Buch, Englisch, 430 Seiten, Format (B × H): 162 mm x 237 mm, Gewicht: 726 g
Buch, Englisch, 430 Seiten, Format (B × H): 162 mm x 237 mm, Gewicht: 726 g
Reihe: Routledge International Handbooks
ISBN: 978-1-032-54549-3
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
The Routledge International Handbook of Constructivist Grounded Theory in Educational Research provides a comprehensive overview of the state of the art in Constructivist Grounded Theory (CGT) methodology, including core grounded theory tenets and processes as well as constructivist ‘adaptations’. It features CGT research from across the education sector, including studies based in primary schooling, post-primary (second-level) schooling, and higher education.
Across 5 parts and 20 chapters, the book makes explicit how CGT techniques and processes were implemented in the field, the way(s) in which challenges were navigated, and how educational researchers aligned their research processes to constructivist principles. It offers exemplars of good practice by educational researchers from Australia, Ireland, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the UK, and the USA. The Handbook synthesises learning from the experiences of CGT researchers in education to establish a framework of guidance for early career and more experienced researchers. Additionally, it directly interrogates and considers how to address challenges in the implementation of high-quality CGT and looks to the future of the methodology in educational research.
This Handbook provides guidance and education-specific examples to doctoral students and researchers who wish to use or are using CGT in educational research. It will also be of significant interest to qualitative researchers in other disciplines like sociology, psychology, and nursing.
Zielgruppe
Academic and Postgraduate
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Part 1: Introduction 1. Grounded Theory and Constructivist Grounded Theory: History and Development 2. Grounded Theory and Constructivist Grounded Theory in Educational Research Part 2: Constructivist Grounded Theory Studies with Children and Young People in Schools 3. A Constructivist Grounded Theory Approach to the School Experiences of Children Living at Refuges for Abused Women: Methodological Challenges and Possibilities 4. Using Constructivist Grounded Theory in a Study of the Career Aspirations of Children from Diverse Backgrounds in Ireland 5. “At this school, you can't do nuthin’!” Using Constructivist Grounded Theory to Understand the Failure of Zero-tolerance Discipline in Urban Education 6. Designing Interview Studies on School Bullying Using a Constructivist Grounded Theory Approach 7. Doing Constructivist Grounded Theory Research with Ethnographic Fieldwork to Understand Schoolchildren’s Involvement in School Bullying Part 3: Constructivist Grounded Theory Studies with Teachers and Parents 8. Whose Main Concern? Constructivist Grounded Theory as a Way of Gaining ‘Closeness’ to What is Important to Participants in a Study of Swedish School-age Educare 9. Employing Visual Methods in Constructivist Grounded Theory Research about Teacher Attrition in Primary Schools in England 10. Using Constructivist Grounded Theory to Understand the Experiences of Early Career Teachers Teaching Students with Diverse Learning Needs in Australia 11. Inside Out: Researcher Positionality as Insider and Outsider and Impact on the Co-construction of Data in a Constructivist Grounded Theory Study about Teachers’ Understandings of Intercultural Education in Ireland 12. Data Analysis in a Constructivist Grounded Theory Study of Remote Teachers in Australia Working with Students Impacted by Complex Childhood Trauma 13. Stepping into an Unfamiliar Field: An Account of Constructing a Grounded Theory in a Study with Parents in the United Kingdom about Home and Alternative Education Part 4: Constructivist Grounded Theory Studies in Higher Education 14. Tracing the Development of a Core Concept in a Constructivist Grounded Theory Study with Student Teachers from Working Class Backgrounds in Ireland: From ‘Performing Social Class’ to ‘Chameleoning to Fit in’ 15. Theoretical Pluralism and Theoretical Agnosticism as Useful Principles when Studying Student Teachers’ Efforts to Cope with Emotionally Challenging Situations 16. Navigating the Literature Review when Conducting a Constructivist Grounded Theory Study in of Internationalisation in Higher Education in Ireland 17. Developing a Theoretical Explanation of University Teaching Using Constructivist Grounded Theory 18. Keeping the Constructivism in a Constructivist Grounded Theory: Data Collection, Writing, and Publishing as Analytical Processes in a Study of Interprofessional Education and Collaboration Part 5: Good Practice, Interrogating Challenges, and Looking to the Future of Constructivist Grounded Theory in Educational Research 19. Synthesising Good Practice in Constructivist Grounded Theory Educational Research 20. Interrogating and Addressing Challenges and Looking to the Future of Constructivist Grounded Theory in Educational Research