The second
chapter outlines the different paradigms, approaches, and methods that teachers
can use to conduct research to generate knowledge that can be applied in their
teaching. I can appreciate the authors emphasis on the naturalistic/hermeneutic
research that “examines phenomena in their authentic network of relationship within
their natural contexts” (Eisner, 1991a; quoted in Falk, p. 9) But I question
how reliable or practical the conclusions can be when naturalistic research is
mired in a complex web of factors and influences that are inter-woven in those
natural contexts and where each situation is uniquely composed. I hope that as the course progresses we will
explore how to realistically use research that originates in the various and
specific individual cases explored through case studies, personal narratives,
action research and ethnography, and be able to apply the strategies resulting
from them in our own unique environments and with our own unique students.
In “Chapter
1: Assembling a Critical Pedagogy” from S. Jones’ Writing and Teaching to
Change the World: Connecting with Our Most Vulnerable Students I found
several significant ideas that got my attention. Jones wrote that within the
teacher inquiry community (TIC) “participants recognized some of their habits
of seeing students in particular ways and challenged themselves to see beyond
those perceptions.” (Jones, 2014, p. 1) This resulted in being open to different
pedagogical approaches and being able to
avoid “playing the blame game, getting mired in deficit discourses.” (Jones, p. 3)
Jones wrote that “deficit thinking about children and families is unethical,
indeed a practice that damages people.” (Jones, p.3)
I was fascinated and appreciated the distinction that Jones made between the
philosophical ideas of morality and ethics. Jones linked morality with judgment
and absolutism (Jones, pp.8-10) while acting and thinking ethically requires awareness
of individualism and interconnectedness and questions not the behaviors but the
conditions that make the behaviors possible.
I didn’t expect to find these definitions in a book about teaching but
found their application as appropriate to teaching as to other areas in my
life. Jones argues for “the conditions
of critical pedagogy necessarily requiring an ethical stance for questioning
and acting and making sense rather than a moralistic stance that knows right
and wrong.” (Jones, p.10)
This author
used the metaphor of giants (Jones, pp.5-6) to describe the obstacles and challenges
of BOTH school experiences AND life beyond school. Having been a successful student and a young
person who enjoyed going to school, it took me by surprise to have school life
described with such a threatening image.
So, I think I may be out of touch with the experiences and feelings of
students who are disenfranchised, vulnerable, or not successfully meeting the
educational challenges. I have not
taught children, nor have I been fully employed in teaching adults, yet I have
heard of and experienced the challenges experienced by teachers from their
perspectives more than I have heard of the experiences from the perspectives of
struggling students. This surprising metaphor was a wake up
call for me about the limits and boundaries of my understanding of the educational
experience from the perspective of the learner.
I think my own classroom research will need to focus greatly on the
student perspective. I am inclined at
this point to consider a case study or narrative approach in my upcoming
research for this class in order to pinpoint that focus on learners' perspectives.
Hello Deborah,
ReplyDeleteA great Summary of all 3 chapter!
I am also looking forward to see how we research will help us explore and discover meaningful ways methods/strategies we can apply in our own teaching/learning environments. I hope that after conducting our own classroom research, we can gain a deeper understanding of how this generation of students learns and how we can help them become self life long learners.
I think the issues you addressed in chapter 2 are interesting. It will be difficult to balance our results with all of the factors that you discussed unless we are doing more of a case study format.
ReplyDeleteHI Deborah!
ReplyDeleteI am also excited to think about how research that is so specific to one setting can be generalized or tweaked in a sense to fit my classroom. It is amazing to me how one strategy that I implement might work so incredibly well in my first period class and on the same day crash and burn in my third period. Teaching and learning are SO personal and teacher research is so personal but at the same time I think all teachers and classrooms can learn from on researchers experience.
I, too, raised an eyebrow at the image of school as "a 'giant' to conquer." That could be because I have never taught in the public school system and have always been involved in student-centered teaching curriculums. But it makes me think, and in fact worry, about what teachers and students have to face just to learn. Wouldn't it be nice if that "giant" were a gentle, helpful one?
ReplyDelete