action research
- Related Topics:
- social science
- knowledge
action research, an overall approach to knowledge and inquiry, concerned with forging a direct link between intellectual knowledge and moment-to-moment personal and social action. Action research seeks to contribute directly to the flourishing of individuals, their communities, and the ecosystems of which they are part.
Action research has two faces: one is practical, concerned with providing processes of inquiry that are useful to people in the everyday conduct of their lives; the other is philosophical and political, part of a movement to ensure that what is taken as knowledge is philosophically sound, participatory, and pragmatic.
Action-research practices aim to open communicative spaces where people can come together in open dialogue to address issues of concern and to engage in cycles of action and reflection, so that ideas that are tentatively articulated in reflection can be examined systematically in phases of active experimentation. Action research can be described in more detail in terms of the following dimensions.
Pragmatic
A primary purpose of action research is to produce practical knowledge that addresses issues of concern in personal and professional life. A wider purpose is to contribute through this to the increased well-being—economic, political, psychological, spiritual—of individuals and communities and to a more equitable and sustainable relationship with the wider ecology of the planet of which they are an intrinsic part.
Participatory
Action research is a participative and democratic process that seeks to do research with, for, and by people; to redress the balance of power in knowledge creation; and to do this in an educative manner that increases participants’ capacity to engage in inquiring lives. At a methodological level, participation is important because one cannot study and improve practice without the deep involvement of those engaged in that practice—the necessary perspective and information are simply not available—and one can study persons only if one approaches them as persons, as intentional actors and meaning makers. But participation is also an ethical and political process: people have the right and ability to contribute to decisions that affect them and to knowledge that is about them, and action research has an important place in the empowerment of people.
Many ways of knowing
Action research draws on a wide range of ways of knowing as one encounters and acts in the world. This “extended epistemology” starts with everyday experience and is concerned with the development of living knowledge. It thus includes the experiential and the tacit; presentational forms drawing on story, theatre, graphic arts, and so forth; propositional knowing through theory and models; and practical knowing as expressed in skill and accomplishment.
Worthwhile purposes
The focus on practical purposes draws attention to the moral dimension of action research—that it is not a values-free process but an inquiry in the pursuit of worthwhile purposes, raising questions of values, morals, and ethics. Here there can be no absolutes; moral choice is always a matter of balance between competing goods. So in the practice of action research, one must continually ask what worthwhile purposes one is pursuing and whether they continue to be appropriate and relevant.
Emergent form
Good action research emerges over time in an evolutionary and developmental process, as individuals develop skills of inquiry, as communities of inquiry develop, as understanding of the issues deepens, and as practice grows, develops, shifts, and changes over time. Emergence means that the questions may change, the relationships may change, the purposes may change, what is important may change. This means action research cannot be programmatic and cannot be defined in terms of hard-and-fast methods but is in a sense a continually emerging work of art.
First-, second-, and third-person research
Action research has encompassed the individual, the small group, and wider organizational and social entities. At an individual level—first-person research—action research has addressed questions of personal and professional change, addressing questions such as “How can I improve my practice?” At the level of the face-to-face group, second-person action research has allowed people to come together to address issues of common concern. Current debate is focused on how action research can address issues at wider social and organizational levels, for example, through networks of inquiry and a variety of large-group processes and dialogue conferences as vehicles of inquiry.
Methodological practices
These broad principles of inquiry are applied in practice with different emphases by the various schools and traditions. Included under the broad rubric of action research are variations including action science, action inquiry, appreciative inquiry, cooperative inquiry, participatory action research, and others.
Peter Reason