Educational Research in Scotland and the Rest of the UK:
Diversity and Opportunity?
Donald Christie
University of Strathclyde
ESCalate Conference:
Tackling Educational Complexity across the UK, Glasgow, 17 December 2003.
Outline
• The legacy of RAE 2001 – performativity profile across UK
• ‘Big research’: ESRC Grant Funding and the Teaching and Learning Research Programme
• The Scottish response: SEED/SHEFC Applied Educational Research Scheme
• Practitioner Research across UK and the Chartered Teacher Programme in Scotland
• Educational research - diversity and opportunity?
RAE 2001 and Education Research
Number of Research Active Staff – Unit 68
rated ‘4’ rated ‘5’ rated ‘5*’
Total number of Research Active Staff
England 539 538 43 1767
N. Ireland 18 39
Scotland 154 163
Wales 22 77
‘Big Research’ in Education- ESRC Research Grant Success Rate
% Success rate
Discipline (2001/02) Rank
Statistics 50 1/16
Linguistics 44 5/16
Economics 40 7/16
Education 28 14/16
Psychology 27 15/16
Educational Research perceived as relatively weak
“Three successive Research Assessment Exercises have suggested that rather too much educational research is small-scale, fragmented, autonomous, atheoretical, non-rigorous and not cumulative. TLRP has the potential to address these limitations in a very public way, although we have to be careful to avoid the assumption that it should or could solve all the problems of educational research.” (Brown, 2002)
Answer: Invest £26M in ESRC Teaching and Learning Research Programme
ESRC Teaching and learning Research Programme
Enlightenment quest: “TLRP: Academic Challenges for Moral Purposes” (Pollard, 2003)
“Our mission is to conduct research to enhance a broad range of learning outcomes of relevance to individuals, educational institutions, workplaces and our society as a whole. Our work will contribute to individual opportunity, economic productivity and social cohesion, and to the new foundations of evidence-informed policy and practice in education.” (Pollard, 2002)
TLRP is a UK-wide Programme
• Networks and Projects (30+) distributed across N.I., Wales, Scotland as well as England
• But Scottish, Welsh and N. Ireland ‘Extension’ Programmes announced
• Thematic groups looking at interface between research and practice and the interface between research and policy across UK, in Europe and beyond
Educational Research in Scotland
• Seven universities with faculties/institutes/schools of education
• Other (new) universities with research interests in teaching and learning
• FE colleges developing research cultures• Schools seen as professional learning communities• Other bodies such as: Learning and Teaching Scotland;
Scottish Qualifications Authority• The Scottish Executive (Ed. Dept. and E.L.L.Dept.)• General Teaching Council Scotland• (Historically) dedicated research organisation – Scottish
Council for Research in Education, now SCRE Centre at Glasgow University
• Charitable bodies with research agenda
SEED/SHEFC Applied Educational Research Scheme
(AERS)Aims:
• To enhance infrastructure and build research capacity in education in Scotland (SHEFC agenda)
• To carry out high quality research to address National Priorities in Education (SEED agenda)
AERS - Enhancing Infrastructure
• Organisation of research– New models of collaboration between HEIs and
between disciplines within and beyond Scotland– Partnership with policy and practice communities
• Theoretical and methodological tools • Skills and expertise of researchers – formal and
informal research training• Create ‘critical mass’ among researchers
pooled across institutions and disciplines• Bring together complementary types of
expertise
AERS - Carrying out high quality research projects
• Establish inclusive research networks to carry out research projects relevant to the National Priorities for Education
• Make use of ‘cutting edge’ theoretical and methodological insights from across the social sciences
• Develop effective and sustainable partnerships to engage all relevant stakeholders at all stages of the research
AERS (2004-2009)
£2M of funding will support creation of four inter-connected research networks:– Network on Learners, Learning and Teaching
(Strathclyde)– Network on School Management and
Governance (Edinburgh)– Network on Schools and Social Capital
(Stirling)– Network on Research Capacity-Building
(Strathclyde)
Potential benefits of AERS
• Educational Research in ‘Pasteur’s Quadrant’• Enhanced research training opportunities• Enhanced opportunities for collaboration• Enhanced opportunities for external funding• Links facilitated with ESRC TLRP• Links to European research
networks/programmes
AERS – opportunity knocks!
