Developing Children as Researchers

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A01=Chae-Young Kim
A01=Kieron Sheehy
A01=Lucinda Kerawalla
Action research
Activity Sheet
Adult Facilitator
Answer Choice
Author_Chae-Young Kim
Author_Kieron Sheehy
Author_Lucinda Kerawalla
Category=JNLB
Category=JNU
Category=YPJJ3
Chae-Young Kim
Child's Tv Viewing
Children as researchers
Children's Research
Choosing Research Participants
Cindy Kerawalla
classroom research facilitation
Closed Questions
Conduct Social Research
Data Collection Tools
Eat School Dinners
educational data analysis
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethical inquiry in schools
inclusive teaching strategies
Inquiry Based Learning
Kieron Sheehy
Learn Research Skills
Lucinda Kerawalla
Natural Science Researchers
participatory research methods
PowerPoint Presentation Slides
Practitioner research
Pupil research
pupil voice empowerment
Research Folders
Research Participants
Sample Consent Form
School Toilets
Semi-structured Interview Schedule
Session Plans
Social research
Social Research Process
Social Research Topic
Stratified Random Sampling
Structured Observation Schedule
supporting young researchers in education
Teacher research

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138669260
  • Weight: 306g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Mar 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Encouraging young children to create and carry out their own social research projects can have significant social and educational benefits. In addition, their research may help them to influence local and national policies and practices on issues that matter to them. To support this, Developing Children as Researchers acts as a practical guide to give teachers – and other adults who work with children – a set of structured, easy-to-follow session plans that will help children to become researchers in their own right.

Comprising of ten session plans that have already been tried and tested in schools, this guide will assist you in supporting child researchers while helping you to develop the techniques for teaching research skills effectively. The session plans also ensure that children’s views are heard and reflected by encouraging their active curiosity and investigation of issues that they may be concerned about. Forming a step-by-step guide, the ten sessions cover themes such as:

  • starting the research process and identifying a research topic;
  • the three key principles of research: be sceptical, systematic and ethical;
  • choosing research participants and drawing up a research plan;
  • the range of data collection and analysis methods;
  • reporting the results of, and reflecting upon, a research project.

Children’s research has often depended upon the support of academic researchers to provide resources and training. By making the research training and facilitation process more widely accessible, this guide will help remove the psychological and practical hurdles that teachers and others who regularly work with children might feel about helping children’s research themselves.

Chae-Young Kim is an associate researcher at the Children’s Research Centre, the Open University, UK. She has previously worked for UNICEF in South Korea.

Kieron Sheehy researches inclusive education and innovation pedagogies. He is an active member of the Open University’s Children’s Research Centre.

Lucinda Kerawalla is a former director of the Open University's Children’s Research Centre. She also researches the technological support of classroom dialogues and mobile learning.

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