Contributing to the development of cultures of morally accountable practices for social transformation
Submitting Institution
York St John UniversityUnit of Assessment
EducationSummary Impact Type
SocietalResearch Subject Area(s)
Education: Curriculum and Pedagogy, Specialist Studies In Education
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences: Psychology
Summary of the impact
    This case study outlines the impact of Professor McNiff's career-long
      research programme aimed
      at supporting practitioners' action enquiries for social transformation,
      and finding ways
      collaboratively to:
    
      - Improve the quality of practitioner research so as to influence new
        forms of thinking,
        practice and policy formation;
- Demonstrate quality and validity through methodologically robust
        accounts of practice;
- Articulate the significance of this research programme for dialogical
        cultures of educational
        enquiry.
The research has been undertaken internationally across multiple settings
      and sectors, and
      supported through the production of associated resources. The collective
      accounts constitute a
      global knowledge base that links impact and validity through critical
      self-enquiry.
    Underpinning research
    Working collaboratively, inter-institutionally and internationally, over
      thirty years, Professor McNiff
      has encouraged and enabled practitioners, including herself, to offer
      descriptions and explanations
      for their practical work through personal theories of education.
    The research is underpinned by values that transform into conceptual,
      theoretical and
      methodological frameworks, as well as forming the criteria and standards
      by which its quality and
      validity may be judged. Those values are also articulated by key academic
      authorities as follows:
      individuals should claim their rightful place on earth (Arendt, 1958);
      humans are dialogical beings
      (Buber, 2002); constituted of agonistic relationships (Berlin, 1969); all
      individuals have the capacity
      for infinite acts of creativity (Chomsky, 1986); there is a need to make
      tacit knowledge explicit
      (Polanyi, 1958) for rigorous reports for public accountability; creating
      methodologies of social hope
      (Rorty, 2000, drawing on Dewey); developing capacity for critically
      informed representations of
      one's own and others' lives (Said, 1994); developing a community ethic for
      social transformation
      (Sacks, 2000); and developing communities of educational enquiry
      (Whitehead, 1999).
    The methodology takes the form of an action enquiry where practitioners
      engage with key
      questions about their own practice. Claims to improved practices and the
      exercise of educational
      influence are tested through a set of six stringent validity checks of
      whether or not: personal values
      have been realised in practice (ontological validity); the research has
      contributed to the
      development of critical engagement in knowledge production
      (epistemological validity); it has
      contributed to social and environmental wellbeing (social and
      environmental validity); it has
      generative transformational capacity for ecologically-constituted
      practices (ecological validity); it is
      methodologically rigorous (methodological validity); the research is
      communicated in a
      comprehensible, authentic and sincere manner, and demonstrates awareness
      of normative
      contextual understandings (communicative validity, Habermas, 1976).
    The creation of these six criteria represents an original and significant
      contribution to the literature,
      and is a development of McNiff's personal and collaborative work. Since
      the early 1990s,
      considerable work has been undertaken by the practitioner research
      community to establish
      criteria and standards for judging impact in practice-based research (e.g.
      Feldman, 2003; Bullough
      and Pinnegar, 2004). In 2005, Furlong and Oancea called for the
      practitioner research community
      to agree on new criteria for impact and standards for establishing the
      kind of epistemological and
      methodological pillars that would guide practices in work and research,
      and their assessments.
      McNiff's own contribution, beginning with her doctoral studies, has been
      to offer explanations for
      how values transform through their emergence in practice into dynamic
      epistemological and
      methodological criteria and standards of judgement. This view is embedded
      within a framework of
      immanence and emergence that demonstrates explanatory adequacy for
      informing and developing
      educational action enquiries, and has been used as the basis for higher
      education programmes of
      study in a range of institutions around the world, while at the same time
      contributing to wider
      impact through its influence on practitioner research within schools, and
      other public sector fields,
      and on national education programmes (see below Section 4).
    References to the research
    
1. McNiff, J. (2013). Action Research: Principles and Practice
      (3rd edition). Abingdon: Routledge.
     
2. McNiff, J. (2012). Travels around identity: transforming cultures of
      learned colonisation.
      Educational Action Research, 20 (1): 129-146.
     
3. McNiff, J. (2011). Initiating debate: `It takes a township'. South
        African Journal of Higher
        Education, 25 (7): 1253-1273.
     
4. McNiff, J. and Whitehead, J. (2011). All You Need to Know about
        Action Research (2nd
      edition). London and New York, Sage.
     
5. McNiff, J. and Whitehead, J. (2010) You and Your Action Research
        Project (3rd edition).
      Abingdon, Routledge.
     
6. McNiff, J. (2011). New cultures of critical reflection in Qatar. Educational
        Action Research,
      19(3): 279-296.
     
