Proposal for a paper presentation/interactive session at
ALARPM
Jack Whitehead
Department of Education,
University of Bath
UK BA2 7AY
e-mail edsajw@bath.ac.uk
Marie Huxtable
Senior Educational Psychologist
Riverside
UK BS31 1DN
e-mail marie_huxtable@yahoo.co.uk
How are we co-creating living standards of judgement in
action-researching our professional practices
13/08/06
Jack Whitehead, Department of Education, University of Bath.
Marie Huxtable, Senior Educational Psychologist, Bath &
North East Somerset, Local Authority.
Abstract
The presentation
will focus on the co-creation of the living standards of judgement of action
researchers as we enquire into living our moral/ethical values as fully as we
can in our workplaces. Whitehead, as the supervisor of Huxtable's research
degree and Huxtable as a Senior Educational Psychologist, will explore the
implications of their co-enquiry, "How do I respond receptively to Marie Huxtable's enquiry, 'How
do I improve my practice as a senior educational psychologist working in
B&NES while researching my practice for a research degree?'" in terms of the co-creation
of new living standards of judgement in action research.
The significance of 20 living theory doctorates flowing through
web-space from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/living.shtml
will be analysed in terms the new epistemology for the new scholarship.
Particular attention will be paid to the implications of changes in University
regulations that now permit the submission of e-media. The latest living theory
doctorates to be legitimated in the Academy will be analysed in terms of their
contributions to the emergence of a living theory of inclusional and responsive
practice (Naidoo, 2005) in the creation of new living standards of judgement
such as a passion for compassion.
Connecting
with the central theme of the congress
The central theme of this World Congress is Standards and Ethics
in participatory research:
"The primary focus will be on approaches to research that
incorporate (self) reflection and a system of (professional) ethics as central
components of action research and action learning practices.
A principal intent of participatory research practices is to
provide the means to improve people's self determination—to empower them
in their roles as professional practitioners or citizens in the diverse social
domains in which they live and work. Participatory action research and learning
processes enable participants to improve the impact of services and programs in
education, health care, urban and regional development, business, agriculture,
arts, aged care, leisure and many other spheres of social life. Inherently,
however, collaborative inquiry practices seek to improve the well-being of the
people by enacting democracy and social justice on the personal, local and
global levels.
Participatory
research practices therefore have "ethics first" as their motto. Research
practices and relationships not only have pragmatic purposes, but also serve to
enhance democratic participation and critical reflection for all participants.
Standards of ethical practice in action research and action learning therefore
provide the means to orient our work and community life so that we contribute
to the attainment of participatory democracy, empowerment and social justice." (ALARPM 2006, http://www.wcar2006.nl/en-index.html )
As
we co-create our living standards of judgement in action-researching our
professional practices we recognise that our ontological values, the values we
use to give meaning and purpose to our lives through our productive work, can
be understood and communicated as our ethical values and epistemological
standards of judgement. They can be clarified and communicated in the course of
their emergence in our action research.
We associate research with knowledge-creation and evaluation. We
understand the importance of avoiding confusion by explicating the
epistemological assumptions in knowledge-claims. By this we are meaning the
unit of appraisal, the standards of judgement and the logics used in evaluating
the validity of a claim to knowledge. Because of this we wish to begin with our
understandings of the three epistemologies, propositional, dialectical and
inclusional, that we use in our action research. Our purpose is to communicate
the meanings of our co-created meaning of inclusionality in the living
standards of judgement in our research.
Three
Epistemologies
The
first epistemology is grounded in the logic of Aristotle with his Law of
Contradiction, which claims that two mutually exclusive statements cannot both
be true simulataneously, and his Law of Excluded Middle which claims that
everything is either A of Not-A. This logic characterises the propositional
theories the dominate what counts as legitimate knowledge in the Academy. We drawn insights from the grand
narratives of propositional theory of the kind offered by Erich Fromm through his
productive life. We continue to draw valued insights from these theories and
Whitehead has acknowledged the influence of theorists such as Polanyi (1958)
and Habermas (1976) amongst many others.
The
second epistemology is grounded in the Marxist dialectic as set out by Ilyenkov
(1977) in his inspirational work on dialectical logic. Contradiction is the
nucleus of dialectics and change is explained in terms of the Law of Identity
of Opposites and the Law of the Negation of the Negation. From Marcuse's (1964,
p. 105) work we draw the insight that logic is the form that thought takes in
understanding the real as rational. In asking, researching and answering
questions of the kind, 'How do I improve my practice?' we have seen and felt
ourselves to be, with the help of video-tapes of my practice, living
contradictions as we hold our values together with their negation in our
practice. Whitehead (1999) has explicated this dialectical epistemology in his
doctoral thesis.
