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Refusals,
resistances, and the transformative power of educational enquiry
Notes
for Jean McNiff’s contribution to the Symposium
Teaching
and Learning Action Research
American
Educational Research Association, New Orleans, April 1–5, 2002
Preamble
It has taken time to come to understand
what drives my life and to communicate these values in appropriate ways.
The main core values I hold that inform
my life work are love and freedom. These values are related conceptually
in a deep way, and the conceptual relationship manifests as the lived
relationships between people in their everyday contexts. My work is devoted
to finding ways of communicating my own potentials for love and freedom
by helping people to experience love and freedom in their own lives. The
metaphors I use to help me communicate my values are those of relational
and generative transformational processes.
For me, the idea of love includes the
capacity to value others and to see them as unique persons, a reciprocal
process in which one also is valued and seen as a unique person. My understanding
of freedom is that it is a process of experience that includes the capacity
to value others’ opinions and feelings, even though those opinions and
feelings might be in conflict with one’s own. Freedom involves reciprocal
responsibility, and this responsibility manifests in ways that communicate
an acceptance of responsibility for the consequences of one’s actions.
I understand the nature of human enquiry
as an unending quest for knowledge, a quest undertaken by individuals
in company with one another. Whatever knowledge they acquire is the grounds
for, and transforms into, new knowledge. Nothing is static. Everything
is in a state of becoming. Personal knowledge transforms into explicit
knowledge; values transform into practice.
I believe profoundly in the capacity
of people to think, speak and act for themselves. My work is to help people
to do so.
I believe that living inevitably involves
learning, and the quality of living is in relation to the quality of learning.
The quality of learning is influenced by the degree of freedom that is
experienced in the process of learning, and the quality of the experience
of freedom is influenced by the quality of love that enables it. Education,
in my view, always needs to be understood within contexts of love and
freedom, and how those contexts can provide spaces for people to create
their own knowledge.
Freedom is not a ‘given’ in some preordained
sense. It is an emergent process within social relationships, as people
work out who they are and how they should live together. This involves
accepting the responsibility of personal decisions and holding oneself
accountable to others for the consequences of one’s thinking, and how
that thinking transforms into acting. Because I am a person also in company
with others, I need to hold myself accountable for my thinking and how
it transforms into action.
An implication of the above views in
terms of pursuing my chosen profession in education is that frequently
I experience situations in which my values are denied in my practice (Whitehead,
1989). I consistently encounter obstacles to the realisation of my values.
These obstacles often take the form of institutional structures and processes.
They also take the form of many people’s unquestioning acceptance of established
norms. Part of my work is to help people to appreciate how their own thinking
and practices are controlled. My love of freedom manifests in a desire
to enable people to learn to see what is there, rather than what they
choose, or are led, to believe is there. I aim to justify my views by
showing how my actions have enabled other people also to realise their
potentials for love and freedom in mutual relationship, and how those
people justify their practices in terms of how they are enabling others
to do the same.
I have learnt from Jack Whitehead the
powerful idea of how educational enquiry is a form of dialogue that has
profound implications for the future of humanity. I bring this idea with
me to my practice contexts. I aim to create contexts of care within which
people can learn, appreciating that their learning is often best enabled
through loving relationships that encourage the unfettered exploration
of ideas, even though those ideas might create dissonance for themselves
and others.
My contexts
My situation is that I am an independent researcher. Of Scottish parentage,
I live in England and work mainly in Ireland and Northern Ireland. I have
been engaged for the past ten years in developing formal and informal
programmes for the continuing professional education of people across
the professions, mainly teachers. When I first began this work I tried
to persuade Irish universities to support educators’ professional learning
by accrediting their workplace based enquiries. These overtures were unsuccessful,
so I negotiated with British universities that they would provide routes
to accreditation. Ten years on, some 60 Masters degrees have been awarded
to Irish educators by the University of the West of England in Bristol,
UK. I later developed a guided doctoral programme with the University
of Glamorgan in Wales, and the first PhD degree is about to be awarded
in March 2002. I believe that education providers should take responsibility
for supporting the continuing professional learning of educators, so I
pursued my original ambition of negotiating with Irish universities to
develop professional development programmes. That wish has come true.
I now work formally with the University of Limerick in developing a doctoral
programme, in company with the Faculty of Education and Professional Studies.
The situation is that a group of 10 doctoral researchers, together with
Faculty, study together to find ways of improving the quality of their
work in their own contexts. Their enquiries take the form of self studies
undertaken collaboratively with their students and workplace colleagues,
and with one another. Given that universities in Ireland set the paradigm
for teaching and learning in primary and post-primary education, this
initiative has significant potential for a reconceptualisation of what
counts as educational knowledge in Ireland and how knowledge is generated
from within the living practices of people as they ask collaboratively,
‘How do I improve my work?’ (Whitehead, 1989).
Themes
in my writings
I try to write in a way that speaks directly to people’s experience. I consciously
try to keep my writing accessible. I tend to write for practitioners in
workplaces, regarding people positioned in universities and other higher
education contexts also as practitioners in workplaces. Therefore I do
not write specifically for an academic audience.
