Teachers as researchers: A discovery of their emerging role and impact through a school-university collaborative research

Authors

  • Ken Chow
  • Samuel Kai Wah Chu
  • Nicole Tavares
  • Celina Wing Yi Lee

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26522/brocked.v24i2.374

Keywords:

teacher research, school-university collaboration, inquiry project based learning

Abstract

This study explored the impact of the role of teacher-researchers on in-service teachers’ professional development, as well as the reasons behind the lack of a teacher-as-researcher ethos in schools. In the study, teachers from four Hong Kong primary schools participated in a school-university collaborative research project that promotes collaborative inquiry project-based learning (IPjBL), in which they took the dual role of the teacher and researcher. Five focus group interviews were conducted with the teachers to collect in-depth qualitative data on their experiences. The impact of this experience on teacher professionalism was examined from four dimensions: knowledge enrichment, school culture, teaching practice and curriculum design. The study provides evidence for the benefits of teacher research and sheds light on how university-school collaboration could contribute to engaging teachers in action research in their everyday classroom.

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Published

2015-10-14

How to Cite

Chow, K., Chu, S. K. W., Tavares, N., & Lee, C. W. Y. (2015). Teachers as researchers: A discovery of their emerging role and impact through a school-university collaborative research. Brock Education Journal, 24(2). https://doi.org/10.26522/brocked.v24i2.374

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Section

Articles