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Educational Research Mentoring

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Educational Research Mentoring Fletcher, S.J. (2006) Technology-enabled action research in mentoring teacher researchers , Reflecting Education Journal, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Educational Research Mentoring


1
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Sarah Fletcher
  • sjfmentor_at_yahoo.com
  • http//www.TeacherResearch.net

2
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Why educational?
  • What kind of research?
  • What kind of mentoring?

3
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Enables a growth of knowledge about teaching and
    learning in schools and in universities.
  • Bridges between two populations of researchers in
    complementary educational contexts.
  • Is distinct from traditional forms of research
    mentoring associated with university contexts.

4
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Origins of educational research mentoring
  • Purpose in educational research mentoring
  • Process in educational research mentoring
  • Educational Research Mentoring outcomes

5
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Practice to theory

6
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Practice to theory

7
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Relates to Boyers (1990) Scholarships
  • Discovery (research)
  • Integration (connectedness of educational
    aspects)
  • Application (e.g. to assist individuals and
    institutions)
  • Teaching (the highest form of understanding)
  • and Generativity

8
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Potential benefits
  • A democratic relationship between those involved
    in researching.
  • Growth of knowledge about teaching an learning by
    teacher, pupil and academic in teaching contexts.
  • A critical symbiosis of academic and school-based
    knowledge.
  • Knowledge created collaboratively is not bound by
    the Disciplines.
  • Preconceptions about mentoring and teachers
    research are challenged.

9
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Potential benefits
  • Schoolteachers and university academics develop
    research informed practice.
  • ERM encourages the micro and macro investigation
    of teaching and learning.
  • Coupled with technology, ERM has the potential
    for global knowledge growth.
  • ERM can be managed face to face and virtually
    synchronously on- or off-line.
  • Teachers in school and universities learn how to
    interact through self-studying.

10
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Potential problems
  • Viability depends on personalities as well as
    experience and motivation.
  • As a boundary activity between school and HEIs
    ERM may be rejected.
  • ERM can be very labour intensive.
  • Different goals in knowledge creation can lead to
    misunderstandings.
  • Where HE accreditation is sought, knowledge may
    be gatekeepered.

11
ERM Potential problems
  • Teachers research may not be tested, critiqued
    and validated by their peers.
  • ERM may nurture woolly ill-defined research
    loosely termed action research
  • Knowledge created by teachers may not transfer to
    be of use to academic tutors.
  • Technology is sometimes viewed by teachers and
    academics as a bolt on extra - to avoid!

12
ERM Potential problems
  • In competitive HE environments teacher research
    is sometimes regarded as low grade.
  • Providing adequate opportunities for validation
    of knowledge can be difficult.

13
Recent publications on ERM
  • Fletcher, S.J. (2006) Technology-enabled action
    research in mentoring teacher researchers,
    Reflecting Education Journal, Vol. 2 (1) pp.
    50-71
  • 2. Fletcher, S. (2005) Sharing Teachers Action
    Research, KEEP Newsletter Carnegie Foundation
    for the Advancement of Teaching (winter 2005)
    Feature Web-Article accessible at
    http//www.cfkeep.org/static/index.html

14
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Is there evidence that my contribution to
    educational knowledge has influenced anyone?
    Donna Chipping and Rachele Morses research
    (2006), Appendix 6, suggests there is
  • We support the definition offered by Fletcher
    (2000) of research mentoring as creative
    collaboration between teachers as researchers and
    other researchers' where the whole is greater
    than the sum of the parts.

15
Educational Research Mentoring
  • Fletcher, S.J. (2006) Technology-enabled action
    research
  • in mentoring teacher researchers, Reflecting
    Education
  • Journal, Vol. 2 (1) pp. 50-71
  • Fletcher, S. (2005) Sharing Teachers Action
    Research,
  • KEEP Newsletter Carnegie Foundation for the
  • Advancement of Teaching (winter 2005) Feature
    Web-
  • Article accessible at http//www.cfkeep.org/static
    /index.html
  • Fletcher, S.J. (2005) 'Research Mentoring The
    Missing Link', in Bodone, F.
  • What Difference does Research Make and for Whom?
    New York, USA,
  • Peter Lang, pp. 177-190
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