Title: ERNWACA-NIGERIA
1ERNWACA-NIGERIA First Annual Café LAGOS 17
February 2005 THE PAF APPROACH TO
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT IN
EDUCATION By Pai OBANYA 1
2FOCUS OF THE DISCUSSION
- Rationale for Choice of Subject
- R D in the Field of Education
- PAF A Triplet Concept
- Possible Applications of the PAF Methodology in
the Nigerian Context - Reflexive Conclusions
3RATIONALE FOR CHOICE OF SUBJECT
- DEMYSTIFYING RESEARCH
- ENHANCING RESEARCH COMMUNICATION
- ENHANCING RESEARCH MARKETING
- BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN KNOWLEDGE GENERATION AND
KNOWLEDGE UTILISATION - MAKING NIGERIAN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH MORE
DEVELOPMENT-ORIENTED
4R D PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE
- The heart and soul of todays knowledge based
industrial and commercial production - Knowledge and research-supported innovation for
global competitiveness - Going beyond present scenario to next
generation products and services - Focus also on PROCESSES and HUMAN CAPITAL
- Increasing collaboration with basic research to
turn results into marketable products - Research planning beginning from the end
- Greater move towards demystificationmore
participatory approaches - EDUCATION needs R D
5PAF A TRIPLET CONCEPT
- RESEARCH THAT IS
- PARTICIPATORY
- ACTION
- FORMATIVE
6ACTION RESEARCH
- Origins traced to the work of Kurt Lewin (1958)
rehabilitating persons affected by World War
IIIn use in education research since the 1970s - its definitions are adequately captured in the
following formulations from a variety of sources - Inquiry in the context of focussed
efforts to improve the quality of an organisation
and its performance - Typically designed and conducted by
practioners who analyse data to improve their own
practice - A process designed to empower all
participants in the educational process with the
means to improve the practices conducted within
the educational experience - All participants are knowing and active
members of the research process - The systematic study of attempts to improve
educational practice by groups of participants by
means of their own practical actions and by means
of their own reflections upon the effect of those
actions
7MAIN FEATURES OF ACTION RESEARCH
- Undertaken by the real actors. These could be
teachers, inspectors, curriculum developers,
material designers interested in improving the
effectiveness and quality of their work.. -
- Focus on self-reflective inquiry. This is seen
in the typical design (called a PROTOCOL), which
tends to approximate the following pattern - Reconnaissance and General Plan an understanding
of a problem is developed and an intervention
plan is adopted - Action the intervention is carried out
- Observation data are collected in various forms
- Reflection and Revision the cyclic process goes
on until a sufficient understanding of the
problems and issues is achieved. -
8PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH
- ORIGINS attributed to Paulo Freires Pedagogy of
the Oppressed 1968 - MAIN FEATURES
- Narrowing the distance between the researcher and
the researched - Action learning on the part of all those involved
in research, usually through iterative
experiments - A wide array of techniques to enable the ordinary
person to participate fully in research focus
group sessions, record keeping, timelines,
participatory mapping and modelling, etc. These
techniques are becoming increasingly standardised
9PARTICIPATORY ACTION RESEARCH
- Participatory Research has a lot in common with
Action Research. It is also a process of
stimulating people to collect information,
reflect on and analyse it, use the results as a
knowledge base for improvement, and wherever
possible document the results for wider
dissemination or the creation of peoples
literature - However, Participatory Research in its true form
seems to focus more on larger scale
socio-economic development projects, with
external support and the use of outside
professionals. - The role of the outside professional should
ideally be limited to helping the beneficiaries
to articulate their problems, assisting with the
choice of research methods, exposing them to
outside experiences, and improving their access
to external information. - The term PARTICIPATORY ACTION RESEARCH is a
reaction against top-down research that
conducts research at the top and implements its
findings below. It is an experiment on
side-side research
10MORE ON ACTION RESEARCH
- Ø 1. People are the subjects of research the
dichotomy between object and subject is broken - Ø 2. People themselves collect data and then
process and analyse the information using methods
easily understood by them - Ø 3.The knowledge generated is used to
promote actions for change - Ø 4. The knowledge belongs to the people and
they are the primary beneficiaries of knowledge
creation - Ø 5. Research and action are inseparable
they represent a unity - Ø 6.SUCH PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH MAY NOT GET
WRITTEN UP. ORAL AND VISUAL METHODS CHARACTERISE
THIS METHOD OF KNOWLEDGE CREATION. SOME OF THE
MATERIAL COULD BE TRANSLATED INTO PICTURES,
CARTOONS, GRAPHICS AND SLOGANS, WHICH MAY BE A
MORE EFFECTIVE METHOD OF COMMUNICATION.
11FORMATIVE RESEARCH
- Formative Research, also known as field or
usability testing) is a methodology for improving
educational practices, and it entails seeking
answers to such questions as - What is working?
- What needs to be improved?
