perspectives on qualitative and quantitative research in education

Upload: mcsm1th

Post on 30-May-2018

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    1/7

    1

    Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    M Cecil Smith

    Northern Illinois University

    Introductory remarks for a presentation given at the 21st annual Midwest Research-to-

    Practice Conference in Adult, Continuing, and Community Education

    October 9-11, 2002DeKalb, IL

    http://www.cedu.niu.edu/reps/midwest.htm

    http://www.cedu.niu.edu/reps/midwest.htmhttp://www.cedu.niu.edu/reps/midwest.htm
  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    2/7

    2

    Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    I, along with my NIU colleagues, Tom Smith, Nadine Dolby, and Hide Shimizu, want to

    talk about the role of research training in graduate school, the different ways that such

    research training occurs for students, and some important issues that graduate students

    should be knowledgeable aboutparticularly in regards to the increasing demands for

    students to have more sophisticated research skills. These demands arise, in part, because

    of the recognition that the kinds of problems that educators must confront are very

    complex and cannot be solved without understanding how social, economic, cultural,

    political, and individual factors interact to create the kinds of conditions seen in schools

    and communities.

    This topic is particularly important at a conference such as this that focuses on translating

    knowledge from the research laboratory (in whatever form it may be) to the arena of

    practice in schools and communities.

    Each of the four of us want to spend a few minutes describing what we think are some

    key issues in graduate research training, and tell a bit about what we try to do here in our

    College of Education in preparing graduate students to become not only consumers but

    producers of research. We will not claim that we are necessarily training graduate

    students better or differently from other colleges of education. In fact, surveys show that

    graduate training in research methods across colleges of education is remarkably similar

    (Mundfrom, Shaw, Thomas, Young, & Moore, 1998). As you might guess, however,

    doctoral students do tend to get more training than masters students, and that graduate

    http://www.cedu.niu.edu/http://www.cedu.niu.edu/
  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    3/7

    3

    students at research institutions receive more training than those at comprehensive

    universities.

    I teach an introductory course to research methods in education, as does my colleague,

    Tom Smith. Although Ive taught this course every semester for about 12 years, I still

    find it a challenging course to teach. There are at least three reasons for this.

    The first reason is that graduate students often come into the course very wary

    about having to learn about research. My experience is that students tend to view research

    as an esoteric activity that is not very relevant to what they do--or want to do--as

    practitioners. They dont see research as important to informing and improving their

    skills and knowledge as teachers, counselors, and administrators.

    The second reason has to do with math anxiety, or more accurately, a fear of

    learning about statistics (as if quantitative methods were the only approach to educational

    research). A few have heard about this thing called qualitative research and hope

    desperately that well focus only on that and disregard the numbers. Of course, we want

    them to learn a variety of approaches to doing research, to understand that there are a

    variety of tools that one can apply, and that the method one selects is very much a

    function of the particular problem being investigated, how one frames the problem, and

    ones philosophical orientation about the nature of knowledge, truth, and certainty. These

    are not simple issues and therefore it follows that the selection of a research method is not

    something that is done casually.

    The third reason has to do with what we try to accomplish in this single, 16-week

    course. We attempt to teach graduate students how to be critical and informed consumers

  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    4/7

    4

    of educational researcha basic skill that we believe is essential for all educators. So, we

    spend a lot of time reading and critiquing studies of various sorts, thinking about the

    value of these studies and how they contribute to the scientific knowledge base, and the

    practicality of the findings for teachers and administrators. But, we also want to teach

    them the basics ofhow to do research so that they can:

    ask a good research question

    distinguish among different types of variables

    recognize the differences between probability and non-probability

    sampling methods

    understand the role of measurement in research

    distinguish among different data-gathering methods

    evaluate the advantage and disadvantages or strength and weaknesses of

    different types of research: descriptive, correlational, group comparison

    (including experiments), and qualitative and quantitative approaches

    understand some basic data analysis methods (both qualitative and

    quantitative)

    make connections between research findings and practical matters in

    regards to teaching, learning, and assessment.

    Clearly, this is a lot to accomplish in a short amount of time. At best, students leave the

    course with some fuzzy knowledge of a few basic concepts and (we hope) the

    recognition that there is much more that they need to do to develop their research skills.

    Unfortunately, due to the reluctance to increase credit-hour requirements in different

  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    5/7

    5

    graduate programs, some students may not have further coursework in research methods

    or statistics. A few may have opportunities to work as research assistants. Some masters

    students, and all doctoral students, will of course face the task of having to do an original

    piece of researchthe thesis or dissertation. Most of us find it troubling that many

    students begin this task not well prepared to undertake or complete it. Still other students

    will be presented with opportunities to do research, or to be involved in research in their

    schools, classrooms, counseling centers, and other worksites. Therefore, many of the

    graduate students whom we set out to train to be consumers of research will evolve into

    those persons who produce research.

    On top of all this course content, we add yet another layer in the introductory course. We

    emphasize that research has a largely social dimension to it. Research topics are

    determined in that space occupied by the individuals intellectual curiosity, their

    perception of a particular problem, and their understanding of some social or educational

    need. Researchers often collaborate with one another because even fairly simple studies

    are very labor-intensive, and require multiple participants to organize and carry out the

    work. Sometimes, it really is true that two heads are better than one, and collaborative

    research activities result in more insightful, even groundbreaking studies. Certainly,

    researchers also share with one another (and the general public) what they have learned

    through publications and conference presentations. So, social science in education is very

    much a social enterprise.

  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    6/7

    6

    Thus, we create a variety of different learning opportunities in the course for students and

    we eitherrequire orencourage them to:

    work together in small research teams to identify a problem that is of common

    interest, to research and write collaboratively (in ways that approximate the collaborative

    activities of many scholars)

    attend research conferences, graduate colloquia, and dissertations defenses (and

    to evaluate these) in order to hear about research first-hand,

    interview educational researchers at other institutions to learn more about their

    work and motivations,

    read and critique published research, and to do these things while

    simultaneously developing their own research questions and appropriate methodologies

    for addressing their questions.

    There are great challenges to learning about educational research. Social and educational

    problems are seemingly more complex, and the methods and tools developed to address

    some of these problems are, likewise, more sophisticated. It is not enough for graduate

    students, who aspire to professional practice in their respective fields, or to produce

    original research themselves, to complete their programs of study with only a minimum

    of research training. Thus, our goal is to create a forum for discussion among those who

    teach research methods to seek out ways to reform graduate preparation in social science

    research for education, making it more effective and efficient, and better suited to the

    complex demands of society.

  • 8/14/2019 Perspectives on Qualitative and Quantitative Research in Education

    7/7

    7

    References

    Mundfrom, D.J., Shaw, D.G., Thomas, A., Young, S., & Moore, A.D. (1998, April).

    Introductory graduate research courses: An examination of the knowledge base.

    Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational ResearchAssociation, San Diego.