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A01=Deana Lee Philb Henry
A01=Ernest T. Stringer
A01=Lois McFayden Christensen
A01=Mary Frances Agnello
A01=Sheila Conant Baldwin
Author_Deana Lee Philb Henry
Author_Ernest T. Stringer
Author_Lois McFayden Christensen
Author_Mary Frances Agnello
Author_Sheila Conant Baldwin
Category=JHM
Category=JMH
Category=JNA
class
Class Members
classroom observation methods
Collaborative Ethnographic Inquiry
Collaborative Ethnographies
Community Based Research
Community Based Research Processes
Digital Education
distance
Distance Education
Distance Learning Networks
Dixie Chicken
Doctoral Candidate
education
educational ethnography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnography Class
experienced
Face To Face
graduate
group dynamics research
Knowledge Acquisition
members
Network Managers
Network Personnel
Part-time Doctoral Student
Positive Interpersonal Interaction
Postmodern Social Theory
qualitative
qualitative data interpretation
reflective practice
research
River Tree
Skills Development Process
South Central LA
stringer's
Stringer's Class
Student Ethnographers
student researcher collaboration
students
Teaching Community Based
university classroom narrative study
View Point

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805822908
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 1997
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Co-written by a professor and 10 students, this book explores their attempts to come to grips with fundamental issues related to writing narrative accounts purporting to represent aspects of people's lives. The fundamental project, around which their explorations in writing textual accounts turned, derived from the editor's initial ethnographic question: "Tell me about the [previous] class we did together?" This proved to be a particularly rich exercise, bringing into the arena all of the problems related to choice of data, analysis of data, the structure of the account, the stance of the author, tense, and case, the adequacy of the account, and more.

As participants shared versions of their accounts and struggled to analyze the wealth of data they had accumulated in the previous classes -- the products of in-class practice of observation and interview -- they became aware of the ephemeral nature of narrative accounts. Reality, as written in textual form, cannot capture the immense depth, breadth, and complexity of an actual lived experience and can only be an incomplete representation that derives from the interpretive imagination of the author.

The final chapter results from a number of discussions during which each contributing author briefly revisited the text and -- through dialogue with others and/or the editor -- identified the elements that would provide an overall framework that represents "the big message" of the book. In this way, the contributors attempted to provide a conceptual context that would indicate ways in which their private experiences could be seen to be relevant to the broader public arenas in which education and research is engaged. In its entirety, the book presents an interpretive study of teaching and learning. It provides a multi-voiced account that reveals how problematic, turning-point experiences in a university class are perceived, organized, constructed, and given meaning by a group of interacting individuals.

Stringer, Ernest T.; Agnello, Mary Frances; Baldwin, Sheila Conant; Christensen, Lois McFayden; Henry, Deana Lee Philb

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