A handbook for Exploratory Action Research
B: You had a catalogue with titles right? A
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A Handbook for Exploratory Action Research
B: You had a catalogue with titles right?
A: Yes, I had the titles but I didn’t know which ones my students would like. B: I see. What did you do then? A: I showed the titles of the readers to my students and I asked them to choose their favourite. They chose a story about animals! I could have never predicted that. B: Why? Which one did you think they would choose? A: A story about UFOs, ghosts or something like that. Never animals! The examples in Task 3.1 above briefly illustrate situations where teachers attempt to solve situations or answer a question by immediately leaping into action. Unlike those situations, in the dialogue above you can see how the teacher answered her puzzle by collecting data. In this case she explored an unclear situation by asking her students. She even reported her surprise when realising that her own choice would have been a different one. This only proves that, sometimes, taking a decision too quickly and without exploring the situation further, can involve incorrect assumptions or simply assumptions which may be based on signs and intuition (as discussed in Chapter One) instead of reasons why this situation is happening, as can be explored through the collection of data. What is Exploratory Action Research? | 21 3.2 Exploratory research: Andrea’s story part 1 Let’s look at an example of how a situation can be explored before attempts are made to resolve it. And we will see how exploring can be built into everyday practice in Andrea’s story, which she tells in her own words: “I decided to start this research because I had a puzzle about my wrapping-up activities. I felt that my closure was not efficient or maybe my activities did not engage students until the end to ensure their learning and the reaching of my class objective: I realised that I tended to prepare my classes giving special emphasis to the warm up and the main activities and I wondered if the wrapping- up was as strong as it should be. But my first question was: What is a wrapping-up? I had an idea about it: a wrapping-up for me was the last activity of the class, in which students verbalise, show or present what they learned. But maybe it was not. So I started surfing the web in order to find some information about it. I found a website, www.busyteacher.com . That website has many articles written by teachers about different topics. Fortunately I found one that concerned the topic I was looking for. In that article, the teacher mentions that a wrapping-up is the last activity and it must be done by the students. In this part of the class the teacher has the role of a facilitator. In that point I felt that what I thought was similar to what that article said, so I felt kind of relaxed to be not so “lost”. However, something that called my attention was that the teacher has a secondary role as a facilitator and that the learners are the protagonists and the most important of all is that the information must come from the students and not from the teacher. After that action, I decided to also ask some colleagues about this topic. I thought that their opinion could be useful because I still had questions that I needed to answer. I asked them the following: Download 3.49 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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