A review of participatory action research as a basis for inter professional learning within the school setting: developing teachers as music makers in the classroom

2021 ◽  
pp. 169-189
Author(s):  
Nick Clough ◽  
Jane Tarr
2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-110
Author(s):  
Laura Morrison ◽  
Jennifer Robb ◽  
Janette Hughes ◽  
Margie Lam

Our Participatory Action Research (PAR) study explored the development and facilitation of an innovative virtual maker professional learning (PL) program during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants included four researchers and educators from a university in southern Ontario. Findings indicate that social presence plays a particularly important role in virtual maker PL for participant engagement and learning. Virtual maker educators may experience moments of isolation, doubt and frustration which can be alleviated by making and learning in a community of practice in order to feel supported and sustained in the process.


2020 ◽  
pp. 146879412095200
Author(s):  
Avy Dwight Hemy ◽  
Assaf Meshulam

Conducting a participatory action research (PAR) in schools is challenged by traditional asymmetrical power relations between adult teacher-researcher and young student-participants inherent in the school setting. In this article, we present PowerView, a new method that may reduce power hierarchy in the research classroom. Based on postcolonial theory, feminist theories, and critical visual studies, we implemented the idea of ‘reversal-of-the-gaze’ by asking the student-participants in our PAR program to turn their cameras at the instructor-researcher and capture images that represent their point of view of him. Enabling the students’ to gaze back at the instructor-researcher/serial observer with their cameras disrupted the hierarchical power paradigm in the research classroom and created a more equal space. The article will introduce the methodological stages of PowerView and present findings that demonstrate the potential of the method to change power relations between the researcher and students and challenge the power structure at the research classroom.


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