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What Comes Next: Forward-looking Stories of Research-as-experience

Landscapes, Edges, and Identity-Making

ISBN: 978-1-83867-598-1, eISBN: 978-1-83867-597-4

Publication date: 21 October 2019

Abstract

In this chapter, we think about shifting stories of research as our experience of relational methodology through narrative leads us to think differently about our work together – our research relationship and responsibility to one another as colleagues, as well as our participants. We inquire into the ways our relational methods of narrative inquiry have continued to compose shared, sustaining stories of research and research community, support our own curriculum making and identity-making experiences, and provoke our respective thinking in new ways. We revisit Aoki’s metaphor of planned and lived experiences to think about the ways that research is lived out in our lives and the complexities of sense-making about research and ourselves as researchers. Research-as-experience can be viewed as a lived curriculum of research, which interrupts the dominant narrative of research-as-plan and acts as a counterstory of research. Research-as-experience is not a static research plan that must be implemented but rather a course of lives within the context of research to be experienced. This perspective recognized that research shifts, just as the lives and identities of our participants shift. Our plans for our participants within our research cannot contain their shifting identities and must shift with them in order to honour their experience. Our work together helped us to understand that it is only through relationship with our research participants and each other that we could approach a deep understanding of their experiences and the narratives they shared about those experiences.

Keywords

Citation

Clarke, C.L. and Hutchinson, D.A. (2019), "What Comes Next: Forward-looking Stories of Research-as-experience", Landscapes, Edges, and Identity-Making (Advances in Research on Teaching, Vol. 33), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 203-215. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-368720190000033015

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Emerald Publishing Limited