What is Paticipatory Action Research?
Tuesday, 09 February 2010 09:11

The Power of Action Research to Create Change

Written by Lisa Small
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James, E. A. (2006). A study of participatory action research as professional development for educators in areas of educational disadvantage. Educational Action Research, 14(4), 525–533.

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this article is to add to the body of literature information relating to a study that evaluates the efficacy of participatory action research methodology as a “tool to engage administrators and teachers, and as a process of professional development through which to address issues of educational disadvantage” (p. 526). The scope of this study includes 17 educators from a variety of rural, small town, suburban and urban school environments, along with participants who represented a variety of educational context such as a homeless shelter, one charter high school, one multilevel year school with age ranges from 4-18, two middle schools from ages 11-13, and one elementary school from ages 4-10 in the state of Colorado. The methodology consisted of qualitative mixed methods design where the variables were derived from work centered on PAR and adaptive leadership. Qualitative data developed in the form of reflective journal writing, in-depth interviews, and participant final reports was included.  Quantitative data included a self report survey.  Over time, CO PAR educators became engaged in issues related to their homeless and transient students as the school year progressed through issues such as:

1.      Engagement through action
2.      Welcoming school culture
3.      Developing flexible instructional strategies
4.      Increasing access for homeless and highly mobile students to educational services

The study concludes “that a major strength of participatory action research in adding educators to address the more difficult issues they face, those of educational disadvantage, is that the process creates a “holding environment” (p.531).

Wednesday, 23 September 2009 06:09

References

Written by josebar
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Elliott, J. (2009). Comment made that PAR is philosophy rather than methodology (Private discussion ed.): BERA Mentoring e-seminars listserve.

 

Granovetter, M. (1973). The strength of weak ties: A network theory The American Journal of Sociology, 78(6), 1360-1380.

 

Granovetter, M. (1982). The strength of weak ties: A network theory revisited, Social Structure and Network Analysis (pp. 105-130). Thousand Oaks: Sage.

 

Heifetz, R. A. (2000). Leadership without easy answers (Second edition ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belnap Press, Harvard University.

 

James, E. A., Milenkiewicz, M., & Bucknam, A. (2008). Participatory action research: Data driven decision making for educational leadership. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

 

 

 

Wednesday, 23 September 2009 06:07

Conclusion: NPAR Project Successes

Written by josebar
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Even thought the project is sometimes arduous, it continues to feed our awareness and our professionalism. We believe in the potential of NPAR to address the recreation of education to help it better meet the needs of young people as they grow to maturity in a world that we cannot imagine.

What Needs to be Done?

The answer to this question could easily make those of us involved in the project become quickly overwhelmed. Mostly we need a lot more voices from a lot more places actively involved. The most efficient way for that to happen would be for the project to interact with other educational groups, hopefully finding someone interested enough to act as a liaison, as well as, an active participant in the Futures project.

In South Florida the PAR cycles will continue. We want to include anyone who has interaction with students in these cycles, not merely educators and parents. The perspective of those who employ young people or new graduates of college and trades schools is important to the future of education, since they have first-hand knowledge of whether their schooling is preparing them or not. We are seeking to have one par cycle per quarter in 2010.

Seeing students look to the future is inspiring. There is little doubt in their minds that the “perfect education” that they are seeking to create a model for will be. The PAR cycles with students requires much greater effort on the part of the leader to arrange, even so the South Florida team would like to meet with students once a month in 2010. In order to meet with students the meetings must be closer together, and are more easily facilitated if they are in the students’ school or local library. All of these efforts are worth it to hear their powerful and hopeful voices in the research.

Part of bridging this project out to wider and more diverse communities requires crossing language and potentially religious boundaries. The site is easily translated into 24 languages, but we do not know how accurate the translations may be. We welcome diverse opinions yet our survey data show that our readership are primarily liberal in their ideology.

