ABSTRACT

The rapid development of video technology in the last decade has changed the ways in which people communicate, how they learn, and how research is done. Video technology offers rich potential in capturing complex social interactions over a prolonged period of time and in supporting teacher professional learning and development.

This book explores the ontological, epistemological, methodological, and ethical challenges associated with the different uses of video in research, ranging from video as a tool for investigating social interactions and for stimulating participants’ reflection, to the use of video for engaging varied communities and social groups in the process of teaching, learning and research. Each chapter presents the authors’ critical reflection on the ways in which video was employed, the research decisions made, the methodological challenges faced, and the consequences for how educational practices were understood. As such, it illustrates a wide range of philosophical and theoretical standpoints with respect to video-based research approaches.

This book will stimulate broad and rich discussion among education researchers who are interested in video research and contributes to: advancing knowledge of the field; developing approaches to dealing with emergent ethical, theoretical, and methodological issues; and generating new protocols and guidelines for conducting video-based research across a variety of disciplinary areas in education.

part I|101 pages

The roles of video in education research

chapter 1|14 pages

The use of video in classroom research

Window, lens, or mirror

chapter 6|19 pages

Critical Videographic Research Methods

Researching teacher’s lives and work post ‘9/11’

part II|106 pages

Video as a tool for capturing and understanding complexity of teaching and learning

chapter 7|17 pages

Video-based research in a laboratory classroom

Connecting learning to classroom interactions

chapter 8|16 pages

Video research

Purposeful selection from rich data sets

chapter 12|15 pages

Re/active documentary

An artefact of dynamic force

part III|66 pages

Video as a tool for reflection on practice in teaching and learning