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Possibilities for the use of research in educational practice are
often written off due to the history, politics and interests of the
ostensibly separate worlds that researchers and practitioners
occupy. However, a more optimistic account highlights the ways
these communities share a common need for practice-based theories,
which enable them to make sense of a wide range of issues in
education, including pedagogy, learning, and educational equity. In
applying theory to situated accounts of various educational
practices and learning contexts, this book explores mistaken
assumptions about the ways that research can 'inform' or otherwise
impact practice. It problematises a 'what works' agenda but also
points to potentially more productive research-practice
relationships in education. Experienced contributors describe how
they have used a variety of context-sensitive theoretical
approaches in the socio-cultural and discursive traditions to both
understand practice and address a wide range of practical issues in
education. At its core Reframing Educational Research challenges
two commonly held assumptions: that "best practice" is readily
identifiable in a way that is then transferrable to new contexts
for use by practitioners more widely, and that theory will not help
with what to do on Monday morning in the classroom or in developing
policies with direct and visible impact. Drawing on the experience
of a number of highly respected expert contributors, including Mel
Ainscow, Harry Daniels, Anna Sfard and Etienne Wenger-Trayner, the
book discusses a range of issues that must be explicitly addressed
if we are to make headway in developing a sustainable and
productive relationship between research, policy and practice. The
authors make it clear that the politics, policies, institutional
practices, market systems and social dynamics currently at play in
education have a tendency to derail the idealised pathway from
research to reform. This book aims to move the discussion towards
alternative, and potentially more fruitful, ways of linking
research with practice. Reframing Educational Research is an
invitation to all researchers to identify new opportunities for
advancing theory and practice in education. It is a must-read for
all practitioners and researchers in education.
Possibilities for the use of research in educational practice are
often written off due to the history, politics and interests of the
ostensibly separate worlds that researchers and practitioners
occupy. However, a more optimistic account highlights the ways
these communities share a common need for practice-based theories,
which enable them to make sense of a wide range of issues in
education, including pedagogy, learning, and educational equity. In
applying theory to situated accounts of various educational
practices and learning contexts, this book explores mistaken
assumptions about the ways that research can 'inform' or otherwise
impact practice. It problematises a 'what works' agenda but also
points to potentially more productive research-practice
relationships in education. Experienced contributors describe how
they have used a variety of context-sensitive theoretical
approaches in the socio-cultural and discursive traditions to both
understand practice and address a wide range of practical issues in
education. At its core Reframing Educational Research challenges
two commonly held assumptions: that "best practice" is readily
identifiable in a way that is then transferrable to new contexts
for use by practitioners more widely, and that theory will not help
with what to do on Monday morning in the classroom or in developing
policies with direct and visible impact. Drawing on the experience
of a number of highly respected expert contributors, including Mel
Ainscow, Harry Daniels, Anna Sfard and Etienne Wenger-Trayner, the
book discusses a range of issues that must be explicitly addressed
if we are to make headway in developing a sustainable and
productive relationship between research, policy and practice. The
authors make it clear that the politics, policies, institutional
practices, market systems and social dynamics currently at play in
education have a tendency to derail the idealised pathway from
research to reform. This book aims to move the discussion towards
alternative, and potentially more fruitful, ways of linking
research with practice. Reframing Educational Research is an
invitation to all researchers to identify new opportunities for
advancing theory and practice in education. It is a must-read for
all practitioners and researchers in education.
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