AERS presents the Scottish educational research community with unique opportunities:-
• To build our own ‘social capital’ • To create innovative communities of
professional enquiry • Perhaps, to develop new cumulative
models of large-scale research in education?
Practitioner Research in England
• DfES Best Practice Research Scholarships - highly commended, but now to be discontinued
• TTA-funded School-based Research Consortia• NCSL Networked Learning Communities• GTC England
– “committed to being an evidence-based organisation”
• GTCE/DfES/NCSL in various partnerships – National (sic) Teacher Research Panel– National (sic) Educational Research Forum
Practitioner Research in Wales
GTC Wales supporting teacher research and development through:
Teacher Research Scholarships - up to £3,000 Teacher Sabbaticals - up to £6,000Professional Networks - up to £10,000 to
enable a group of teachers from one subject area, school cluster or LEA to work together
Plus- Professional Development Bursaries (£500)International Visits (£2,000)
(Practitioner) Research in Northern Ireland
GTCNI• Aims to collate a database holding details of all
educational research in N. Ireland• Would like to offer sponsorship of research
projects, but does not have control of finances• Co-sponsoring the North of England Education
Conference, January 2004, in Belfast (!)
DENI • Limited support for practitioner research so far
(but TLRP Extensions just announced).
Practitioner Research in Scotland
GTC Scotland is supporting Teacher Research and Development through its
Teaching Scholarship Programme and its
Teacher Research Programme
GTCS has also recently appointed a full-time Research Fellow to develop its research profile and support its Teacher Researchers
[SEED Sponsored Research Scheme: Awards up to £10K – not specifically intended for practitioners]
Research, Policy and Practice
The Chartered Teacher Programme: a Scottish case study of educational research and development
• Political context – New Parliament/ Scottish Executive priority yields ‘historic’ McCrone Agreement
• CPD given high prominence• Professional Development to be incentivised, and
‘promotion’ without management role introduced• Standard for Chartered Teacher created – a
systematic research exercise
Researching the Standard for Chartered Teacher
Grounded theory/content analysis by the hexagonal ‘post-it’ method!
Standard for Chartered Teacher
• Professional values and personal commitments
• Professional knowledge and understanding
• Professional and personal attributes
• PROFESSIONAL ACTION
The SCT
Model
Professional Values and Commitments -Critical reflection, self-evaluation and
development..To ensure that teaching is informed by reading and
research, for example, by:• engaging in professional enquiry and action
research, and applying findings • reflecting critically on research evidence and
modifying practice as appropriate • testing whether a particular theoretical perspective
actually applies in practice • interpreting changes to education policy and
practice and contributing and responding to such changes
Research Opportunities for Chartered Teachers
• Engage in worthwhile professional enquiry and related school development– AND be rewarded for commitment to such enquiry
and development work
• Gain access to potentially powerful networks across schools and local authorities, sharing ideas
• Share in wider research activity, not situationally bound
• Become a member of a community of enquiry?
Roles/Opportunities for Educational Researchers
• Provide expertise and methodological support to practitioners engaged in work-based projects
• Potentially create a network of practitioners engaged in cognate areas of enquiry
• Networks become communities of enquiry?• Mutual access to broader datasets• Multi-trialling of interventions + meta-analysis• New Model of ‘Design Experiment’
Scottish Contexts for Educational Research
• Governance and political accountability– Education and national identity– Consensus and collaboration versus control and
competition– Role of 32 local authorities
• Social inclusion agenda and inter-professional approaches in the Integrated Community Schools
• Children’s rights – Article 12 enshrined in Education Legislation (2000)
Issues for Consideration• Can the four divergent education systems provide
us with a series of large-scale ‘naturalistic experiments’ and/or fruitful comparative studies?
• Being different from England equals being better than England – How can we all avoid such complacency?
• How can we best foster cross-UK collaboration in a competitive environment (e.g. refereeing bids)?
• How can we engage most effectively with broader international networks?
• Can we find better ways to explore the interface between educational research, policy and practice?