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| What is Exploratory Action Research?
Task 3.5
As emphasised above, we believe that sufficient exploration
is very important before you engage in action research.
Why? Note down one or two of your own reasons before
reading on. Hint: don’t forget the stories you’ve already
read, for example in Tasks 3.1 and 3.4!
There are at least three good reasons for exploring a
situation before planning action to change it:
1) Before
we can decide what to do, we need to understand
the current situation. As teachers, we often think we
understand what is happening in our classrooms, but this
is not always the case. The
problem-solving examples in
Task 3.1 (and associated commentary) show that, without
exploration, we can easily take the wrong action and even
make things worse.
2) In order to decide whether our action has been
successful, we need to compare what happens with the
situation as it was before we acted. By exploring the
situation
and collecting data, we will have enough
information about the initial situation to do this. Another,
related, advantage is that we can often use the same way
of collecting data after a new action,
making it relatively
easy to compare the situations.
3) It may not be very difficult to combine exploration in
your classroom with your everyday teaching. It shouldn’t
increase your workload too much and should go well
together with what you normally do. Exploration essentially
means looking at your situation in a different way, or in
more detail, and this, as we’ve seen, can be advantageous
for a number of reasons.
As
we saw in Chapter Two, and in Andrea’s story in this
chapter, research begins with and grows out of questions.
we ask ourselves. So it may be useful at this point to
highlight the way Exploratory Action Research has two
separate basic research questions,
which relate to the two
separate phases shown in the ‘Steps of Exploratory Action
Research’ diagram – Exploration and Action:
Only these two main questions are necessary for
Exploratory Action Research. We can make them more
specific and detailed, but everything
we do should aim to
answer these two questions.
At this stage you may have questions about the questions!
You may be wondering how an interest or challenge that
you’ve identified can be explored with these questions, or
you may want to see examples of more specific questions.
Don’t worry! These are coming soon. In the remainder of
this book, we will look into each
of the steps of Exploratory
Action Research in more detail, as follows:
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