All articles
Articles by tag "participatory research":
2015, 1
p. 69-79
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26
Since the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child was ratified in 1991, children’s right to have a voice, and to have their opinions heard, has led many providers and practitioners in the field of early years to seek ways to involve children’s perspectives in the evaluation and development of practice. Those who value democracy understand that encouraging young children to actively participate has long term implications for participatory citizenship. Researchers in early childhood have also been sensitised to the challenge of inclusive research, in which our youngest children are viewed as active subjects, rather than objects, in a research process that is set in the context of a democratic encounter. The Centre for Research in Early Childhood in Birmingham, England has a strong ethical commitment to including the voices of children as an integral part of all its research and development work. We operate through an ethos of empowerment of all participants, and aim for participatory research practice which has at its heart an active involvement in promoting the rights of children as citizens with voice and power. This paper will trace a brief history of the children’s participatory position in England and explore the struggles and challenges we, as researchers, have faced in making our personal commitment to children’s participation a reality. It will draw upon the work of a series of research and development projects we have undertaken over the last fifteen years in which we tried to work alongside children to explore and document their realities of life in early childhood settings. These projects include the Effective Early Learning (EEL) Programme, the Accounting Early for Life Long Learning (AcE) Programme, the Children Crossing Borders Project (Bertram and Pascal 2007) and the Opening Windows (OW) Programme. Through the work of these projects, and with an especial focus on the Children Crossing Borders research, which was the precursor to the OW programme, we explain how we have attempted to provide space for multiple voices in the research process. We share our learning about how better to support and listen to the voices of young children, who are the most often silenced in the production of knowledge and understandings about their lives. From this experience, methodological and epistemological lessons for researchers and practitioners will be identified and further explored.
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2013, 6
p. 50–57
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18
Participatory approaches to engaging in research with young children place a great deal of emphasis on children’s rights to choose whether or not they wish to be involved. A number of recent studies have reported a range of strategies both to inform children of their research rights and to establish options for checking children’s understanding of these rights throughout the research process. This paper seeks to move the debate around children’s informed agreement to participate forward by considering the ways in which children might indicate their dissent their desire not to participate at various stages of the research process. Drawing on examples from Iceland and Australia, involving children aged two six years, the paper explores children’s verbal and non-verbal interactions and the ways in which these have been used, and interpreted, to indicate dissent. Reflection on these examples raises a number of questions and identifies several tensions, as well as offering some suggestions for ways in which researchers can recognize children’s decisions to opt out of research participation.
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