Guest Editorial: Ethnographies of Education for Social Justice

IF 1.1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Ethnography and Education Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/17457823.2023.2192170
Begoña Vigo Arrazola, Jonathan Tummons
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Abstract

The different articles in this special issue of Ethnography and Education approach several inter-related questions. What is the nature of ethnography of education for Social Justice? In what ways can a deeper understanding of ethnography inform and guide the actions of researchers for social justice in education settings? How best can ethnographic research be developed in education for Social Justice? And finally, to what extent can ethnography of education for social justice be preserved? As researchers and specifically as ethnographers of education, we think it is essential that we consistently ask the question: ‘for what purpose should we do research in education?’ Perhaps an equally important question is: ‘in whose interests are we acting?’ This special issue foregrounds a moral purpose in educational research and aims to examine ethnographies of education for social justice through a variety of lenses and scenarios. In each of the papers, our underlying assumption is that ethnography of education and being an ethnographer are linked to social and moral responsibility. Our hope is that we can generate truly useful knowledge for educational change and social transformation in the interests of educational praxis and also social justice. In our original call for papers, we looked for ways to explicate the creation of spaces where researchers and participants empower the research process and generate dialogues of mutual transformation. The ways in which ethnographic research practices can contribute to participants’ autonomous constructions of themselves, ability to reflect critically and control their own educational practices based on propositional knowledge that can be incorporated into their teaching practices, are sometimes insufficiently articulated. And this is the critical point. The analysis of the information and the interaction during research provides knowledge that serves to focus the attentionof researchparticipants onwhat they already, implicitly, know. It also enables them to develop that knowledge and allows them to have a point of reference to fit to their own experiences. We wish to extend this lens for analysis towards students, parents, community leaders, and any other people who can claim an interest in or concern for educational processes, practices, and praxis, from a social justice standpoint. We are excited to be curating this rich collection of papers that includes a diversity of approaches, research, narratives, and voices. Across this special issue, different educational practices have been explored in such a way not only to foreground the participatory potential of the researched but also to generate emancipatory spaces for different social actors within education to make sense of their own condition and position, and to co-construct, in a meaningful way, powerful knowledge among and of themselves. The cores of interest are distinct in each article but there is a contextual sensitivity, there is coherence and there is critical reflection. In this sense, the ethnographic research presented in this special issue shows a critical perspective, inhabiting a critical framework that recognises the need to contribute to a process of social transformation; it emphasises the creation of a space where researchers and participants empower the research process towards explanatory critique and social transformation. One of the values of ethnographic research is its potential to generate deeper and richer knowledge about specific activities in their particular contexts, but the idea of transformation
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客座编辑:社会公正教育的民族志
本期《民族志与教育》特刊的不同文章探讨了几个相互关联的问题。社会正义教育民族志的本质是什么?对民族志更深入的了解可以通过哪些方式为教育环境中的社会正义研究人员提供信息和指导?如何在社会正义教育中最好地发展民族志研究?最后,社会正义教育的人种学能在多大程度上得以保存?作为研究人员,特别是作为教育人种学家,我们认为有必要不断地问这个问题:“我们应该为了什么目的进行教育研究?”或许一个同样重要的问题是:“我们的行为符合谁的利益?”这期特刊强调了教育研究的道德目的,旨在通过各种镜头和场景来研究社会正义教育的民族志。在每一篇论文中,我们的基本假设是,教育民族志和成为一名民族志学家与社会和道德责任有关。我们的希望是,为了教育实践和社会正义的利益,我们可以为教育变革和社会转型产生真正有用的知识。在我们最初的论文征集中,我们寻找方法来解释研究人员和参与者赋予研究过程权力并产生相互转化对话的空间的创建。民族志研究实践有助于参与者自主构建自我的方式,批判性反思的能力,以及基于命题知识控制自己的教育实践的能力,这些知识可以纳入他们的教学实践,但有时没有得到充分的阐述。这是临界点。在研究过程中对信息和相互作用的分析提供了知识,这些知识有助于将研究参与者的注意力集中在他们已经隐性知道的东西上。它也使他们能够发展知识,并允许他们有一个适合自己经验的参考点。我们希望从社会公正的角度出发,将这一视角扩展到学生、家长、社区领袖和任何其他可能对教育过程、实践和实践感兴趣或关注的人。我们很高兴能够策划这个丰富的论文集合,其中包括各种方法,研究,叙述和声音。在这期特刊中,不同的教育实践以这样一种方式进行了探索,不仅突出了研究的参与潜力,而且为教育中的不同社会行动者创造了解放空间,使他们能够理解自己的条件和地位,并以一种有意义的方式共同构建他们之间和他们自己的强大知识。每篇文章的兴趣核心都是不同的,但有上下文敏感性,有连贯性和批判性反思。从这个意义上说,本期特刊中提出的民族志研究展示了一种批判性的视角,它居住在一个认识到需要为社会转型过程做出贡献的批判性框架中;它强调创造一个空间,在这里,研究人员和参与者赋予研究过程解释性批评和社会转型权力。人种学研究的价值之一是它有可能产生更深入和更丰富的知识,关于特定背景下的特定活动,但转变的想法
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来源期刊
Ethnography and Education
Ethnography and Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Ethnography and Education is an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing articles that illuminate educational practices through empirical methodologies, which prioritise the experiences and perspectives of those involved. The journal is open to a wide range of ethnographic research that emanates from the perspectives of sociology, linguistics, history, psychology and general educational studies as well as anthropology. The journal’s priority is to support ethnographic research that involves long-term engagement with those studied in order to understand their cultures, uses multiple methods of generating data, and recognises the centrality of the researcher in the research process. The journal welcomes substantive and methodological articles that seek to explicate and challenge the effects of educational policies and practices; interrogate and develop theories about educational structures, policies and experiences; highlight the agency of educational actors; and provide accounts of how the everyday practices of those engaged in education are instrumental in social reproduction.
期刊最新文献
Ethical dilemmas of translanguaging pedagogy in L2 and basic literacy education for adults: social justice and ethics of care Playing the ‘pibe chorro’ game: masculine skills and legitimate peripheral participation in street culture Socio-spatial networks and capital in small rural primary school voluntary activity ‘And here is a caterpillar kindergarten’: Latin American children transforming school practices at home during the pandemic ‘What’s he writing in there?’ Reciprocal field relations and relational curiosity in ethnographies of education
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