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Articles

Practitioner research: with intent

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ABSTRACT

Practitioner research is increasingly used by and with teachers to counter discourses and policies of top-down standardisation. Growing numbers of researchers advocate benefits as the learning and empowerment of educators, and the sense of achievement for university researchers when they research with rather than about educators. We focus here on initiatives that engaged educators in planning and reflecting on their own professional learning (PL). A research project entitled Research Connections: Practitioner research engagement network for early childhood educators, combined professional learning and research through a research network of early childhood centres and university researchers working collaboratively for a year to plan and implement research projects intended to improve self-identified aspects of centre practice. We report the project model and present findings that suggest that the practitioner researchers valued learning about research processes that embedded intentional planning to construct and use their own knowledge and understanding of core curriculum concepts, increasing the likelihood of sustainable change. We argue that practitioner research proves a powerful and useful way for educators to drive improvements to their own practice. Educators have built the capacity to advocate for policy that recognises their strengths in planning their own professional learning.

Acknowledgements

We wish to acknowledge the educators, families and children of the four children’s centres that initiated, encouraged and supported PRENECE. This project went on to win an international research award at the European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference in 2017. We thank EECERA for this honour.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Appendix 1 Comparison of quantitative responses.

Additional information

Funding

This work is supported by the educators, families and children of the four children’s centres. Their financial support made the project possible.

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