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Relevant and Rigorous?

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Relevant and Rigorous? Action research evaluation and practitioner research in social care Ian Shaw (University of York) Presentation Aims Report and reflect on a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Relevant and Rigorous?


1
Relevant and Rigorous?
  • Action research evaluation and practitioner
    research in social care
  • Ian Shaw (University of York)

2
Presentation Aims
  • Report and reflect on a study of small-scale,
    local research and evaluation carried out by
    social care practitioners, and consider its
    relevance for policy evaluation and action
    research.

3
Location of Practitioner Research
  • Health related practitioner research
  • Housing practitioners
  • Teachers
  • Social workers

4
PR in Social Care
  • An audit and case study evaluation of
    practitioner research in social care in South
    East Wales (2002-3) and its possible implications
    for the development of action research evaluation
  • Keane, S., Shaw, I and Faulkner, A. (2003)
    Practitioner Research in Social Care an Audit
    and Case Study Analysis Report to Wales Office of
    RD for Health and Social Care, Wales Assembly
    Government

5
Inquiry Design
  • Audit
  • Telephone screening interview of 42 projects in
    south east Wales from 1999-2002
  • Classification/typology
  • Case studies
  • Theoretical sample of eight projects
  • Interviews/documents
  • Recommendations

6
Classification of PR in Social Care
Practitioner owned Practitioner owned Agency owned Agency owned
Formal approval No formal approval Formal approval No formal approval
Higher Education link Single data source 7 9 0 0
Higher Education link Multiple data source 3 4 2 0
No Higher Education link Single data source 0 1 0 7
No Higher Education link Multiple data source 0 0 6 3
7
Diversity in PR
  • Simple/private PR
  • Simple/multi-stakeholder PR
  • Complex multi-stakeholder PR
  • Complex/private PR

8
Purposes in PR
  • Practitioners are not insensitive to matters of
    ethics, but they do sometimes act as if they are
    in a subordinate relationship to an expert, whose
    advice whether rightly or wrongly recalled - is
    treated as beyond question. This illustrates a
    possible risk in PR that practitioners may be too
    easily discouraged from seeking ethical approval,
    due to lack of experience in weighing the
    seriousness of ethical obstacles.
  •   Issues of consent occurred to some degree in
    all the projects studied, and the level of
    negotiation lay on a continuum.

9
Purposes in PR (2)
  • There is no clear evidence of PR that involving
    service users in the development and management
    of the research project ever took place in these
    case studies, nor in the other studies audited.
  • With regard to utilisation of findings, there was
    often a sense of disappointed expectations. There
    was also a strong aspirational quality to
    practitioners accounts of PR utilisation. Are PR
    results more likely to have an impact when they
    resonate with agency priorities?

10
Methods and Processes of PR
  • The role of support and networks is important in
    PR, though it is not easy to draw simple
    conclusions, or to identify the factors that are
    associated with supportive projects.
  • PR projects that work well are often those that
    enjoy a variety of congruent roles that include
    both support and shaping influences. Yet for
    some, the individualism of the research project
    is what drives the researcher.

11
Methods and Processes (2)
  • Practitioner researchers tend to take an
    ambivalent attitude to research methodology. This
    can lead to a dependence on the advice of others.
    This may make the project methodology fragile
  • This was often linked to growing awareness, and
    learning on the job.
  • Practitioners doing PR move back and forth
    between insider and outsider roles

12
Colleagues and professionals
  • In choosing to undertake PR there are elements of
    socialisation, selection, earmarking those seen
    as promising, career motivations, formalising
    emergent research interests, and so on.
  • positive relationships between research project
    and agency were not universal.
  • Joined up PR is almost completely absent. Some
    practitioners and their sponsoring agencies
    apparently did not make any connection between
    problems and developments in delivering joined up
    services, and the PR process.

13
PR and social care careers
  •         A general positive impact on a career in
    social work
  •         A stepping-stone in a move previously
    planned or otherwise towards a career in which
    research is central.
  •         PR involvement regarded as an end in
    itself, with no identifiable impact on career or
    identity.

14
Some Reflections
  • Practitioner research in social care poses
    questions and issues that act as gateways to
    several of the major debates within social care
    the quality of practice and research, evidence
    based interventions, career development, ethical
    decision making, and so on.
  •   Terms like use, insider and own account
    often mask the complexity of the PR process.
  •  There is a striking degree of diversity in what
    passes under the PR rubric.

15
Some Reflections (2)
  • Quantitative skills were probably lacking
    throughout the researcher group, and there were
    few more through-going qualitative designs
  • The tendency for PR practitioners to be
    marginalized in one way or another renders their
    survival capacity at constant risk.

16
Some Reflections (3)
  • The absence of user involvement in almost all PR
    is likely to reinforce an assumption that
    practitioner expertise does not have to be
    complemented by service-users understanding. PR
    is, as a consequence, less likely to promote
    social justice issues in service development and
    delivery. Yet we would not wish to promote a
    practitioner-blame culture, by suggesting that
    this is due solely to practitioner-level
    decisions. It may be part of a PR culture that
    promotes a service development and delivery
    agenda and is often linked to higher education
    demands ways of writing that do not encourage
    multiple stakeholder involvement.

17
Some reflections (4)
  1. The role of practitioner researcher as both
    insider and outside, and as moving between the
    two, is sensitive and frequently difficult.
  2. There is an ever-present risk of marginalisation
    for the practitioner researcher. This stems
    mainly from the frequent points at which
    relationships of authority and power shape the
    decisions for good and ill - about access,
    methods, and utilisation of research results.
  3. Despite the tendency to polarise practitioner and
    academic research that we have just noted, there
    were hints that the two roles are both exposed to
    elements of risk of marginalisation.

18
Recommendations
  • that interested government departments review the
    extent, character, development and associated
    career opportunities of practitioner research in
    social care
  • that steps be taken in the light of that review
    to promote the quality of practitioner research
    in social care. We advise at the present time
    against the selective promotion of one type of PR
    at the expense of any other type of PR.
  • the support of university based centres for the
    development of PR

19
Recommendations (2)
  • there is need to respect and even increase the
    present diversity of types of PR in social care
  • the development of approaches to PR that draw on
    the ideas presented above regarding multiple
    ownership and a wider range of research
    sophistication

20
Recommendations (3)
  • The development of a PR bursary system, similar
    to that already existing for teachers eg through
    the GTCW
  • Discuss in context of implementation of the
    research governance frameworks in Wales and
    England
  • Review IPR claims in PR in the light of the
    diversity of ownership claims
  • That social science, social policy and cognate
    departments in higher education develop guidance
    for postgraduate students that legitimises the
    collaborative dimensions of PR
  • feed PR issues into the present work being
    undertaken by the Social Care Institute for
    Excellence on the knowledge base of social care.
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