The
third epistemology is grounded in the living logic of inclusionality (Rayner
2004). This living logic is characterized by a relationally dynamic awareness
of space and boundaries that are connective, reflexive and co-creative. Naidoo (2005) has used this living
logic in developing the inclusional and responsive standard of judgement of
passion for compassion in her emergent living theory of inclusional and
responsive practice. The living
logic of inclusionality is clarified and communicated below with the help of
multi-media explanations of educational influences in learning that show the
educational relationships of action researchers in terms of interconnecting and
branching channels and boundaries of communication.
We
will demonstrate below how we use insights from propositional, dialectical and
inclusional logics in researching our question, 'How are we creating living
standards of judgment in action researching our professional practice?' The
explanations we generate for our learning together contain living standards of
judgement for action research. These living standards are grounded in our
expressions of our ontological values as we clarify and co-create their
inclusional meanings in the course of our individual and shared practices.
The multi-media
presentations of living standards of judgement can include text, verbal
presentation, dialogue, art and interactive demonstrations, using video-clips
from the researchers' professional contexts. The presentation of a visual
narrative, documents the process of clarifying the meanings of the embodied
values of the action researchers in the course of their emergence in practice
and in their formation into inclusional living standards of judgement.
The following extract from a presentation prepared by Marie Huxtable and Christine Jones (2006) for the British Educational Research Association 2006 Annual Conference shows the co-creation of 'our' living inclusional standards of judgement. We are using 'our' carefully because of the nature of our co-creation. In responding to our ideas we hope that you will include in your responses the questions we have drawn below from Habermas' (1976) points about the validity claims we make of each other in coming to an understanding. Our central point concerns the possibility that multi-media representations in a visual narrative enhance the quality of our communications about the meanings of our co-created understandings of inclusional standards of judgement. We are thinking of meanings that are relationally dynamic and responsive (Naidoo, 2005) in terms of our awareness, of the boundaries and space in the expression of our embodied values, that is connective, reflexive and co-creative:
"The move to communicating with rather than simply to others at this point is consistent with our developing inclusional pedagogy where we seek to extend our own learning and to co-create new knowledge and understandings with others; to extend our educational influence in our own learning and that of others.
We are claiming that through the following text, images and video clips you can see us supporting educators to develop skills and understandings inclusionally. We would ask you to ask the questions of us that Jack Whitehead offers in, 'How can I/You create living educational theories from educational action research?' - Notes for an Ed.D. seminar in the University of Bath on 12 July 2006:
'I usually ask a validation
group of my peers to criticise my explanations of my educational influences in
terms of the questions
Jack Whitehead engaged with
Chris' account as he worked to prepare a keynote for (Whitehead, J. 2006) Have
we created a new educational epistemology in our living educational theories as
practitioner-researchers? A Keynote Presentation to the Practitioner Researcher
Conference on Living Theory or Empty Rhetoric at St. Mary's College on 13th
July 2006 Retrieved on 3 August 2006 from http://www.jackwhitehead.com/jack/jwkeynote130706.htmref and
url) and selected visual images and video clips from the hour
session that he felt connected with Chris' text. While you are reading Chris'
account with Jack's selection of video clips we ask 'Can you see what we see?
Can you feel what we feel?' as we live and work inclusionally.
Chris begins:
I am smiling as I watch the video of our Creativity Workshop and I am feeling the joy and pleasure in seeing inclusionality being demonstrated naturally and spontaneously in, between and with my friend and colleague, Marie, and other educators who are participants in the workshop. I am looking at Marie as she is inviting the group to respond to her questioning with her arms open, her eyes scanning the room and including all.
I feel the joy and pleasure in looking at Marie and me, sitting adjacently and leaning forward and smiling as we engage with the participants in discussing creativity, being creative and creating that moment together and with others.
(see the 8.2Mb, 1min. 31 sec. video clip from http://www.jackwhitehead.com/marie/mhchwk1min31.mov )
We move outside the room and as I listen to what I am saying, I feel the flow of energy that I felt at the time and as I always feel when I am working with colleagues, every interaction unique and co-creative. I am listening to the expressive, 'ooh', and the intermittent laughter as the egg is passed around, all apprehensive should the egg fall, all separate, yet one as we share the activity in that moment in time. Silence follows laughter and laughter follows silence; those bursts of energy cutting through the atmosphere of apprehension. There are no barriers here between us; there is no vacuum dividing us; we are flowing as one and as the first task is complete, we clap spontaneously together.
(see the 6.8 Mb, 1min 15 sec video clip from http://www.jackwhitehead.com/marie/cjmhwkegg.mov)
I am still smiling as I watch the video as we move back into the room. The conversation, the questions and answers, the smiles and the laughter; Marie and I sitting adjacently, moving forward in response to comments, hands moving, arms outstretched, openly invitational.
