Chapter 8
Ethical research with adult migrant language learners
Challenges and responses
Applied Linguistics research, teacher-research
and scholarship with adult language learners who are migrants holds
ethical challenges in relation to social and political contexts that
are under-examined in the TESOL/Applied Linguistics literature and
in practice. The critical exploration in this chapter addresses this
gap. With examples from participatory research-and-practice
initiatives in the UK, the chapter advocates a critical
participatory approach towards research, one that is oriented
towards the promotion of social justice. Such an approach can
support the empowerment of participants as they respond to
challenging and unethical policy landscapes: through their active
participation in research, learners and practitioners may be better
equipped with the tools they need for resistance and change. First,
the authors describe how language education researchers working with
adult migrants have adopted a reflexive, critical and activist
orientation towards their work. They then discuss research that
relates to practice which is not attendant on top-down policy moves,
and which itself might inform a critical, emancipatory orientation
towards policy formation. To end, they reflect further on the notion
of research that empowers, and the impact this might have on policy
and practice.
Article outline
- Introduction
- Contextualising ethics
- Ethics in practice: Two examples
- The Speak to Me project: A participatory approach
to language education in
Wales
- Migration and settlement: Exploring belonging through arts practice
- Commentary and reflection: Practitioner-researchers as advocates
-
References
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