Young people are one population likely to both have ideas and be invested in the immediate outcomes of the project. April has started youth participatory groups, the videos from which will soon be on the site, and we would love to see international responses from other teenagers. Youth declarations are not heard often, and we hope that giving them an opportunity to express their thoughts will be a small flame that can be fanned into a wildfire of powerful new ideas shared around the world.

We are sure there are many other answers to this question and hope that the potential of the international participatory discussion designing new ways and means to educate young people is of interest to people who want to carve out their own portion of this project and champion new voices for new designs in education.

 

 

Wednesday, 23 September 2009 06:04

Findings

Written by josebar
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When reflecting on the challenges and successes of the last year, one has to ask what are the qualities that made things work, and what were the forces that inhibit continued participation? Some facts are consistent. People who are leaving or explaining lack of participation always mentioned competing responsibilities. In reverse, during the time that people are most active, they display enthusiasm and a belief that they are participation has meaning and usefulness to help combat the complex adaptive problem that is education today. This is consistent with findings from the web-based professional development project that Alana previously facilitated. It leads us to see participatory action research as a holding environment through which people can address complex issues (Heifetz, 2000; James et al., 2008).

Excitement creates energy. The South Florida team has experienced this over and over again throughout our PAR cycles. The adults who participated had a more difficult time harnessing the energy, and some actually just let it slip away. The students, on the other hand, have harnessed this excitement and turned it into energy by continuing the discussions outside our PAR group. They are searching for a way to design and begin “the perfect school.” Is this because they are young and hopeful? Maybe, but this kind of optimism is what can lead the world into a future that includes radical changes in the way children are educated.

Given that background what are the new lessons to be learned here?

  1. Did the next international voices on the web enhance the project? Yes absolutely, although maybe when someone drops off the loss is felt on more complex levels, because we are losing access to an entire international context until we recruit someone else from that area of the world. April Maria, our South Florida team leader, felt this enhancement when talking with our New Zealand contact at one of our international meetings. She had been discouraged when her adult team began to lose members, but her passion to continue led her to attend this meeting even though it was in the wee hours of the morning her time. What she heard about education in New Zealand, and the documents that were shared from New Zealand, inspired her to continue her South Florida team. She was convinced that if change could happen in New Zealand then in could happen in South Florida too.

  2. What attributes cluster with participant involvement in the project?

The amount of international participation keeps others involved. One key participant was an educator at the end of her career who looking back at a high level of frustration with how education in the UK evolved. Her team selected a focus (assessment) that was not universally interesting and they did not receive the international feedback that they wanted. Attendance quickly dropped off.

Local teams will question their involvement. Some teams never started as a result, even though the host was originally quite keen. We saw one team disappear as mentioned above when they did not receive feedback and another suffered through a very unpleasant meeting as they discussed, “What in the world are we doing here? Are not other people with more money doing this exact work?” It should be noted that we have found one group that is similar yet with a lot more money: The Education Project in the Kingdom of Bahrain. This international scope of experts have not uncovered more than the NPAR teams in the Future(s) Project and because they do not have the underlying philosophy and process of PAR, they struggle with “what to do next.”

  1. What can be learned from analyzing the Web log data?

Almost 2000 people in over 80 countries visited the site and stayed long enough to look around (didn’t bounce). Consistently the United States brings the most visitors with India second. Most looked into three or four pages during a visit. We now believe that one of the volunteers who came to us in the last months was correct when she said that we needed to design a website or more “takeaways” by the individual. New designs for the site allows visitors to give us information, as they take away:

  • knowledge about how their ideas stack up with others (findings from the survey they take)

  • knowledge about how the rest of the world sees educational issues (we are trying to develop a map that links stories to the locations)

  • a range of quick understanding of different international voices (our video debate section with videos in multiple languages)

  • information from a variety of papers, videos, and short essays by people on the tension within the education around the world

We also have to address the almost 50% bounce rate through better search engine optimization.