(see the 7.9 Mb, 1min 42 sec video clip from http://www.jackwhitehead.com/marie/mhcjwk3.mov[JF1]
Can anyone see what I see? Does anyone feel as I feel? As I watch the flow of interaction between one and the other, I am reminded of Rayner's Paper Dance of Inclusionality (http://www.jackwhitehead.com/rayner1sor.mov) and O' Donohue's 'web of betweenness' (2003). I am looking at inclusionality in action of which I am a part and I am seeing the flow of life- affirming energy between Marie, the group and me, and as I watch, I am feeling the joy of what for me gives life meaning – the flow of interaction between one and the other and the pleasure of that co-dynamic relationship. I am reminded of these feelings of joy when I was a teacher interacting with the class: I am learning from them; they are learning from me; we are all learning together in a co-creational relationship which could not happen without one or the other within that moment in time.
I value who I am and what I try to be; I value others for who they are and what they try to be; I value what we are between us and what we try to be. It is through my relationship with others and the generative flow and pleasure of our interaction that I grow and live a life that has meaning for me.
We would like to return to the
question we asked you to focus on when we wrote, 'we would ask you, as you
read, to see if it gets closer to communicating the embodied values and
educational theories of Chris and Marie as they were seeking to express in the
workshop'.
The form of evidence used to validate a claim to knowledge is important and is taxing many in the school system as can be seen in the oft used phrase, 'we value what we measure, rather than measuring what we value'. We are asking you to consider here how far we have been able to offer you evidence that can be validated, accepted as authentic and of value by 'authorities', whether they are the academy or government department, while also communicating those qualities and values that for us are at the core of education and the reason we do what we do.
So far we have sought to
explore whether we have communicated with you our growing understandings of
what it is for us to support educators developing skills and understandings
inclusionally. We have asked you to consider whether we have communicated those
values more fully than relying on the traditional text- based report format by
using a poetic, aesthetic form with images as well. We have also tried to
provide you with evidence as to our success or otherwise in answering our
question,'how can we work inclusionally with educators during an hour
workshop to enable them to extend their own understandings of creative
learning, and to contribute to the creation of new understandings which they
would wish to explore further in their own schools and classrooms beyond the
workshop'."
******
Our
interest in offering the above account for your critical evaluation is focused
on our belief that we are showing how living standards of judgement in the
relationally dynamic and responsive awareness of inclusionality can be
validated. We are also interested in exploring the educational influence of
such inclusional standards of judgement in the education of social formations
through their role as cultural artefacts.
The
cultural significance of living educational theories flowing through web-space
The
public launch of the World Wide Web on the 6th August 1991
transformed global communications. Our emphasis on enhancing the flow of the
accounts of action researchers through web-space owes much to our assumption
that the significance of these communications for the development of cultural
harmony will increase. We make this point about cultural harmony with an awareness that acknowledges terrorist violence (Cowley,
2006) in different parts of the world. With the recognition of this violence we
are seeking to enhance the flow of values, skills and understandings that carry
hope for the future of humanity through showing how individuals are learning to
live values of humanity as fully as they can in their workplaces and
communities. We are thinking of the hope flowing through web-space from over 20
living theory doctorates from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/living.shtml.
In 2004 the University of Bath changed its regulations
to permit the submission of e-media in research degrees. This change opened up
the possibility of presenting visual narratives that could communicate clearly
the process of transforming living values into living epistemological standards
of judgement. To accomplish this transformation educational researchers
required courage. They required the courage to engage in a self-study
educational enquiry as they clarified the meanings of the values they used to
give meaning to their lives and work in the course of their emergence through
practice. The processes of clarification, communication and validation involve
several challenges. There are challenges of method in the use of action
reflection cycles in clarifying the meaning of the values. There are challenges
of self-study involving visual narratives in communicate the meanings of
embodied values (Whitehead, 2005). There are challenges of rigour and
scholarship in subjecting claims to educational knowledge to validation
processes informed by Polanyi's (1958) ideas of personal knowledge, Winter's
(1989) ideas on rigour and Habermas' (1976) ideas on social validity.
You can see how five of the living theory doctorates,
(Hartog 2004; Church 2004; Naidoo 2005; Farren 2005; Lohr 2006) examined under
the new regulations of the University of Bath, have included multi-media
accounts of educational practices in their explanations of educational
influence, in original contributions to the development of the new
epistemology.
