Transcript Slide 1

Is educational research(ing)
a profession?
Examining issues of professional
status and developmentalism
Linda Evans,
School of Education, University of Leeds
[email protected]
The impetus
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Questionable quality of educational research
Interest in the sociology of the professions
 professionalism
 professionality
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Donald McIntyre (1996 BERA presidential
address):
 ‘How
helpful and how necessary is it for at least some
of us to see ourselves as professional educational
researchers?’
Professionalism, professionality and
professions:
concepts and substance
What defines a profession?
 McIntyre: professionalism:
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expertise
extensive knowledge
creative intelligence
a degree of perfectionism
Professionalism as occupational/social control
Professionalism as a service level agreement
Professionalism incorporates homogeneity
My interpretation of professionalism
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Homogeneity is elusive
 underpinned
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by the diversity of individuality
Professionalism is the ‘plural’ of individuals’
professionalities
 professionality
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writ large
Hoyle (1970s) distinguished between
professionalism and professionality:
– status-related
 professionality – relates to individual practitioners’
skills, knowledge, procedures, attitudes
 professionalism
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‘extended’-‘restricted’ professionality continuum
‘Restricted’ and ‘Extended’ Professionals
(adapted from Hoyle, 1975)
‘restricted’ professionals:
 adopt an intuitive
approach to practice
 use skills derived from
practical experience
 do not reflect on or
analyse their practice
 are unintellectual in
outlook and attitudes
 avoid change and are set
in their ways
‘extended’ professionals:
 adopt a rational approach
to practice
 use skills developed from
both theory and practice
 are reflective and
analytical practitioners
 adopt intellectual
approaches to the job
 experiment with and
welcome new ideas
My definitions
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Professionality is: an ideologically-, attitudinally-,
intellectually-, and epistemologically-based stance
on the part of an individual, in relation to the practice
of the profession to which s/he belongs, and which
influences her/his professional practice.
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Professionalism is: professionality-influenced
practice that is consistent with commonly-held
consensual delineations of a specific profession and
that both contributes to and reflects perceptions of
the profession’s purpose and status and the specific
nature, range and levels of service provided by and
expertise prevalent within the profession, as well as
the ethical code underpinning it.
Key components of professionalism
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What practitioners do
How they do it
What they know and understand
Where and how they acquire their knowledge
and understanding
What kinds of attitudes they hold
What codes of behaviour they adhere to
What purpose(s) they perform
What quality of service they provide
The level of consistency incorporated into the
above
Key components of professionalism
subjective
professionalism
intellectual
component
attitudinal
component
functional
component
comprehensive
dimension
perceptional
dimension
processual
dimension
epistemological
dimension
evaluative
dimension
procedural
dimension
rationalistic
dimension
motivational
dimension
productive
dimension
The intellectual component of
professionalism
intellectual
component
What do practitioners know and
understand?
What does the professional
knowledge base comprise?
Are there specialist areas?
Are there minimum (general)
practitioner knowledge
requirements?
What is the basis of practitioners’
knowledge?
Common sense and experience?
Research and/or scholarship?
•In which disciplines/subjects?
•What depth?
•What width?
•Contextual differences?
To what extent do practitioners
apply reason to decision making?
Is practice underpinned by
rationality, intuition or a mediation
of the two?
comprehensive
dimension
epistemological
dimension
rationalistic
dimension
The attitudinal component of
professionalism
attitudinal
component
perceptual
dimension
evaluative
dimension
motivational
dimension
How do practitioners perceive things
(issues, situations, people, activity, etc.)?
How do they perceive their own
profession and its purpose?
What perceptions do practitioners hold?
What perceptions do they not hold?
How widespread/consensual are
specific perceptions?
Are there any key/core perceptions?
How do practitioners evaluate things
(issues, situations, people, activity, etc.)?
How do they evaluate their own
profession and its purpose?
What values do practitioners hold?
How widespread/consensual are these
values?
Are there any key/core values?
What is the basis of practitioners’
motivation?
What factors influence motivation?
How motivated are practitioners?
What motivates them?
The functional component of
professionalism
functional
component
What processes do practitioners
apply to their practice?
gathering data?
examining?
analysing?
disseminating?
writing/composing written material?
learning?
collegiality?
procedural
dimension
What procedures do practitioners
apply to their practice?
What hierarchical procedures
operate within the workforce?
What stratification exists within the
workforce?
practitioners’ modes of communicating
and interacting?
mode(s) of meeting contractual
requirements?
How are responsibility and authority
distributed?
What layers of practice exist?
productive
dimension
What is the nature of practitioners’
output?
How much do practitioners
produce? (or ‘do’?)
What (if any) productive yardsticks
guide them?
What do practitioners ‘do’ at
work – their remit and responsibilities?
Is the workload determined by the
clock – set hours?
Is workload determined by the
task – in response to need?
processual
dimension
Is educational research(ing) a
profession?
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On the basis of homogeneity – consistency of
excellent practice and service – no, educational
research is not a profession:
 underpinned
by a diversity reflecting individuals’
professionality orientations
 quality of research produced is variable
 much of it is low quality
‘Extended’ and ‘Restricted’ Educational
Researcher Professionality
The researcher located at the ‘restricted’ extreme of the
professionality continuum typically:
The researcher located at the ‘extended’ extreme of
the professionality continuum typically:
conducts research that lacks rigour;
conducts highly rigorous research;
draws upon basic research skills;
draws upon basic and advanced research skills;
fails to develop or extend her/his methodological
competence;
strives constantly to develop and extend her/his
methodological competence;
utilises only established research methods;
adapts established research methods and develops
methodology;
fails to develop basic research findings;
generates and develops theory from research findings;
perceives research methods as tools and methodology as a
task-directed, utilitarian process;
perceives research methodology as a field of study in
itself;
applies low level analysis to research data;
strives constantly to apply deep levels of analysis to
research data;
perceives individual research studies as independent and
free-standing;
recognises the value of, and utilises, comparative
analysis, meta-analysis, synthesis, replication, etc.;
perceives individual research studies as finite and complete;
constantly reflects upon, and frequently revisits and
refines, his/her own studies;
struggles to criticise literature and others’ research
effectively;
has developed the skill of effective criticism and applies
this to the formulation of his/her own arguments;
publishes mainly in ‘lower grade’ academic journals and in
professional journals/magazines;
publishes frequently in ‘high ranking’ academic journals;
is associated mainly with research findings that fall into the
‘tips for practitioners’ category of output.
disseminates ground-breaking theoretical issues and
contributes to, and takes a lead in developing,
Is educational research(ing) a
profession?
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The concept of a profession is changing.
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the ‘professionalization of everyone’ (Williams)
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‘Profession’ is no longer an exclusive label.
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Therefore, educational research(ing) may be
considered a profession.
From professionalism to
‘developmentalism’
Developmentalism:
 a commitment to (self)-develop(ment)
 professional
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development
a new basis for evaluating occupations
How developmentalist a culture is manifested?
How developmentalist are individual
practitioners?
a new criterion for professional quality
Features of developmentalism
Practitioners with strong developmentalist
attitudes will typically:
 be analytical;
 be self-critical;
 manifest perfectionist tendencies;
 lie towards the ‘extended’ end of the
professionality continuum.
Educational research(ing):
a non-developmentalist ‘profession’?
For the most part:
 no evident commitment to CPD compared with
other professions:
 social work
 pharmacy
 teaching
 medicine
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‘ostensible’ CPD
no culture of developmentalism
‘riding a bicycle’ culture
There are individual exceptions to this.