© British Council 2018
The British Council is the United Kingdom’s international organisation for cultural relations and educational opportunities.
This
practical, user-friendly guide takes teachers through the steps of Exploratory Action Research, an approach
to teacher-research for professional development created originally in the context of the British Council Champion
Teachers programme for secondary
school teachers in Chile and, since then, adopted also in teacher-research
schemes
in India, Nepal and Peru.
Based on examples from actual experience, including cases from the companion publication
Champion Teachers:
Stories of Exploratory Action Research (British Council, 2016), the book is unique in the literature on teacher-
research in ELT in being particularly targeted at school teachers working in relatively difficult circumstances.
Richard Smith (Reader in ELT &
Applied Linguistics, University of Warwick, UK) has expertise in the fields of
language teaching history; learner and teacher autonomy; teacher-research; ELT research capacity-building; and
teaching in difficult circumstances. He has published
widely and given invited talks, seminars and workshops in
many countries, working as an educator and mentor with teachers and researchers
from around the world, both
face to face and as leader of networks like the Teaching English in Large Classes network (TELCnet), IATEFL
Research SIG. and the International Festival of Teacher-research. He is currently the editor of the ‘Key Concepts’
section of
ELT Journal, chair of the Editorial Board of
English Language Teacher Education and Development Journal,
and an academic adviser to teacher-research schemes in both Latin America and South Asia.
Paula Rebolledo has
taught at primary, secondary, undergraduate and postgraduate levels and in INSETT
programmes. She is the former coordinator for teacher education of the English Open Doors Programme (EODP)
at the Ministry of Education in Chile and is now a freelance teacher educator and researcher.
Her areas of interest
include teaching young learners, teacher education, professional development and teacher-research. She has
given talks and workshops in Latin America, Europe and Asia. She has worked as a mentor in a number of teacher-
research programmes such as the Champion Teachers programme in Chile and Peru and
the APTIS Action Research
Award Scheme, both funded by the British Council. Recently, she led the Laureate Action Research Scheme funded
by Laureate Languages. She
is the co-founder of RICELT, the first network of Chilean researchers in ELT.