Hartog, M. (2004) A Self Study Of A Higher
Education Tutor: How Can I Improve My Practice? Ph.D. University
of Bath. Retrieved 27 June 2007 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/hartog.shtml
Church, M. (2004) Creating an uncompromised place
to belong: Why do I find myself in networks? Retrieved 27 June
2006 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/church.shtml
Naidoo, M. (2005) I am Because We Are. (My
never-ending story) The emergence of a living theory of inclusional and
responsive practice. Ph.D. University of Bath. Retrieved 27 June 2006
from
http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/naidoo.shtml
Farren, M. (2005) How can I create a pedagogy of
the unique through a web of betweenness? Ph.D. University
of Bath. Retrieved 27 June 2006 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/farren.shtml
Lohr, E. (2006) Love
at Work: What is my lived experience of love and how might I become an
instrument of love's purpose. Ph.D. University of Bath. Retrieved
27 June 2006 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/living.shtml
The latest living
theory thesis to be legitimated is that of Bernie Sullivan at the University of
Limerick:
Sullivan, B. (2006) A living theory of a practice of social justice: Realising the right of traveller children for educational equality. Ph.D. University of Limerick. Supervised by Jean McNiff. Retrieved 6 July 2006 from
http://www.jeanmcniff.com/bernieabstract.html
With the multi-media
communication such as that of Marian Naidoo (2005), in the development of her
emergent living theory of inclusional and responsive practice, there is at
present no Journal that can carry the visual narrative on the DVD in her
Thesis. We make this point to emphasise the limitations of present text based
Journals in communicating the meanings of embodied values that are expressed
through a relational dynamic and responsive awareness of space and boundaries
and that is connective, reflexive and co-creative. Journals such as Action
Research Expeditions and the Ontario Action Research are beginning to open up
possibilities for such communications but it will become some time before they
reach the status of the established refereed international journals. Perhaps
Action Research International or web-based publications from ALARPM will open
further these interconnecting and branching channels of communication. What we
are wondering at the end of this presentation is whether we have made a
significant contribution to the theme of the Congress with its emphasis on
ethics and standards in action research.
By focusing on our living relationships in our workplaces and being
willing to hold ourselves accountable to the ontological values we use to give
meaning and purpose to our lives, we hope that we have shown, through our
multi-media presentation, what might been needed to develop a new epistemology
for action research. We are thinking of an epistemology that forms living
standards of judgement from the embodied values and ethical principles used by
action researcher in giving meaning and purpose to their life-long learning as
they seek to enhance their contributions to well-being and productive lives.
References
Church, M. (2004)
Creating an uncompromised place to belong: Why do I find myself in networks?
Retrieved 27 June 2006 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/church.shtmlReferences:
Cowley,
J. (2006) What novelists reveal about the minds of murderers, Observer
Newspaper, 13/08/06, p. 23.
Farren, M. (2005) How can I create a pedagogy of
the unique through a web of betweenness? Ph.D. University
of Bath. Retrieved 27 June 2006 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/farren.shtml
Habermas, J. (1976) Communication and the Evolution of
Society. London; Heinemann
Hartog, M. (2004) A Self Study Of A Higher
Education Tutor: How Can I Improve My Practice? Ph.D. University
of Bath. Retrieved 27 June 2007 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/hartog.shtml
Huxtable, M. & Jones, C. (2006) How can we support educators to develop
skills and understandings inclusionally?
Paper prepared for
presentation at the BERA 2006 Annual Conference, University of Warwick, 6-9
September, 2006.
Lohr, E. (2006) Love
at Work: What is my lived experience of love and how might I become an
instrument of love's purpose. Ph.D. University of Bath. Retrieved
27 June 2006 from http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/living.shtml
Marcuse, H. (1964) One
Dimensional Man. London; Routledge
and Kegan Paul.
Naidoo, M. (2005) I am Because We Are. (My
never-ending story) The emergence of a living theory of inclusional and
responsive practice. Ph.D. University of Bath. Retrieved 27 June 2006
from
http://www.bath.ac.uk/~edsajw/naidoo.shtml
Rayner, A. (2004) Inclusionality: The Science, Art and Spirituality of Place, Space and
Evolution. Retrieved 16 August 2006 from http://people.bath.ac.uk/bssadmr/inclusionality/placespaceevolution.html
Sullivan, B. (2006) A living theory of a practice of social justice: Realising the right of traveller children for educational equality. Ph.D. University of Limerick. Supervised by Jean McNiff. Retrieved 6 July 2006 from
http://www.jeanmcniff.com/bernieabstract.html
Whitehead, J. (1999)
How do I improve my practice? Creating a discipline of education through
educational enquiry. Ph.D. University of Bath. Retrieved 18 August 2006 from http://people.bath.ac.uk/edsajw/jack.shtml
[JF1]We do not have permissions for this one, but could the video stop before Julie speaks or could we use another video clip without her in it. – she only speaks for a few seconds – perhaps it could just be clipped out