 

Wednesday, 23 September 2009 05:59

Theoretical Background and Short History

Written by josebar
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Granovetter (1973, 1982), tells us that the power of “weak ties” is that they have the potential for news to travel between networks, thus improving the work on both sides of the link because of the messages communicated. The potential of this power is seen in the development of open source technology and it relies on a free and uninhibited communication pattern. A key component of networked communication is that anyone can contribute to the conversation, uninhibited by hierarchical roles or the dictates of power. This freedom is obviously not only enjoyed in the halls of educational institutions, but is a guiding light for the emancipatory work of participatory action research teams around the world.

The participatory action research (PAR) methodology (or philosophy as John Elliott (2009) would have it) that I employ is articulated in any three step cycle: 1) discover, 2) act/measure, and 3) reflect. It is frequently true that groups working on complex problems spend the first act/measure step surveying their population or gathering more information (James, Milenkiewicz, & Bucknam, 2008). Thus, measurable actions to create change are not always identified in the first stages of the process.

Short history of what happened 2008 – 2009

Figure 1, below, is a diagram of what would have been true July 2008. It shows Alana James surrounded by a cloud of diverse information on the Internet and interested in talking to others about new possibilities for the design of education.

Figure 1: The Beginning of the Future(s) of Education Project

The website at www.futureofeducationproject.net was launched in mid-September, after Alana attended a self-study conference in the UK. One year later, figure 2 displays the relationships that evolved with the project.

Figure 2: Relationship map, year one Future(s) of Education Project

The following eight milestones contributed to the configuration above:

  1. Colleagues at a conference express interest in the project, most fell away but Lindsey Conner in New Zealand has given the project enormous help through sharing futures research from her part of the world and the idea of system wide competencies vs. curriculum.

  2. Through a participant from India the overarching challenges of literacy and numeracy in much of the developing world were brought into the conversation. Other colleagues add a few ideas/videos etc to the site.

  3. Our Isle of Wight team starts and adds a firm direction not to forget the importance of assessment – others agree that in many ways assessment drives the ship.

  4. We make our first growth producing connection, April Maria. She: runs a complete group (5), starts a facebook group (6), and most recently facilitates groups of young people who are producing a video for the CARN conference in Athens.

  5. Stray volunteers happen (8) leading us towards more individualized input and “take away” strategies for the site.

  6. One doctoral student, loosely connected to the project, nevertheless runs with the ideas, developing the concept of student “VOICE” and is beginning to transform the ways in which the US Army provide ongoing training to officers.

  7. Spanish speaking colleagues help add non-English content to the site (7).

  8. A connection in Uganda grows to the point where he will also present at the CARN conference in Athens, 2009.

In tandem with various input from diverse partners the conversation about what the required by students in the future evolved. Figure 3 outlines the general conversation.

Figure 3: Map of discussion topics, year one Future(s) of Education Project

A central point for discussion and debate had to do with whether and to what extent young people require guidance. Two continuums became clear, from student-driven to educator-driven choices on what topics needed to be learned and the best processes for learning it. Our partner in New Zealand was instrumental in helping others open up to new possibilities. Her country has recently adopted competencies and teachers are beginning to build their instructional design to encourage skills rather than specific points of data retrieval. A ninth grade student participating in our South Florida team had this to add to the discussion, “I think students should lead the school. They should interview the teachers. They should have more control in their schools. Like in academics, we should have a say in what classes we take. Like, we hear the same things over in over in most classes. Take out those classes and put in classes where we can learn new things.” Another student suggested, “We want classes that are tailored to individual styles of learning. I want AP classes that can be offered no matter what the income bracket the school is in. Now, if you don’t have money then you don’t have AP classes in that school.”

In another end of the year set of research findings, the following continuum was developed as we concluded that even with a small group of participants new and provocative ideas emerge. Figure 4 outlines what appears to be a core discussion, foundational to any new design process for education.

 

 

Educator-driven process.

Students driven process.

Educator-driven curricula.

Educator-driven curricular choices with professionals the guiding, and assessing the entire process.

Educator-driven curricular choices delivered in online or other modular context, so that students decide upon and employ skill sets and outcomes of their own choosing.

