Title: Sarah Fletcher
1Sarah Fletcher
- Educational research mentor
- http//www.TeacherResearch.net
- sjfmentor_at_yahoo.com
2What is Educational Research Mentoring?
- Educational Research Mentoring or ERM developed
from the integration of mentoring as CPPD
(Continuing Personal and Professional
Development) for teachers (Fletcher, 2000) and
Living Educational Theory action research
pioneered by Whitehead and McNiff (2004).
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4Research Mentoring is
- concerned with continuing personal as well as
professional development (CPPD) and not just
continuing professional development. - Fletcher, S. (2000) Mentoring in Schools A
Handbook of Good Practice London, Taylor and
Francis
5What is Action Research?
- any systematic enquiry conducted by teacher
researchers to gather information about how their
particular schools operate, how they teach and
how well their students learn. Action research is
done by teachers for themselves it is not
imposed on them by someone else - Mills, G. (2003) Action Research a Guide for
the Teacher Educator, USA, New Jersey, Pearson
Education
6Research Mentoring
- . should unblock the ways to change by building
self-confidence, self-esteem and a readiness to
act as well as to engage in ongoing constructive
interpersonal relationship. - (Fletcher, 2000)
7BPRS research mentoring
- A mentor not a tutor
- Collaborative enquiry
- A mentor has responsibilities
- http//www.TeacherResearch.net
8What does an educational research mentor do?
- you draw my knowledge out of me
- you ask a broad question you pick out the
pieces from my answer and work with me on each of
those - You have discovered how my mind works. I
compartmentalise everything. - You are helping me gather my knowledge into a
more coherent form.
9What does a research mentor ask?How do I help
you to identify your focus? How do I help you
to audit as a starting point? How do I help you
map out possibilities for action?How do I help
you to collect data in rigorous and systematic
ways and synthesise data to evidence?How do I
keep you on track with your project?How do I
help you to disseminate your research?
10What does a research mentor ask?
- What matters most to you as a creative teacher?
- How do you teach best and how can you teach even
better? - In your work as an teacher, what is your main
concern? - How can you live out your professional values
more fully? - What can you do to become a more professional
teacher by helping colleagues to learn with you
and to teach you? - How can you help your students to learn in
lessons?
11Roles and Responsibilities
- Professional skills and aptitudes
- Professional values
- Professional knowledge and
- understanding
- Christie et al. (2003) Chartered Teacher Scheme
in Scotland, BERA presentation, Edinburgh
12Technology in research mentoring
- Whole group sessions face to face
- Individual sessions face to face
- Telephone mentoring
- Video mentoring
- E-mentoring
- Collaborative web-page construction individual
and group
13Research mentoring is
Teachers
Students
Academics
14Case Studies Students Research Mentoring
- Hayesfield School, Bath
- Westwood St Thomas, Salisbury
- Bishops School, Salisbury
15Why integrate mentoring in action research?
- Action research is formulaic when you restrict
personal and professional interrelationships. - Mentoring helps students, teachers and partners
develop creative relationships with one another. - Action research can sometimes be a solitary
experience but mentoring builds supportive
networks for building collaborative creativity. - Mentoring students and teachers skills, values,
knowledge and understandings develop. These are
the core areas for creative engagement.
16- Using digital photography to evidence claims to
know - Is becoming a widely accepted technique in
school- - based enquiry (Fletcher and Whitehead 2003)
- Web-based templates at http//www.cfkeep.org
- are changing perceptions in practitioner
research. - Embedded web-based Critical Thinking Scaffolds
- (Fletcher and Coombs, 2005) ensure that
practitioner - research is sloughing its homespun, rather
parochial - history and evolving an altogether more
professional - image in the field of evidence-based practice.
- (Fletcher, 2005 23)