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Educational Studies
A Journal of the American Educational Studies Association
Volume 43, 2008 - Issue 2
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Toward “Good Enough Methods” for Autoethnography in a Graduate Education Course: Trying to Resist the Matrix with Another Promising Red Pill

Pages 125-143 | Published online: 28 Mar 2008
 

Abstract

Educational research suggests that the response biases of educators can negatively influence student performance and aptitude (CitationBlanchett 2006; CitationBloom 2001; CitationDarity et al. 2001; CitationGordon 2005; and CitationSkiba et al. 2000). This article introduces “good enough methods” for autoethnography as an alternative approach to this problem. Luttrell (Citation2000, 13) conceptualizes “good enough methods” researchers as those seeking to understand and appreciate difference and accept errors often made because of their blind spots and intense involvement. Evidence of this approach via autoethnography is provided here from cases of graduate student-practitioners and their Intergroup/Intercultural Education professor. Moreover, the article highlights (a) a connection of autoethnography to research in Education, (b) five key decisions of a “good enough methods” approach to autoethnography, and (c) how this approach can be applied to expose and address educator biases relating to “the matrix” (CitationHill-Collins 1990) of race, class, and gender.

Notes

1. All names of participants and person or place names offered by them were replaced by pseudonyms.

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