Women telling their own stories in action research
This post is part of a Methodspace series about action research featuring contributors to the book Action Research by Ernie Stringer and Alfredo Ortiz Aragón. Use the code MSPACEQ223 for a 20% discount, valid until June 30, 2023.
Ros Beadle is an Adjunct Lecturer at the Centre for Remote Health, Flinders University (in Alice Springs). Despite extensive previous experience working in community development, Ros Beadle found herself out of her comfort zone when she first started to work as a community support worker in a very remote Australian Aboriginal community in 2009. As she indicates in this conversation with Ernie Stringer, co-author of a new edition of the text Action Research, action research processes provided her with the means to assist a group of Aboriginal women to engage in significant activities that greatly enhanced their capacity to make a real difference in their lives. Building on the women’s momentum and enthusiasm for telling stories about their experiences in a range of mediums, the women assisted Ros to find a way for their stories to form the basis for her own dissertation research.
More Methodspace posts from this series about 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.
In this guest post Catherine Collins describes ways to put action research principles into practice.