Foundations
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12
One teacher we’ve worked with says this very clearly:
“I think when you ‘see’ something wrong in class, you
should stop, reflect on that issue, collect data, analyse it
and plan actions according to that purpose.”
(Teresa Ríos)
We will come back to the nature of good information (‘data’)
later in the book.
For the moment, though, let’s consider an
example which illustrates how a teacher can gather
information about their teaching in practice.
1.4 What’s the value of research?
We want to continue to show you the value of collecting
information, and start to show you the value of doing
research to understand your practice and possibly to
change things. We would
like to share with you the
following short story of research which comes from a
teacher – her name is Teresa Perčić – that Paula worked
with in Chile. We think it demonstrates well how
empowering research can be for teachers who engage
in it, as well as how it can show you things you didn’t
know before:
“The academic manager of the school where I worked
told me to play classical music in all my classes while
students were doing a task. I did it and I noticed no
difference so I stopped. I was told the school’s decision
was based on research which indicated it aided
concentration and learning and therefore, I had to do it
no matter my observations. I was not convinced at all and
my colleagues and I decided to play classical music but
other kinds of music as well.
Then, I learned about classroom research and the idea
of conducting research in my classroom seemed the
perfect solution to prove to my headmaster that she was
wrong, so I prepared a series of tasks and different kinds
of music to play while my students were working. I took
notes of everything that happened while my students
worked: their attitudes, their behaviour, etc. I later
collected their different pieces of work and started
to notice certain differences in their work according to
the music I played. I also gave them a survey, a simple
kind of questionnaire for them to give me their opinions.
Still, I wasn’t convinced they understood my questions.
Finally, I decided to interview them, so after each activity
we did with background music, I asked them about how
they felt, if they had trouble concentrating, if they felt the
music helped them complete the task and so on.
After collecting all the evidence and analysing it in detail,
I gave up. It was true, my students learned better and
concentrated more while listening to classical music.
They told me they felt relaxed and it helped them think,
even more than if working in silence. On the contrary,
popular music made them agitated. They said they felt like
dancing and singing so they could not concentrate on the
task. I informed the results to my colleagues and I had to
admit my boss was right. I did not feel I had lost the
argument at all! I was proud of myself ... I didn’t do what
I was told just because.
I researched it and found answers of my own!!”
(Teresa Perčić)
Even though she had to agree with the headteacher in the
end, Teresa felt empowered because she was no longer
just following orders. She felt she was able to make
informed decisions about her teaching based on something
she discovered for herself. The story also reinforces the
point made above that the information you gather can
reveal things you did not expect –
things which contradict
the everyday signs you had previously been getting. This is
why teacher-research is different from simply reflecting on
what you think has happened in the classroom – it can take
you beyond your everyday experience for you to gain new
perspectives.
Now let’s take a closer look at what Teresa did to gather
more information.
She had to compare what happened with and without
music, and what happened with different kinds of music.
That’s why she
‘prepared a series of tasks and different
kinds of music to play while my students were working’.
But what kinds of information, did she gather about the
effect of each kind of music?
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