dc.description.abstract | that began in 1979 with a modestly produced version for education students at Deakin
University in Geelong Australia. A course was offered as part of an ‘upgrading’
Bachelor of Education degree designed for practising teachers. The intention
was to encourage teachers to conduct small action research projects, or preferably,
to participate in larger ones, and to report regularly on their action research work
and reading throughout the year through a course journal. Each student was also
expected to write a critical review of another student’s work, and on an aspect of
the action research literature. The early Planners were somewhat restricted by their
need to guide assessment tasks required by a course. Nevertheless, the Planners
became popular and were used in many projects in several professional fields and
community projects outside Deakin University, with varying degrees of success.
As the Planners began to be used by a wider readership and without the support
of other readings prescribed for the Deakin Action Research course, we re-worked
the text to give a little more theoretical background and to take account of the growing
literature discussing more critical approaches to action research, including Carr
and Kemmis (1986) which had also begun its life as a text for students in the Deakin
Action Research course. Twenty-first century volumes of the SAGE Handbook of
Qualitative Research presented more refined versions of the idea of critical participatory
action research (Kemmis and McTaggart 2000, 2005). These chapters described
significant reconsideration of the concepts of educational practice, research
practice, and participation. This twenty-first century thinking shapes the intention
of this version of The Action Research Planner with its new sub-title Doing Critical
Participatory Action Research. | en_US |