Chapter 3
Ethical issues in educational action research
Educational action research (EAR) is often
employed in language education by practitioners and researchers who
wish to engage in bottom-up, collaborative forms of research that
merge teaching, learning, and inquiry. EAR is characterised by
having a direct impact on the teaching and learning processes as it
is often carried out by teachers with their own students. EAR can be
approached as a practical or transformational endeavour to improve
language teaching and learning. Whatever the architecture supporting
EAR, there are a few macro- and micro-ethical issues that must be
acknowledged. In this chapter, I draw on my experience as a
researcher leading an EAR project carried out with secondary school
teachers and learners in Argentina to discuss ethical issues related
to quality of evidence, quality of purpose, and quality of outcome.
The article includes a series of takeways to support the ethical
design, implementation, and evaluation/afterlife of an EAR
project.
Article outline
- Contextualising ethics
- Contextualising ethics in educational action research
- Ethics in practice
- Quality of evidence
- Quality of purpose
- Quality of outcome
- Final reflections
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References
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