1st Edition

Teaching as Learning An Action Research Approach

By Jean McNiff Copyright 1993
    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    140 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this fascinating and very personal book, Jean McNiff, author of the successful Action Research: Principles and Practice, argues that educational knowledge is created by individual teachers as they attempt to express their own values in their professional lives.
    Working with case studies of actual practice, she looks again at the familiar action research paradigm of identifying a problem, imagining, implementing and evaluating a solution and modifying practice in the light of that evaluation. She gives practical advice on how working in this way can aid the professional development of action researcher and practitioner alike. She concludes that the best teaching is done by those who want to learn and who can show others how to be open to their own processes of self development.

    Acknowledgements, Foreword by Jack Whitehead, Introduction, Part 1: I Experience a problem when some of my educational lues are denied in my practice, 1 The Professional Education of Teachers, 2 The Problem of Educational Knowledge, Part II: I imagine a solution to the problem, 3 The Notion of a Living Educational Theory, 4 The Educational Enterprise, 5 Towards an Educational Epistemology of Practice, Part III: 6 The Answer of Avon, 7 Action Research for Groups of Schools, 8 Whole-School Development, Part IV: I evaluate the imagined solutions, 9 Evaluating Practice, 10 Evaluating Support Practices, 11 Evaluating Provision for Continuing Teacher Education, Part V: I modify my ideas and practices in the light of the evaluation, 12 Perspectives on Practice, 13 Education and the Society of Tomorrow, Appendix, Bibliography, Index

    Biography

    Jean McNiff