1st Edition

Practitioner Research In The Primary School

Edited By Rosemary Webb Copyright 1990
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1990. Central to the vision of teachers researching their own practice was the belief that the improvement of teaching and learning in schools could best be achieved through the development of the critical and creative powers of individual teachers. The research studies in this book, which reflect and extend that vision, serve as accounts of the learning experiences of a group of practitioner researchers. The book has two closely interrelated purposes. The first is to provide information and ideas on the areas of the formal and hidden curriculum into which the practitioners enquired. The second purpose is to provide methodological ideas and assistance for those already engaged in practitioner research and to motivate others to seek an opportunity to undertake some form of research-based enquiry. The two purposes are closely interrelated because of the value the contributors ascribe to taking a research stance to teaching.

    Introduction, Rosemary Webb; Chapter 1 The Origins and Aspirations of Practitioner Research, Rosemary Webb; Chapter 2 Why do Pirates have Peg Legs?, Doreen Gregson; Chapter 3 Towards Reading?, Beatrice Reed; Chapter 4 Writing in the Infant Classroom, Linda Russell; Chapter 5 Information Gathering in Topic Work, Rosemary Webb; Chapter 6 Language Counts in the Teaching of Mathematics, Susan Wright; Chapter 7 A Process Approach to Science, Virginia Winter; Chapter 8 Culture and Behaviour:, Avrille McCann; Chapter 9 Towards a Policy of Equal Opportunities through Research, Jenny Vickers; Chapter 10 Procedural Rules in the Management of Pupils in the Primary School, Alastair Horbury; Chapter 11 The Processes and Purposes of Practitioner Research, Rosemary Webb;

    Biography

    Rosemary Webb University of Manchester.