Navigating Sites for Narrative Inquiry

Narrative inquiry is a methodology that frequently appeals to teachers and teacher educators. However, this appeal and sense of comfort has advantages and disadvantages. Some assume narrative inquiries will be easy to design, live out, and represent in storied formats in journals, dissertations, or...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of teacher education 2007-01, Vol.58 (1), p.21-35
Hauptverfasser: Clandinin, D. Jean, Pushor, Debbie, Orr, Anne Murray
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container_issue 1
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container_title Journal of teacher education
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creator Clandinin, D. Jean
Pushor, Debbie
Orr, Anne Murray
description Narrative inquiry is a methodology that frequently appeals to teachers and teacher educators. However, this appeal and sense of comfort has advantages and disadvantages. Some assume narrative inquiries will be easy to design, live out, and represent in storied formats in journals, dissertations, or books. For the authors, though, narrative inquiry is much more than the telling of stories. There are complexities surrounding all phases of a narrative inquiry and, in this article, the authors pay particular attention to thinking about the design of narrative inquiries that focus on teachers’ and teacher educators’ own practices. They outline three commonplaces and eight design elements for consideration in narrative inquiry. They illustrate these elements using recently completed narrative inquiries. In this way, the authors show the complex dimensions of narrative inquiry, a kind of inquiry that requires particular kinds of wakefulness.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0022487106296218
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subjects Analysis
Definitions
Ethics
Inquiry
Inquiry method
Narrative inquiry
Narratives
Periodicals
Research Methodology
Story Telling
Study and teaching
Teacher centers
Teacher centres
Teacher education
Teacher Educators
Teachers
Teaching Methods
Training
title Navigating Sites for Narrative Inquiry
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