Volume 11 of the Journal of Educational Controversy is now online with a focus on the question: Is “Best Practices” Research in
Education Insufficient or even Misdirected?
This invited issue is dedicated to the life and scholarly work of John G. Richardson. Dr. Richardson is professor emeritus at Western Washington University and the associate editor of the Journal of Educational Controversy since its beginning in 2006. He has conceptualized the theme for this issue and has written an introductory essay that places the invited articles within a conceptual framework that raises deeper questions about what it means to make claims to understand something.
For decades the research agenda for
identifying “best practices” for reforming education has been structured around
testing hypotheses of either effectiveness or prediction of outcomes. Within the quantitative approach researchers
have used a variety of traditional causal and correlational designs to examine
relationships between specific measurable variables. Researchers have also used
qualitative approaches to examine implementation of such practices in more
depth through observations in the field, interviews with students and
educators, and content analysis of curriculum and student work.
However, educational research seeking the best
practices can often ignore or minimize the mechanisms that generate the
phenomenon studied. From
school-to-prison and mass incarceration, racial-gender disproportionality in
special and vocational education, to school dropout rates, correlations abound,
but they don't by themselves explain the phenomenon. Good intentions frame much educational
research, but can over-dramatize correlations at the expense of deeper
explanation.
This volume seeks papers that
exemplify the "paradoxical" nature of educational research. Submissions should focus on two things: the
intentions or motivations that (often) inform educational research, but where
the results or outcomes are unintended or unanticipated. We seek papers that go beyond descriptions of
educational issues, however detailed, as well as beyond explanations that
repeat initial intentions or motivations.
Papers should reveal and discuss the specific forces and mechanisms that
generate the topic of analysis, be it educational practices (teaching, assessment),
outcomes (achievement, court decisions, enrollments) or events (protests and
emergent social movements, school shootings, drop outs) that are the subject of
the paper.
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