159 research outputs found
A problem with inclusion in learning disability research.
People with severe learning disability are particularly difficult to include in the research process. As a result,
researchers may be tempted to focus on those with learning disability who can be included. The problem is
exacerbated in this field as the political agenda of inclusion and involvement is driven by those people with
learning disability who are the higher functioning. To overcome this we should first detach the notion of
consent from ideas about autonomy and think instead of it as a way to avoid wronging others; this fits
the original historical use of consent in research. This allows us to think in terms of including
participants to the best of their abilities rather than in terms of a threshold of autonomy. Researchers
could then use imaginative ways to include the least able and to ensure they are not wronged in research
or by exclusion from it
On religion and cultural policy: notes on the Roman Catholic Church
This paper argues that religious institutions have largely been neglected within the study of cultural policy. This is attributed to the inherently secular tendency of most modern social sciences. Despite the predominance of the âsecularisation paradigmâ, the paper notes that religion continues to promote powerful attachments and denunciations. Arguments between the ânew atheistsâ, in particular, Richard Dawkins, and their opponents are discussed, as is Habermasâs conciliatory encounter with Joseph Ratzinger (later Pope Benedict XVI). The paper then moves to a consideration of the Roman Catholic Church as an agent of cultural policy, whose overriding aim is the promotion of âChristian consciousnessâ. Discussion focuses on the contested meanings of this, with reference to (1) the deliberations of Vatican II and (2) the exercise of theological and cultural authority by the Pope and the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). It is argued that these doctrinal disputes intersect with secular notions of social and cultural policy and warrant attention outside the specialist realm of theological discourse
Action research and democracy
This contribution explores the relationship between research and learning democracy. Action research is seen as being compatible with the orientation of educational and social work research towards social justice and democracy. Nevertheless, the history of action research is characterized by a tension between democracy and social engineering. In the social-engineering approach, action research is conceptualized as a process of innovation aimed at a specific Bildungsideal. In a democratic approach action research is seen as research based on cooperation between research and practice. However, the notion of democratic action research as opposed to social engineering action research needs to be theorized. So called democratic action research involving the implementation by the researcher of democracy as a model and as a preset goal, reduces cooperation and participation into instruments to reach this goal, and becomes a type of social engineering in itself. We argue that the relationship between action research and democracy is in the acknowledgment of the political dimension of participation: âa democratic relationship in which both sides exercise power and shared control over decision-making as well as interpretationâ. This implies an open research design and methodology able to understand democracy as a learning process and an ongoing experiment
Transitional experiences of post-16 sports education: Jack's story
This paper explores the layered transitional experiences of a semi-professional athlete named Jack (a pseudonym) between the fields of professional sport and further and higher education. Our analysis is framed by the quadripartite framework of structuration and focuses on Jack's 'in-situ' practices at his college and university in order to illustrate how these can operate to reproduce, transform, and challenge the habitual discourses and rituals that circulate within these institutions by generating forms of corporeal empowerment for young athletes who have valued conjunctural knowledge. The findings highlight the fragility of the transition process and raise questions regarding how the experiences of young people are shaped by the relationships between employment and post-16 education. Jack's experiences have implications for both policy and practice within further education and higher education. © 2012 © 2012 Taylor & Francis
The effects of online negative wordâofâmouth on dissatisfied customers:A frustrationâaggression perspective
Conceptualizing how customers construe online negative wordâofâmouth (nWOM) following failure experiences remains unsettled, leaving providers with inconclusive recovery strategy programmes. This empirical study recognizes online nWOM as a coâcreated encounter between the complainant (i.e., the initiator of the online nWOM) and the recipient (i.e., the consumer who engages with the online nWOM), examining their idiosyncrasies to discern their understanding of the experience. It introduces frustrationâaggression theory to online WOM literature, recognizing that it can support a higherâorder understanding of phenomena. Through phenomenological hermeneutics, interviews and focus groups, data were collected from millennials in Albania and Kosovo that provided accounts of nuanced and distinctive online nWOM realities. The emerged insights extended extant theory to a threeâfold online nWOM typology (i.e., lenient online nWOM, moderate online nWOM and severe online nWOM) recognizing the negative impact customers have on a provider, which is controlled by frustrationâaggression tags. Frustrationâaggression variations across online nWOM led to the construct of three types of customers that engage in online nWOM, namely tolerable online nWOM customers, rigorous online nWOM customers and confrontational online nWOM customers. Findings culminated with satisfactory recovery strategies aligned to customer inferences regardless of the nWOM context
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'Leader, you first': The everyday production of hierarchical space in a Chinese bureaucracy
Recent studies highlight how organizational power relations are materialized in space. However, relatively little is known about how these spatialized power relations are reproduced on a day-to-day basis. Drawing on a ten-month ethnographic study of a large government office in China, we find that hierarchical space is produced through three intertwined processes. It proliferates as employees actively seek out signs of hierarchy in the organizationâs space; it becomes familiarized as employees fabricate and circulate fanciful narratives about their spatial environs; and it is ritualized by employees acting out hierarchical relations across the organizationâs space. These processes resulted in a hardening of the hierarchical relations of power. The study extends the existing literature by showing how hierarchical organizational space is not just something that is imposed on employees; it is also imposed by the employees themselves
Translating Learners, Researchers, and Qualitative Approaches through Investigations of Studentsâ Experiences in School
This article uses the conceptual framework offered by âtranslationâ to argue for transforming students into authorities and agents in research on educational practice. Drawing on various definitions of translation and highlighting the influence of recent feminist perspectives on translation studies, the article presents two cases that illustrate how learners can be translated into co-researchers of educational experiences, researchers translated into partners with students in making meaning through the research process, and qualitative researchâs approaches and modes of presenting findings translated into new versions of those processes and products
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