4.5 Article

Relevance to Practice as a Criterion for Rigor

Journal

EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 19-23

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.3102/0013189X13520289

Keywords

educational policy; educational reform; research methodology; research utilization

Funding

  1. Division Of Research On Learning
  2. Direct For Education and Human Resources [1237328] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The authors argue for a reconceptualization of rigor that requires sustained, direct, and systematic documentation of what takes place inside programs to document how students and teachers change and adapt interventions in interactions with each other in relation to their dynamic local contexts. Building on promising new programs at the Institute of Education Sciences, they call for the formulation of collaborative research standards that must require researchers to provide evidence that they have engaged in a process to surface and negotiate the focus of their joint work, and to document the ways participation in this process was structured to include district and school leaders, teachers, parents, community stakeholders, and, wherever possible, children and youth. They close by describing how this new criterion-relevance to practice-can ensure the longevity and efficacy of educational research.

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