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What Difference Does Research Make and for Whom?

by Françoise Bodone (Volume editor)
©2005 Textbook XII, 292 Pages
Series: Counterpoints, Volume 275

Summary

Education is a discipline that is constantly emerging, and for which there are more questions than answers. Beyond the research reports, the articles in refereed journals, and the well-crafted presentations, what is happening in education? What difference does our work make in the lives of those we research? How is education as a whole different because of our effort? And what is the nature of the difference we make? This book provides some answers to those questions based on engaged and critical research from around the world. It is also a critical reflection on new possibilities for qualitative research, its implications and relevance to educational practice. Andrew Hargreaves, Enora Brown, Graham Hingagaroa Smith, Jack Whitehead, Mutindi Mumbua, Andrew Gitlin, Phil Carspecken, and others invite readers to join the conversation, and take it beyond these pages by enriching and extending the discourse within their communities of practice.

Details

Pages
XII, 292
Year
2005
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820470733
Language
English
Keywords
Lehrerausbildung Aufsatzsammlung Bildungsforschung
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2005. XII, 292 pp., 6 ill.

Biographical notes

Françoise Bodone (Volume editor)

The Editor: Françoise Bodone is an international independent scholar who received her Ph.D. in educational policy and leadership from the University of Oregon. Her interests include critical pedagogy as applied to research and classroom practices, cultural and social justice in education, and the potential of photography in educational research. She recently co-authored a chapter in the International Handbook of Self-Study of Teaching and Teacher Education Practices (2004), and published another in Teen Life in Europe (in press).

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Title: What Difference Does Research Make and for Whom?