Generating research from and for action—3 central ideas in Action Research
by Alfredo Ortiz Aragon
The MethodSpace focus for October 2020 was on Action Research. Our Mentors-in-Residence this month were Ernie Stringer and Alfredo Ortiz Aragon, co-authors of a new edition of the text Action Research.
Action Research: Central Ideas
This 11-minute video offers the three most important ideas in action research :
Acting to learn: How action is a powerful way to generate knowledge. Also, taking action is the ultimate purpose of action research.
Learning, to act: How harvesting knowledge and using it to inform our actions can significantly improve the quality of our "doing".
Participation of those who know: How acting to learn, and learning to act are only meaningful if based on the knowledge and experiences the people who are closest to the issues.
Acting to learn and learning to act, when repeated, are what are known as action research cycles. There are of course many more important ideas in AR, but these three provide enough to get most of us going on approaching our work in interesting new ways!
Figure 1: Three central ideas in Action Research
We expand on this in more detail in chapter 1 of the 5th edition of our book, Action Research. You can download chapter 1 here.
More Methodspace posts from this series on Action Research
Using action research to understand Covid-19 experiences, a guest post by Hege Gravdahl Garelius.
The 11 co-authors of “Self-in-Field Action Research in Natural Spaces of Encounter: Inclusion, Learning, and Organizational Change” discuss their research.
Read this interesting post by Tineke Abma, Barbara Groot, Alie Weerman, Frederiek Overbeek, part of the Action Research series for October 2020.
Read this guest post about collaboration and action research by Melissa Parenti.
Learn about action research from Ernie Stringer and Alfredo Ortiz Aragon, co-authors of a new book on this important methodology.
Learn about how action researcher Ros Beadle invited Aboriginal women to tell their own stories.
Find the entire collection of posts from the October 2020 series on action research!
Listen to a podcast interview with Dr. Alfredo Ortiz Aragón.
Watch this discussion of embodied and sentient action research methods with Iñigo Retolaza Eguren.
Action research and evaluation are inter-related topics in this guest post and video from Marina Apgar and Mieke Snijder.
A discussion about engaging participants in action research in a social work context.
See this interview with Ernie Stringer and Geoff Mills to learn how he applies action research in educational contexts.
View this discussion of participatory action research methods with Ernie Stringer and Susan Young.
View a conversation between Antonio Boyd and Dr. Cherese Childers-McKee about inclusion and action research.
Learn about how key action research principles allow for inclusion of marginalized people in this presentation from Alfredo Ortiz Aragon.
View a conversation between Ernie Stringer and long-time collaborator Darryl Kickett.
Learn more about the new edition of Action Research from Ernie Stringer and Alfredo Ortiz Aragon.
In this guest post Catherine Collins describes ways to put action research principles into practice.