- Department: Education
- Credit value: 20 credits
- Credit level: C
- Academic year of delivery: 2024-25
- See module specification for other years: 2023-24
The purpose of this module is to introduce students to some of the important aspects of educational research. They will develop the skills of reading, critiquing, designing and communicating educational ideas and research. For instance, they will learn to read empirical research articles critically and consider the pros and cons of different approaches to research. There will also be a focus on the philosophies that underpin decisions about research design before exploring different research methodologies and methods.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
---|---|
A | Semester 1 2024-25 |
The key aims of the module are:
Developing research literacy, including an understanding of different research styles in educational research and their philosophical foundations
Developing the understanding of how data is collected and analysed using qualitative and quantitative research methods
Being able to apply this research literacy to the critical evaluation of a body of research on a chosen educational issue
Based on a critical evaluation of this body of literature, be able to formulate research questions and identify appropriate research approaches for addressing them.
Subject content
By the end of this module students will be able to:
distinguish between different paradigms of educational research
critically review research literature and engage with research
consider the nature of research in educational studies
understand the design and construction of educational research in order to become research literate.
conduct a review of the literature research on an educational issue in compulsory education.
understand issues of sampling, reliability, validity and their interpretation from different approaches
consider issues of data collection within different methodological approaches
Academic and graduate skills
Students will develop their skills of:
communication,
searching for sources,
analysing issues and ideas.
engaging in group work,
formal and informal presentations to the group,
supplement their assigned readings with ones they have found,
critically examine issues and ideas relating to argumentation and research literacy.
develop their IT skills by interacting fully with the VLE (Yorkshare).
The following is indicative of the possible content:
The module will include the following themes:
Introductory unit
Introduction research styles and research literacy
Introduction to critical literacy - coloniality in research
Philosophies and methodologies of research
Realism, positivism and quantitative methodologies
Constructivism, interpretivism and qualitative methodologies
Pragmatism and mixed methods
Quantitative research methods
Reading quantitative research (including considerations of reliability and validity)
Collecting quantitative data (including questionnaires, large data sets and research ethics)
Analysing quantitative data
Qualitative research methods
Reading qualitative data
Collecting qualitative data (including interviews, observations and research ethics)
Analysing qualitative data
Making sense of research
Identifying areas of research interest
Considering research designs (qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods)
Conducting literature reviews
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Essay/coursework | 100 |
None
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Essay/coursework | 100 |
Individual written feedback reports, with follow-up tutor meeting, if necessary. The feedback is returned to students in line with university policy. Please check the Guide to Assessment, Standards, Marking and Feedback for more information
Bryman, A. (2015) Social Research Methods (5th Edition). Oxford: Oxford University Press
Cohen, L. (2011) Research Methods in Education (7th Edition). London: Routledge
Moosavi, L. (2022) Decolonial Research Methods: Resisting Coloniality in Academic Knowledge Production (webinar series). DOI: 10.17638/datacat.liverpool.ac.uk/1670
Luke, A. (2012) Critical Literacy: Foundational Notes. Theory into Practice, 51(1), 4-11
Shank, G and Brown, L (2007) Exploring educational research literacy. Abingdon: Routledge.
Wellington, J. (2015) Educational Research: Contemporary issues and practical approaches. Second edition. London: Bloomsbury.