Research Methods for Social Justice and Equity in Education (Bloomsbury Research Methods for Education)

Author(s): Liz Atkins & Vicky Duckworth

Publisher: Bloomsbury Press

Year of Publication: 2019

Print Length: 352 pages

Genre: Academic / Methodology & Methods, Non-Fiction / Educational Theory and Practices, Social Science

Topic: Education, Equity & Fairness, Social Justice, Research, Research Methods

Research Methods for Social Justice and Equity in Education offers researchers a full understanding of very important concepts, showing how they can be used a means to develop practical strategies for undertaking research that makes a difference to the lives of marginalised and disadvantaged learners. It explores different conceptualisations of social justice and equity, and leads the reader through a discussion of what their implications are for undertaking educational research that is both moral and ethical and how it can be enacted in the context of their chosen research method and a variety of others, both well-known and more innovative.

The authors draw on real, practical examples from a range of educational contexts, including early childhood, special and inclusive education and adult education, and cultures located in both western and developing nations in order to exemplify how researchers can use methods which contribute to the creation of more equitable education systems. In this way, the authors provide a global perspective of the contrasting and creative ways in which researchers reflect on and integrate principles of social justice in their methods and their methodological decision making.

It encourages the reader to think critically about their own research by asking key questions, such as: what contribution can research for equity and social justice make to new and emerging methods and methodologies? And how can researchers implement socially just research methods from a position of power? This book concludes by proposing a range of methods and methodologies which researchers can use to challenge inequality and work towards social justice, offering a springboard from which they can further their own studies.

Acknowledgements

List of Abbreviations

Series Foreword

Introduction

Part One: Theorizing social justice and equity in educational research

1. Theoretical conceptions of social justice and equity

2. Research methods for social justice and equity in context

3. Socially just research as ethical endeavour

4. Insiders: Educators and researchers for social justice

Part Two: Researching for social justice and equity in context

5. Education, marginalization, voice and socially just methods

6. Education, literacy, and socially just methodology

7. Global perspectives on researching for equity and social justice

Part Three: Research methods for equity and social justice

8. Collaborative and participatory methods for social justice

9. Ethnographic approaches for social justice

10. Methodological creativity for social justice

Conclusion

Glossary

Bibliography

Index

Liz Atkins is Professor of Vocational Education and Social Justice at the University of Derby, UK. She is the leading scholar of Vocational Education and Training (VET). Her research includes a project at Guernsey College which is concerned with developing a more effective curriculum model for low-attaining youth, the school to work transitions of young people in the context of broad vocational programmes, and professional education and identity of teachers.

Source: https://www.derby.ac.uk/staff/liz-atkins/

More from Liz Atkins in this library, click here.

Vicky Duckworth is Professor of Education at Edge Hill University, UK. Her research and teaching spans over two decades, developing a national and International reputation for research in Adult Education and Literacy. She is deeply committed to challenging inequality through critical and emancipatory approaches to education, widening participation, inclusion, community action and engaging in research with a strong social justice agenda. She has drew on a critical perspective, applying Bourdieu’s work as the theoretical framework, as well as using a range of feminist, sociology of education, literature on the ethics of care and critical literacy pedagogy, including the New Literacy Studies to explore and add to the debate on the impact of violence and trauma on learning, possibilities, resistance and transformation and its link to class, gender, ethnicity, health and literacy.

Source: https://research.edgehill.ac.uk/en/persons/vicky-duckworth

More from Vicky Duckworth in this library, click here.