Student-driven curricula.

Student-driven curricular choices with adults facilitating process and skill sets that aid mastery.

Student-driven curricular choices with little or no adult facilitation (LIE).

 

Figure 3:  Educator/student-driven curricular/educational choices

 

Wednesday, 23 September 2009 05:57

Introduction

Written by josebar
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This story begins in July 2008 with a series of coincidences that left one woman to take some very bold moves. As an independent academic, living in Ireland, Alana James found herself employing online social networks as a means to develop collegial relationships with other people interested in the future of education. At the same time her hundred plus doctoral students in education flooded her desktop with stories of how difficult it is to work in schools. Three things were troubling:

  1. Education is a hard job, with little pay, and difficult work place environments - and this appeared to be as true in the developing world as it was in complex Western societies.

  2. Authors and publishers focus on efforts to improve schools while others point out that achieving consistent outcomes is a complex problem, yet no one was using an integrated means to develop new designs.

  3. While it has become natural in the world of open source technology for new voices from far distant environments to work together on designing new software, the only international consortiums in education discussing the future of education were attended by those best educated or highly employed in the status quo.

The three coincidences that converged to start the futures of education project were first, Alana was just finishing a six-year longitudinal project where network of participatory team had employed Internet conversations as they designed local solution to the problems associated with homeless students. Second, she was nominated for a fellowship for which the application requires a description of her project. Third, because she was isolated and therefore able to investigate the most intriguing conversation about education she saw the threads of new ideas and wanted to be part of a conversation that wove them together, perhaps into entirely new cloth.

Thus the Future(s) of Education Project was born in July, 2008. The project encourages individual and group participatory work and ideas centered on the question, “What do our children need to thrive in the world they will inherit? A world we cannot imagine.”

Meanwhile, in South Florida, a mother of three children was grappling with the question of why one of her children loved school and the other hated it. Could it be more than just personality differences? Could it have to do with the fact that one school was focused on the performing arts and the other school was focused on Florida’s standardized achievement test? During her doctoral work this mother was introduced to the Future(s) of Education Project, and it connected with her interest in finding out how educators can help all children love school. She was able to join in the project even though she was an ocean away from it’s origin because the project is rooted in networking technology. This online network, and the availability of Skype technology, connected her to Alana, and gave her a passion to start her own branch in South Florida.

 

Friday, 18 September 2009 08:28

Abstract

Written by josebar
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Using Networked Participatory Action Research
to Address the Future(s) of Education:
First Year Successes and Challenges

A presentation at the Collaborative Action Research Network conference, CARN, 2009: Athens, Greece, 31 October, 2009.

By E. Alana James and April Maria


Article Highlights

  • Introduction of the Future(s) of Education Project and the ideas behind it that drive change

  • Discussion of first year outcomes regarding the continuum of design choices between student-driven and educator-driven curricula and process

  • Invitation to participate

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to reflect upon lessons learned during the first year of the international collaborative action research endeavour to redesign education. The scope of this study centres on the experience of two women as they negotiated a collaborative environment that included participants from seven countries. Based upon the philosophy of participatory action research organized as networks, this study employs mixed methodology analyzing data from weblogs, e-mails, articles, and triangulating that information with quantitative evidence from an online survey. Findings show that:

  1. Not surprisingly, beginning a collaborative process, without funds, and international space, requires diligent effort.

  2. Educators may not want to discuss strengths-based potential when they are faced with oppressive practices.

  3. We continue to confront whether and to what extent we believe in participatory process and its ability to change the world.

This article concludes that participatory action research is a worthwhile undertaking to give voice to the varied ideas regarding how we can better prepare our students for the future. The PAR process allows those involved to face the roadblocks that are a holding back the progress toward bettering education and find ways around those obstructions through discussion, reflection and research. While limited to the reflective voices of two of the many participants, the study contributes to the use of collaborative action research by encouraging its employment in international settings and across virtual environments.

Keywords

future of education, student-driven education, collaborative action research, networks,

 

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