I try to communicate theories through the form and content of stories of experience.
My work contexts involve helping practitioners understand how their own
theories are embodied within their practices. I encourage them to make
these theories explicit so that others may learn from them. My writings
have the same purpose. I try to show how my own theorising has emerged
from within my embodied practice of encouraging others to do the same.
My writing is informed by the metaphors of relation and generative transformation,
and I aim to show how I am developing forms of communication that show
the practical realisation of my own embodied values as I try to help others
to do the same. My work adopts an ecological perspective, as I try to
make connections between values and practice, and show how an elegant
underlying dynamic relational order manifests as an emergent dynamic social
order of relationships among people, and among people and their environments.
Themes within my writing are to do with how I enable people to learn within
contexts of love and freedom. We show how we achieve freedom to think
and learn as a developmental process in loving relationship with one another.
I believe I communicate these ideas to people successfully because I am
constantly trying to find ways myself of experiencing love and freedom
in relation with others.
I am deeply interested these days in the idea of responsibility and how this
manifests in educational enquiry. I am learning that there are levels
of experience of responsibility. Particularly pressing are my needs to
find ways of realising Noam Chomsky’s ideas of telling the truth and exposing
lies, ideas with which I profoundly agree, especially in relation to the
lies that are told within the invisible propaganda systems that underpin
formal education and social systems; and to balance these imperatives
with the need to do no harm and especially to protect those with whom
I am in company and who are subject to direct punishment by powerful elites
whom I might offend. I recognise these elements as obstacles to my own
progress in developing contexts of love and freedom. I try to approach
all relationships in a spirit of love and freedom, recognising from long
experience that my efforts may well be rejected, often in a way that does
emotional violence. I have become political. I do see the need for strategic
action in achieving my long term goals. Current specific difficulties
in these arenas are foregrounding for me the need for ethical awareness,
first in relation to how self study is justified in terms of making one’s
own contribution to good social orders, and second in relation to how
I have a responsibility to care for the welfare of those who are dependent
on me to support their formal and informal workplace enquiries. This dependency
is short-term, but real; I am working to secure ways in which people can
become self-reliant.
My
teaching strategies
I work mainly with in-service teachers, and educators across the professions.
My strategies are to support the development of groups of practitioners who
are involved in formal and informal professional learning. This work is
undertaken in university contexts, teaching and managing professional
learning programmes for accreditation, as well as teaching and managing
workplace programmes. I complement this work with the production of texts,
both my own which show how I am helping others to learn and in which I
offer advice about how they might develop their own capacity for learning,
and I also support the publication of others’ work. My aim is to withdraw
from teaching programmes and concentrate on working with faculties in
building their own capacity for supporting professional education programmes
through personal and collective enquiry. I also hope to develop my writing
more systematically.
I am currently involved in developing web-based learning opportunities.
Obstacles
and challenges
The obstacles and challenges
within my main practice contexts in Ireland and Northern Ireland are the
same as those in the wider contexts of education research, and its extension
into other research contexts such as organisation and management research.
I encounter structural prejudice against the ideas that people are able
to think and act for themselves, and against practitioner-based forms
of enquiry that hold this as a core value. I encounter situations in which
people, who should have learnt to see permeating prejudices for what they
are, either deliberately choose not to see or are unable to see because
of the insidious nature of the propaganda systems that control their thinking.
Like Maxine Greene (from whose text ‘The Dialectic of Freedom’, 1988,
p.112, I have borrowed part of my title) I refuse to accept these underpinning
systems of control, and I resist their influence. I celebrate the transformative
potentials of people in community to create their own opportunities for
freedom and loving relationships.
I justify the foregoing by evidence collected over the years in the shape of
the dissertations and theses of people I have supported, and in their
comments about their experience of our working together. Examples of such
comments are offered here from our group of research participants and
faculty at the University of Limerick.
‘For me, what I am learning is there is great value in discourse and sharing
and exchanging ideas. In the course of today I can see that I actually
change my ideas, that they can develop in such a short time … this is
something we don’t normally get an opportunity to speak about.’
‘You have created these spaces in which we can develop new ideas and test them
with each other.’
And
finally …
I value opportunities such as our meeting today to share the joy of learning
and teaching. My life is animated by a faith that hidden processes transform
into explicit ones in life-affirming ways, and this emergence is a property
of living. The faith that exists at a deep level within me emerges over
time into the lived reality of practice. This process of inexorable emergence
towards the good, in terms of love and freedom among people and their
environments, is how I understand the nature of God. While my faith exists
as a form of personal knowledge, I support my claim to this knowledge
by showing how it has transformed into the realities of practice.
References
Greene, M. (1988) The Dialectic of Freedom. New York, Teachers College
Press.
Whitehead, J. (1989) ‘Creating a Living Educational Theory from Questions of
the Kind, “How do I Improve my Practice?”’, Cambridge Journal of Education,
19(1): 41–52.
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