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Activity: reviewing the Guest Lecture (1) In small groups, discuss your reactions to the guest lecture. Use the following questions as a guide: 1. Which parts of the talk resonated with your own experience? Try to be as specific as possible. 2. Did anything surprise you? If so, what? 3. What more, if anything, would you still like to know about the lecturer’s findings? 4. What do you think the connections are with Educational Leadership? 5. Can you see how strands from the talk might inform your own research or professional practice in future? Activity: reviewing the Guest Lecture (2) Would you describe the lecture as ‘research-based’? If so, how do you know? Working as a group, make a list of all the features of the lecture which made you think it was based on research evidence. Is there anything else, not on your list, which would identify a piece of work as research-based? Activity: reviewing the Guest Lecture (3) Now consider the literature you read in preparation for today. Did any part of those texts lead you to think that the material might be the product of research? Do you need to add any more factors to your list of research features? With all the factors you have accumulated, revisit your earlier definition of research. Revise it if necessary. Write a final agreed version. How do others define research? “The triumph of evidence over anecdote” (Mortimore, 1999). “A focused and systematic enquiry that goes beyond generally available knowledge to acquire specialised and detailed information, providing a basis for analysis and elucidating comment on the topic of the enquiry” (Johnson, 1994:3). More definitions Bassey (1999:38) suggests: Research is systematic, critical and self-critical enquiry which aims to contribute towards the advancement of knowledge and wisdom. It is ethical, sceptical and analytical (Robson, 2002) and “seeks to make a difference” (Kellett, 2005: 8).
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