In this presentation, I draw on my research encounters with schools and classrooms, together with contemporary movements in social theory and research, to propose a conceptualisation of ‘place-based inquiry’. Three areas of theory are drawn upon: (1) ‘Practice’ ontologies and associated moves towards ‘philosophical-empirical inquiry’ (Green & Hopwood, 2015) provide a warrant for thinking more closely and looking more closely in social research; (2) more-than-representational theory (Anderson & Harrison, 2010) problematizes the notion of the work and impacts of research, raising implications for the ambitions of research undertakings; and, (3) place-based pedagogies (e.g., Gruenewald, 2003) support a sentiment and model for an openly transformational social inquiry. These synergistic areas of theory are used here to frame a practice that recognises the more-than-representational work of research and how this work might be harnessed in more explicit and more deliberate ways to support educational change. I tentatively characterise this practice as that of an inhabitant-researcher, drawing on Orr’s (1992, p. 130) distinction between residing and inhabiting, where inhabiting involves “mutually nurturing relationship with a place”. The inhabitant-researcher attempts to engage research participants in both decolonising and reinhabiting encounters, and to make contributions that are both critical and generative, representational and more-than-representational.
History
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
Start date
2015-11-25
End date
2015-11-26
Language
eng
Notes
Keynote Presentation
Publication classification
X Not reportable, E3.1 Extract of paper
Copyright notice
2015, Deakin University
Title of proceedings
2015 Symposium for Contemporary Approaches to Research in Mathematics, Science, Health and Environmental Education
Event
Contemporary Approaches to Research in Mathematics, Science, Health and Environmental Education. Symposium (2015 : Melbourne, Vic.)