Saturday 17 February 2007

Action Research, 1988, S Kemmis, Vol 1 Reader, p177

Participative Practitioner Action Research is good. Okay?

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K Lewin used the term Action Research (AR) in a paper in 1946, illustrating it by describing the process of reconnaissance necessary for a WWII bombing run. His emphasis was that knowledge comes from the action taken by participants in research (fact finding) and influences their next action. As will be significant, the methodology is critical, not any technique employed to carry it out e.g. fact finding is a methodology; how facts are found is the technique.

Kemmis dislike the simplicity of AR defined by Lewin. Kemmis and W Carr developed 5 rules to determine legitimate from illegitimate contemporary action research. It reads like commandments, and starts with

“1. It must reject positivistic notions of rationality, objectivity, and truth;" (sic).
They also insist that the motivation must be emancipatory (rule 4). Any failure renders the research inadequate or incoherent they argue. Their paper was 5 years earlier, in 1983, “Becoming Critical, Knowing through Action Research”. Acceptance is presumed, so I must write at this time that the “requirements” in isolation come across as dogmatic laws without justification. However, Rules 2, 3 and 5 are just re-amplifications of Lewin but applied to education.

Action Research peaked in the 1950’s but had a resurgence last century when Kemmis wrote.

The objects of Kemmis’s AR (KAR) are restricted to praxis, an unconvincing term of specious etymology that seems to be a re-minted coin, with the word practice on its face and with a requirement to be "informed by theory" as the legend on its edge. Actually, praxis is an Aristotelian term. Theory is subordinate to praxis because reason can't always prevent contradiction, which is always overcome by praxis (history, in fact). Is this pertinent? Kemmis seems to misapply it and misunderstand the role of theory, which he makes dominant and a pre-requisite to praxis. This undermines the rest of his paper. He actually writes quoting “theorist of practical action” and seems quite unconscious of his superfluous and pedantic language in the eyes of a non-convert. The difference between this and reconnaissance is mystifying. Praxis is vital to Kemmis. And that is the flaw in his paper – he just does not prove it, but writes as if it is dogma. There is no practical difference between practice and praxis, and Kemis seems again to re-define a word idiosyncratically.

He spends time explaining what AR is distinguished by methodology, not techniques. This is self-evident if his laws are used to prescribe KAR. It is also inevitably so because AR, even as defined by Lewin, is a spiral (or cycle) of methodology – techniques are irrelevant. The methodology is practitioners interdependently apply iterative research and reconnaissance to hopefully attain enlightening conclusions.

He makes clear the AR is associated with Policy Research and Control of Education.

The paper is mostly unconvincing and verbose. I wish I could have read more of Lewin’s paper.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi Graham
isn't Kemmis writing about praxis as defined by Carr? for example Carr p173 in reader: 'What is distinctive of praxis is that it is a form of reflexive action which can itself transform the 'theory' which guides it.'
I also wonder if Action Research is designed to focus on processes and not outcomes. If so, then it has a focus that is motivating for people involved in educational practice, even if not seen as so useful by policymakers?
Hope these comments are useful. Its early days for me on some of this stuff.!!

Quotidian Hopes said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Quotidian Hopes said...

Ali

What Carr says praxis is differs not a jot from what practice means. That is the issue for me. Theory informing “praxis” is inevitable since action research is action research because action informs the next action and so on (Lewin, 1946).

Process not outcomes – yes, indeed. Methodology, not technique. One could reconnoitre Mars with the orbiter and the data could be rejected by Nasa, but it could still prove useful to the world at large – as it does.

I don’t think Carr or Kremis add anything useful or new; they just over-complicate a simple straightforward methodology with pointless jargon.

But I am grateful they stimulated this discussion.