Texts 2, 3 and 6 are included in the REF2 submission and the other texts
      are available on request
      from the institution. Texts 1, 4, and 5 are only some of a significant
      output of textbooks relating to
      action research which have been produced by Professor McNiff. The most
      recent editions have
      been cited above but the original work dates back into last century. While
      metrics are no proof of
      quality, these texts have certainly had very significant reach: sales
      total over 33,000 since 2002 ;
      Text 1 has been cited more than 1500 times; Text 4 has 500 citations; and
      Text 5 more than 750.
    Details of the impact
    The impact of this case study is demonstrated through the development of
      local and global
      communities, who are reconceptualising the nature of educational research
      and theory through (1)
      engaging in their individual and collaborative action enquiries; (2)
      producing their dissertations and
      theses in the form of their personal theories of practice; (3) developing
      dialogical communities of
      educational enquiry for collaborative knowledge production. The aim is to
      improve education and
      serve the public good through developing a new epistemology for a new
      scholarship of learning
      and teaching. While much of the research has been conducted with higher
      education practitioners,
      in this case study the emphasis is on the impact of the research on those
      beyond academia — most
      notably teachers, but importantly also health professionals — who have
      come to use her work as a
      means of linking practical and theoretical knowledge for individual and
      social transformation.
    Impact on developing dialogically-oriented institutional
        epistemologies
    Through working with groups of school, hospital, and university staff,
      the research has influenced
      the development of new institutional and organisational epistemologies of
      practice and cultures of
      enquiry. As far as impact beyond the level of universities is concerned,
      this can be evidenced in,
      for example:
    
      - Norway: where McNiff is Visiting Professor at the University of Tromsø
        to support faculty in
        Health Sciences to develop a practice-based research culture for
        improving service delivery
        to ensure enhanced patient wellbeing. The ultimate focus is on improving
        the professional
        learning of student nurses and healthcare practitioners. Some initial
        evidence of impact is
        listed in the sources of corroboration (below).
- Qatar: where Professor McNiff headed a team to deliver an action
        research-based teacher
        professional education programme. This fulfilled the National
        Professional Standards for
        Teachers. This is offered as evidence of significant impact in that a
        national education
        system has adopted her research approach as a means of improving the
        quality of
        teaching, and, ultimately, of learning outcomes, in its schools.
        Sponsored by the national
        government, led by Professor McNiff, the input has ongoing impact in
        Qatari schools; the
        underpinning research (above) outlines part of what was involved and the
        sources of
        corroboration (below) include examples of outcomes directly related to
        her research
        involvement.
- United Arab Emirates: where Professor McNiff has worked with school
        staff to develop new
        inclusional and dialogically-oriented curricula and programmes. One
        venture in Dubai has
        been a whole-school approach to action research for improved practice
        and student
        outcomes. This is reported in a conference paper listed below as a
        source of corroboration.
Impact on new criteria and standards
    Through working with workplace practitioners and university faculty, new
      criteria and standards
      have been developed for judging quality in practice-based research. For
      the purposes of this case
      study, the reference to universities is merely to show how it is through
      her work at HE level that the
      practitioners following McNiff's approach to action research have had
      their work validated. McNiff
      has sought successfully, therefore, to work with practitioners examining
      their own practice while at
      the same time to work with HEIs to have the study of that practice
      accepted at postgraduate
      research level. This is evidenced in doctoral programmes and journal
      publications, as follows:
    
    Impact on collaborative networks and dialogical communities
    Through working with institutional communities around the world to
      develop collaborative networks
      and dialogical communities:
    
    UK: where she co-convenes the Value and Virtue in Practice-Based Research
      International
      conference: see http://www.yorksj.ac.uk/education--theology/faculty-of-education-theo/faculty-events/value-and-virtue.aspx
    Sources to corroborate the impact 
    
      - Teacher Enquiry Bulletin Action Research for Teachers in Qatar
 (http://www.jeanmcniff.com/userfiles/file/qatar/Qatar_Action_Research_booklet_email.pdf)
        which reports on various projects which have been undertaken in schools,
        based on the
        research model developed by McNiff and endorsed by the Supreme Education
        Council of
        Qatar. This is also reported in item 6 in the references to the research
        (Section 3 above).
- Influence on thinking and practices in South Africa: see http://aru.nmmu.ac.za/Home;
        (2011)
        article (see Section 3 above); invitational keynote presentations at the
        Universities of the Free
        State; Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University; North West; Cape Town.
- Work with the National Centre for Guidance in Education, Ireland,
        since 2005; influencing
        forms of professional learning and practices: see Darbey, L., McNiff, J.
        and Fields, P. (2013)
        Evidence Based Handbook: Guidance Case Studies. Dublin, NCGE.
- Norway: presentation at the American Educational Research Association
        (2013), San
        Francisco; see also chapter by colleagues Norbye, Thoresen and Edvardsen
        in McNiff (2013)
        Value and Virtue in Practice-Based Research.
- United Arab Emirates. A paper at the 2013 Value and Virtue Conference
        reports on the impact
        of McNiff's research on school practice in Dubai: Hammond, D. (2013). Professional
development
          through action research in Dubai English Speaking Schools.
Individual contacts for corroboration:
    Chief Executive, La Salle Education can attest to Professor McNiff's
      impact on professional
      development in Qatar and Bahrain.
    Chair, Department of Education, Moravian College, USA can attest to the
      impact of Professor
      McNiff''s work on Moravian's public school teachers.