Abstract

Responding to the identified need for reflection, critique, and evaluations of appreciative inquiry (AI), a form of action research, this article presents a critical reflection on an application of AI in a cross-cultural music education research project. AI was selected as it appeared to both have potential for addressing the complexities related to power imbalances, ethnocentrism, and coloniality inherent in a project aiming to co-develop music teacher education in Finland and Nepal, and because its 4D model supported the co-constructing of visions, which was central to the project. The critical reflection presented in this article focused on three situations of breakdown that occurred during the research process. Analysis of these breakdowns highlighted the need for researchers to engage responsibly in research as participants, account for dreaming as an unevenly distributed capacity when working with visions or aspirations, and develop skills facilitating collaborative spaces that cultivate listening for and appreciating difference. The article concludes by recognising the limitations of undertaking this reflection independently rather than collaboratively and by cautioning against the instrumentalization of appreciation, calling instead for sincere appreciation. Overall, the article contends that the process of identifying and generating new understandings of breakdowns is a powerful approach for stimulating researcher reflexivity.

Highlights

  • This article began as a critical reflection on an application of Appreciative Inquiry (e.g., Cooperrider et al, 2005; Watkins et al, 2011; appreciative inquiry (AI)), a form of action research, and its potentials for ethically engaging in cross-cultural research (Liamputtong, 2010)

  • As highlighted during the workshops, cultural norms, TREACY Appreciating situations of breakdown for researcher reflexivity ideas, and beliefs contribute to the challenges women encounter when pursuing music as a hobby or career in Nepal and if seen as itinerants, any gender issues they may have raised in the workshops may have remained unheard at best, dismissed and disregarded at worst

  • This article has critically reflected on a research process that intentionally made use of AI in efforts to engage ethically in cross-cultural research

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Summary

Introduction

This article began as a critical reflection on an application of Appreciative Inquiry (e.g., Cooperrider et al, 2005; Watkins et al, 2011; AI), a form of action research, and its potentials for ethically engaging in cross-cultural research (Liamputtong, 2010). TREACY Appreciating situations of breakdown for researcher reflexivity contemporary music teacher education to equip professionals with the capacity to engage with an uncertain future, the sub-project focussed on musician-teachers’ visions of music education in Nepal.

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