- How can it be improved?
- Formative research can occur before a programme
is designed and implemented, or while a programme
is being implemented. -
- The tendency these days is for Formative Research
to come closer to the Participatory Action
Research mode. - Thus, while complex research designs are still
in use, there is a strong shift towards rapid
assessment procedures (or RAP). Also, in most
cases, researchers are teaming up with
practitioners to conduct formative research. -
12TOOLS FOR FORMATIVE RESEARCH
- Case Studies on situations designed by
the researcher or naturalistic situations
(already occurring in the educational
environment). Naturalistic formative case studies
can also be either in vivo (arising during the
conduct of the research) or post facto (arising
from what had already happened) - Observations of situations as they
occur, as much as possible in carefully
structured situations - Documents from a variety of sources,
and in a variety of forms, with content analysis
based on the key questions being raised by the
formative evaluation/research project - Interviews of key informants
- Focused discussions with key
stakeholders, with emphasis on seeking consensus
and congruence - MOST FORMATIVE RESEARCH STUDIES THESE DAYS WOULD
USE A MULTIPLE METHODOLOGY PROCEDURE. -
13APPLICABILITY IN THE NIGERIAN SETTING
- THE CHALLENGE
- to develop a framework for applying PAF as an R
D tool in the Nigerian education setting. This
should in fact be a new direction for educational
research in Nigeria and for most of Africa, where
it is often alleged that the knowledge base for
education sector development work is weak, where
the relevance of most of existing research is
being seriously questioned, and where research
capacity requires both strengthening and
broadening. - CHOICE CRITERIA
- 1. Of the myriad of problems facing Education in
our immediate environment, which exactly should
be our entry points to PAF-type research? - 2.Which of the problems, if correctly addressed,
would have a positive multiplier effect on most
of the others?
14FIRST KEY AREA FOR PAF-TYPE RESEARCH
- AT THE MACRO POLICY LEVEL, THE UBE (UNIVERSAL
BASIC EDUCATION) PROGRAMME - PAF-type research on UBE can be justified on the
ground that it has been the real major education
policy move by the present administration. It is
also the nations answer to the global challenge
of EFA (Education for All) by the year 2015. A
PAF-type R D would - Mobilize stakeholders to seek to
understand what the programme is all about - Empower them to articulate their hopes
and fears on the programme goals - Generate a wealth of knowledge on what
is working, what is not, what can be meaningfully
done to put things back on track, where necessary - Develop community feedback mechanisms for sharing
knowledge on the project, in order to make it
work, and to adapt implementation strategies to
changing conditions
15SECOND KEY AREA OF APPLICATION
- AT THE SYSTEMS LEVEL, PAF RESEARCH
STRATEGIES AS AN INTEGRAL PART OF TEACHER
EDUCATION (PRE-SERVICE AND IN-SERVICE) - 1.Teachers have always been the researched, and
very rarely the researchers. It is also well
known that educational research has always been
top-down and never side-side. - 2. In addition, research language has always been
different from teacher language. - 3.For teachers to become better able to effect
positive change in schools, the prevailing
situation will have to change, and a PAF approach
to educational research would be one way of
effecting the much desired change. - 4. For this to happen, prospective and practising
teachers would have to learn PAF (internalise its
basics) through full involvement in PAF.
16THIRD AREA OF APPLICATION
- AT THE INSTITUTIONAL LEVEL, THE PRACTICE OF
CONTINUOUS ASSESSMENT - This is a pedagogical principle that was intended
to improve learning outcomes, through greater
teacher attention to the needs of the individual
learner. - Its development was however another top-down'
affair. - No account was taken of teachers intuitive
knowledge and practice of continuous assessment. - The guidelines for its implementation were also
in the form of unilateral monologues. - The result is that continuous assessment became
first mere continuous testing, later continuous
cheating, and now continuous harassment. - A PAF research and development strategy is very
likely to contribute to reversing that trend,
since the process would narrow the distance
between researcher and practioners
17FINALLY, FINALLY and FINALLY
- In the spirit of the PAF philosophy that
motivated it, this discussion has not said it
all. - It has simply made some attempts to challenge us
all to find ways of turning research in Education
into an activity to be shared by all, with fruits
that can be used for the benefits of all. - The challenge is also one of turning researchers
into real learners, who should learn from the
real world of Education. - It is also a challenge of improving the
practical utility of research projects in
Education, and of communicating research findings
in a more digestible form. - PAF does not exclude more robust approaches to
educational research. - It is only saying that the robustness of
research can be enhanced by its utility to the
practioners, and to the stakeholders. - PAF can in fact enhance the international
acceptability of educational research efforts. - Researchers who are able to endure the rigours of
PAF would in fact be writing research papers that
do not simply follow the well-trodden path - They will in addition be making discoveries that
have been waiting for creative educational
researchers for a long time. -
-
18THANK YOU FOR A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN