To read this content please select one of the options below:

Theme 5 – A Beautiful Mess: Keeping Hold of Messiness and Complexity in Research

Liz Todd (Newcastle University, UK)
Jo Rose (University of Bristol, UK)

Repositioning Out-of-School Learning

ISBN: 978-1-78769-740-9, eISBN: 978-1-78769-739-3

Publication date: 21 January 2022

Abstract

This chapter explores how the case studies were ‘messy’ research. Because we were researching in contexts with many unknowns, the research process was unpredictable. ‘Tidying up’ the research in advance and working within clearly defined parameters was not usually possible. Across the case studies, mess occurred at different points and in different ways in the research process. For some projects, the design itself was subject to uncertainty and change; sometimes what had been planned was not possible; sometimes what had been planned was not the best course of action as the project progressed; and sometimes the design itself was emergent, requiring creativity and flexibility to meet the project outcomes. Some projects faced messiness when trying to combine methods and data. Others encountered messiness when collecting data, deciding what counted as data, and interpreting data. The real-world nature of our research and our need to be responsive to dynamic and often unknown out-of-school contexts meant that our methods could not fit into the neatly structured shorthand that is often used to think about (and teach about) methods. As researchers, we were constantly dealing with fluid and changing identities, as our relationships with participants and spaces developed during the project. This also means that tidying up our research could be counter-productive. The chapter concludes that making sense of mess in research can reveal understandings that are sometimes hidden. Mess and complexity, then, is something to be held on to, celebrated and engaged with, rather than tidied away.

Keywords

Citation

Todd, L. and Rose, J. (2022), "Theme 5 – A Beautiful Mess: Keeping Hold of Messiness and Complexity in Research", Rose, J., Jay, T., Goodall, J., Mazzoli Smith, L. and Todd, L. (Ed.) Repositioning Out-of-School Learning (Emerald Studies in Out-of-School Learning), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 155-161. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78769-739-320211015

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Liz Todd and Jo Rose. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited