Abstract

Developments in pedagogical knowledge in the teaching of social research methods have largely been generated through teachers reflecting on their practice. This paper presents an alternative approach to generating data through reflective dialogue between researchers, teachers and learners. The approach incorporates elements of video stimulated recall and reflective dialogue within focus group interviewing. The rationale and affordances are discussed in relation to the goals of discussing teachers’ pedagogical decision-making and learners’ experience of, and response to, various pedagogical practices. The context is a study of capacity-building short courses in advanced social science research methods, specifically courses on: multi-modal analysis, computer-assisted qualitative data analysis software, multi-level modelling, and systematic review. The paper examines the methodological challenges of capturing the everyday realities of methods classrooms for teachers and learners and the affordances of using dialogue on observed teaching sessions to gain further insight into each other’s thinking and action. It concludes with lessons learned about methodological and pedagogical processes and an argument about the value of bringing methods and standpoints together in creative dialogue.

Highlights

  • A need has been identified in the UK (HaPS, 2010; Lynch et al, 2007; McVie, Coxon, Hawkins, Palmer, & Rice, 2008), Europe (Kottmann, 2011) and beyond, to build capacity in both the development of advanced research methods in the social sciences and their application to challenging research problems

  • This includes understanding the particular pedagogical practices and pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) (Shulman, 1986) associated with advanced social science research methods – how those with advanced methodological competence translate their knowledge of methods into a form that others can comprehend and use

  • New perspectives emerged quite literally, as in the focus group following the computer-assisted qualitative data analysis software (CAQDAS) training one of the learners referred to another as a disembodied voice as she had not seen his face from behind his computer screen. This was not see-able by us as researchers at the back, or by the teacher seated at the front, and so without the focus group dialogue would have been left unknown to us

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Summary

International Journal of Social Research Methodology

Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/tsrm. Using video and dialogue to generate pedagogic knowledge: teachers, learners and researchers reflecting together on the pedagogy of social research methods.

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