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                                       Details for article 8 of 8 found articles
 
 
  The Myth of Rational Research
 
 
Title: The Myth of Rational Research
Author: Thomas, Gary
Appeared in: British educational research journal
Paging: Volume 24 (1998) nr. 2 pages 141-161
Year: 1998-04
Contents: In its flight from 'positivism' educational inquiry still cleaves to a faith in the ordered and the rational. Educationists continue to believe in an order, accessible via rational inquiry and ordered reflection, governing human affairs and thought. This belief has three unwelcome consequences. First, it promotes the notion that certain rationalistic ingredients are obligatory in research: a technology of inquiry is thus constructed and maintained. Consequently, inquiry (even interpretative inquiry) is formulaic; it follows predictable ruts and leads often to uninteresting findings. Second, a belief in the ordered mind leads to a faith in certain models of mind, and in 'personal theory' which can be developed via particular and orthodox methods of finding out. Third, and partly because of this second belief, it leads to a notion of teaching as an explicitly articulated 'know what' rather than an implicitly understood 'know how' practice—leading, I argue, to a promotion of the notion that 'know how' can be enhanced via the technology of reflection. The result of all this is that education ignores and eschews less structured but arguably more productive methods of inquiry.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 8 of 8 found articles
 
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