bradbury and Reason talk about four distinct ways of knowing: • Experiential knowing (via face to face experience); • Presentational knowing (through articulation or expression of experiential knowing to others); • Propositional knowing (through concepts and ideas); • Practical knowing (through action). Bradbury and Reason (2001), page 9.

  7. Relational ecological form • The ecology of human life is about relationships and the rights of all to participate; • Politically democratic and inclusive; • Researchers and the subjects of research are treated as co-enquirers; • The powerful and influential are not privileged in terms of knowledge or right to speak; • There is a respectful relationship to the planet Bradbury and Reason (2001), page 10.

  8. Validity and quality in inquiry in Action Research Questions about significance Questions of outcome and practice Questions about plural ways of knowing Questions of relational practice Bradbury and Reason (2001), page 12.

  9. Validity and Quality Factors • Does the research lead to questions about emergence and enduring consequences? Such as: • Pragmatic issues such as: What are the outcomes of research, does it work, what are the processes of inquiry, are they authentic/life enhancing? • Does it use the extended epistemology? • Does it recognise plural ways of knowing? • Does it deal with questions of relational practice, i.e. Have the values of democracy been actualised in practice? • Does the work have significance, i.e. Was it worthwhile, have values been actualised?

  10. Varieties of Action Research • Participatory action research; • Collaborative inquiry; • Action Science; • Appreciative Inquiry; • Many others. • We will view a number of these later Bradbury and Reason (2001).

  11. References Bradbury and Reason (a), (2001), Introduction, in Bradbury and Reason, (eds), (2001), “Handbook of Action Research”. London: Sage.

More Related