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- Message-ID: <EDPOLYAN%93010710472164@ASUVM.INRE.ASU.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.edpolyan
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 10:37:39 MST
- Sender: Professionals and Students Discussing Education Policy Analysis
- <EDPOLYAN@ASUACAD.BITNET>
- From: Gene Glass <ATGVG@ASUACAD.BITNET>
- Subject: Action Research
- Lines: 145
-
- A couple of days ago, David Williams asked that a discussion of
- action research be started; he cross-posted to EDPOLYAN and ERL-L;
- the discussion seems to have taken hold somewhat on ERL-L. I am
- cross-posting the following note which I posted to ERL-L just a moment
- ago in hopes that some of you who subscribe to EDPOLYAN but not ERL-L
- might join ERL-L and contribute to the discussion (herewith I add the
- obligatory apology to those who subscribe to both).
- If you do not know about ERL-L and want to subscribe, here are the
- directions. ERL-L is a LISTSERV based at Tulane University and managed
- by myself and Jean Pierce at Univ of Northern Illinois. It is for the
- discussion of all things relevant to educational research. You may subscribe
- by sendng an email letter to LISTSERV@TCSVM.BITNET and making the sole
- contents of the letter read as follows: SUB ERL-L <your actual name>
-
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- ACTION RESEARCH FOR TEACHERS
-
- This notion of "action research" for teachers (it could be for
- administrators too, as far as that goes) is not new but could not
- be more timely. As some have indicated, the term probably
- originated with Kurt Levin, which would have placed the ideas
- involved in it at around the 1940s, as Levin was--if memory serves-
- -a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany who relocated in the US in the
- late 1930s. And for anyone who remembers anything about the
- Frankfurt School (Adorno, Marcuse and others), there is more than
- a hint of the precursors of the likes of Habermas in the notion of
- "action research." When I was getting into the educ. research
- business about 1960, I was told that Teachers College Columbia was
- the center of the action research movement and that I should ignore
- it because it fostered bad research.
- There is a tendency today to recast the "action research"
- agenda in methodological or epistemological terms and to ignore its
- political agenda. Hence, we ask, "Should action research be
- quantitative or qualitative? Will action research results be
- generalizable or limited? Will action research be valid? Can it
- discover causes or must it merely describe?" I think these are the
- wrong questions, and I think action research is the wrong agenda
- for teachers. Let me explain.
- The persons asking the questions about action research tend to
- be "university-types" who imagine hordes of teachers designing
- small "studies" that, if accomplished in the quantitative
- tradition, will involve formulating hypotheses, selecting
- variables, measuring them, analyzing data and the like. The result
- is promised to be some improvement in teaching technique, most
- likely. The qualitative action study will adhere to the newly
- discovered standards of ethnographic analysis: observations,
- interviews, content analysis of verbatim transcripts, narrative
- presentation of "findings."
- This style of research errs in at least two respects. It is
- not what teachers need, and it can not be done well enough or be
- focused where it will gain political legitimacy. It will be, in
- short, a waste of time for teachers.
- What teachers need--if I may attempt to speak for them--is
- more thought to what we call "curriculum" rather than "technique,"
- and the activity that we label action research is not up to the
- task of informing teachers about key questions regarding
- curriculum. (I do believe that among those things that account for
- education being rich and relevant, curriculum is many times more
- important than technique.) Curriculum is improved by thinking about
- it, reading about it, experiencing new things, talking to other
- teachers who are trying new things and reflecting on the nature of
- the child and the world in which children will live. This sort of
- inquiry does not involve formulating hypotheses, measuring
- variables and running statistical tests. It does involve a host of
- things that teachers have traditionally done for decades (like
- attending conferences, being trained in workshops on new
- curricula), and it could involve the type of activity that Donald
- Schon has described in his many presentations of the concept of the
- reflective practitioner.
- Secondly, the type of action research being pressed on
- teachers will, rightly or wrongly, be condemned by others as
- invalid, inept, non-generalizable and all the other bad things that
- can be said about it. Small scale research will be quickly
- dismissed in a ny dispute over resourcesbecause it lacks the
- panoply of "controls" and incomprehensible statistical
- paraphernalia that the professional community has come to expect.
- In short, it will not be viewed as legitimate by the broader
- professional community. To ask teachers to engage in it then--
- arguing that it hardly matters what this broader community thinks
- if well-meaning teachers just keep to their own business and do a
- better and better job of teaching with the help of what they learn
- from their action research--condemns them to a losing position in
- all the conflicts over control of educational resources (by which
- I mean money, personnel decisions, curriculum and technique).
- Is there an alternative? Of course. Not action research, but
- large-scale research that speaks to teachers' political agenda.
- Administrators do not perform "actin research," but at all levels
- they can command that well-funded, large-scale "legitimate"
- research be done on the issues AS THEY DEFINE THEM. Hence, we see
- mega-study after mega-study arguing that expenditures don't relate
- to outcomes or that school choice produces higher achievement, but
- not a single study on sabbaticals for teachers (I'll give 50-to-1
- odds that I can do a huge statistical study that will "prove" that
- teacher sabbaticals increase students' achievement). Such
- organizations as the National Association of School Boards, the
- Amer Assoc of School Administrators, and the National Assoc of
- Secondary School Principals fund "independent research
- laboratories" (in the manner of the automobile and tobacco
- industries) that turn out research that supports administrators
- political positions. The shame is that the NEA does not do
- likewise; indeed it is a mystery to me why the NEA is so near-
- sighted as to focus solely on bread-and-butter labor concerns and
- lobbying activity and ignore the fact that "research" commands
- attention in today's political arena (perhaps the explanation is
- related to the fact that the American Educational Research
- Association was from 1915 until the late 1950s a bureau of the
- National Education Association; it broke away to become an
- autonomous organization and left NEA with few ties to the emerging
- scholarly community in education).
- Underlying my remarks is the belief that where education is
- concerned there is no truth out in the real world to be discovered
- by the proper application of research techniques, but rather there
- is an on-going debate, if you will, between conflicting interests
- (political interests) who wish to impose their agenda on the
- institution of the schools. I don't find this article of faith to
- be discouraging or depressing in the least; in fact, I think it is
- quite invigorating to believe this way and act accordingly.
- (Actually, the belief that education is a natural system that must
- be researched and charted in some gigantic morphology of boxes and
- circles and arrows is quite depressing to me.)
-
- To recap:
-
- 1. "Action research" as it is conceived of today by the bulk
- of university professors who wish to promote it is a reflection of
- the worst in the history of educational and behavioral science
- research (it ignores ideas about curriculum in favor of a focus on
- teaching technique; it is overly quantitative and preordinate.)
-
- 2. "Action research" is a retreat from the political battles
- that will shape the schools of the future (It is Dr. Pangloss
- saying to Candide, "Come let us cultivate our garden" and forget
- the evil outside world about which we can do nothing).
-
- 3. Rather than doing research, teachers should sponsor large-
- scale research by trained researchers that speaks to the agenda
- that teachers themselves define.
-
- -------**********======================================**********-------
- GENE V GLASS ATGVG at ASUACAD.BITNET
- College of Education ATGVG at ASUACVAX.BITNET
- Arizona State University Internet Address:ATGVG@ASUVM.INRE.ASU.EDU
- Tempe, AZ 85287-2411
- 602-965-2692
-