Introduction | 5 Style of presentation The book is targeted in particular at secondary and primary
teachers (for whom few such books have been previously
produced) and is written in a jargon-free, non-academic
style, with many concrete examples.
We have deliberately tried to make this book different from
previous treatments of teacher-research in the field of ELT,
aiming for as non-academic an approach as possible to
reflect the idea that teacher-research is by teachers and
for teachers and their students, not needing to adhere to
relatively dry or ‘academic’ norms of presentation or to
standards of rigour which are imposed from outside.
As far as possible, then, rather than prescribing particular
activities in the abstract or moving from theory to practice,
we proceed from example to recommendation. The
examples are real, not invented ones, and they come from
teachers in relatively difficult circumstances, not in well-
resourced or otherwise privileged contexts. Thus, we refer
throughout to cases from the Champion Teachers project,
in particular those represented in the companion Champion Teachers: Stories of Exploratory Action Research book,
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which readers are encouraged to read to gain further
understanding. Instructions and examples are accompanied
by practical tasks, with answers to most of these being
provided in an Answer Key at the back of the book.
We wanted the book to be visually appealing (well-designed,
and including illustrations and photographs) in order to
enhance its accessibility, given that the idea of carrying out
‘research’ can be off-putting to teachers, who may feel that
it is not ‘for’ them.
How to use this book The book has been written to be used by teachers working
on their own; in self-sustaining groups of teachers or mentee
groups; within teacher associations supporting teacher-
research; or in pre-service or in-service teacher education
programmes. The only assumption is that readers have some
current classroom contact with students, since tasks will
require reflection on current teaching experience.
Ideally, you will find someone else to interact with about the
contents and to answer tasks together with. If not, try to
engage with the book actively and carry out tasks in your
mind, checking answers in the back of the book whenever
you see the ‘@’ symbol.
Although the book does not constitute a full introduction to
‘Research Methods’, our own experience with pre-service as
well as in-service teachers has shown us that engaging in
Exploratory Action Research represents a good, practical
first step towards more academic research methods training
and research engagement. This, of course, is not the major
aim of the book, which is to introduce teachers to the
personal and professional benefits of researching their own
classrooms, and to show how this can be feasible as well as
useful, even for teachers in very difficult circumstances.