1,720,973 research outputs found
Gatekeeping of researcher positionality: should this be the norm in research with/on racially minoritised participants?
In 2020, Dr Addy Adeleine and nine other Black academics, researchers, community representatives and professionals involved in research wrote an open letter to UKRI to highlight the inequalities in the award of £4.3 million to explore Covid-19 and its disproportionate impact on Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic communities. They noted that none of the funding was awarded to Black academic leads but that one member of the awards assessment panel was co-investigator on three of the six successfully awarded studies. They raised in their letter the apparent lack of critical reflection on the inherent systems, processes and power imbalances and questioned the balance of panelists who have specific specialism and training in race, ethnicity and inequality as an independent field of inquiry. They further noted concerns presented by Black individuals, many of whom have repeatedly expressed a desire to challenge and study the impact of systemic and structural racism but are invisible when appropriate research funding is awarded. In this situation, questions arise about who was gatekeeping the qualifications, backgrounds and particularly the positionality of the academic leads awarded this funding. Why did the awarding panel neglect to consider that “members of affected communities should be leaders in the response and not just be supportive voices within the research framework”? What made the successfully awarded academic leads most suited to explore the experiences of racially minoritised communities when Black academic leads were bypassed?
Gatekeeping in social science research is often associated with access to participants, particularly vulnerable, marginalised or minoritised communities, for data collection purposes (Aaltonen and Kivijärvi, 2019; Emmel et al, 2007; Singh and Wassenaar, 2016). However, this paper raises the question of whether there should also be gatekeepers from conception to dissemination that ensure that researchers consider and articulate the researcher/researched power dynamics and ‘who they are’ in the research process involving these communities, particularly when there is not a match between the researcher and researched. The ethical approval process will generally require researchers to consider power imbalances and whilst some ethnographic researchers explicitly express their positionality in the dissemination of their research, this is not consistent and the depth of reflexivity varies. More problematic is the broader issue of who is being afforded the opportunities to conducted funded research with minoritised communities without gatekeeping whether they are justifying ‘who they are’ and what makes them the most appropriate researchers to conduct this research, as highlighted by the open letter to UKRI.
In research that specifically involves racially minoritised communities, locating the researcher in areas related to social and political contexts of the research and the researched group, including the impact of ‘race’ and ethnic differences or similarities, and researcher ontological and epistemological beliefs which influence their research are particularly pertinent. Researcher positionality “reflects the position that the researcher has chosen to adopt within a given research study” (Savin-Baden and Major, 2013, p. 71), influencing how research is conducted, its outcomes and results. Holmes (2020) notes that some aspects of positionality are considered fixed, such as social identities (gender, ‘race’/ethnicity, skin-colour, nationality) whilst other aspects are more fluid, subjective and contextual, such as political views and personal life experiences. Fletcher (2010) notes that the researcher positionality, and specifically researcher biographies related to ‘race’ and/or ethnicity, problematises fieldwork and permeates all stages of the research – from “the questions they ask, to those that are ignored, from problem mutilation to analysis, representation and writing” (2010, p. 2). Positionality is informed by reflexivity. Reflexivity is the concept that researchers “should acknowledge and disclose their selves in research, seeking to understand their part in it, or influence on it” (Cohen et al, 2011). Although much has been written about researcher positionality (Manohar et al, 2017; Milner, 2007, as examples), articulation of a researcher’s position relies on the researcher’s willingness to declare their ontological and epistemological standpoints in relation to the researched group, the importance researchers place on discussing this concept, the openness to be critiqued on researcher/researched differences and power structures which are presented or omitted in research outputs and who, if anyone, is asking them ‘who they are’ in relation to their researched community. Although positionality statements are increasingly being included in outputs, not all researchers conducting studies with racially minoritised groups explicitly acknowledge their positionality. Should this be a choice or an expected norm? Who could and should hold researchers accountable for acknowledging and disclosing their selves if the researcher themselves do not?
I am a racially minoritised Early Career Researcher (ECR) but I was not ‘race’ matched to the Black women participants in my own research project. During the research process and in disseminating my work, I experienced multiple forms of checks and balances through gatekeepers who forced me to robustly articulate my positionality and who I am in the research process, making the researcher biography inescapable. Was this to authenticate my suitability to carry out research with Black communities in a way that the example of the UKRI failed to do? This paper presents an autoethnographic perspective of the experiences of being asked four specific questions by a range of stakeholders through the research activity and publication process, acting as gatekeepers about my positionality. I then raise the question of whether the practice of gatekeeping researcher positionality should be embedded in the research process with racially minoritised participants, from conception to dissemination, and who or what processes could potentially act as these gatekeepers.
References:
Aaltonen, S. and Kivijärvi, A. (2019) Disrupting professional practices with research-driven intervention. Researcher-gatekeeper negotiations in the context of targeted youth services, Qualitative Social Work, 18(4), pp. 621-637. DOI: 10.1177/1473325018757080.
Cohan, L., Manion, L. and Morrison, K. R. B. (2011) Research Methods in Education, London: Routledge.
Emmel, N., Hughes, K. and Greenhalgh (2007) Accessing socially excluded people- Trust and the gatekeeper in the researcher-participant relationship, Sociological research online, 12(2) pp. 43-55. DOI: 10.5253/sro.1512.
Fletcher, T. (2010) “Being inside and outside the field”. An exploration of identity, positionality and reflexivity in inter-racial research, Leisure Identities and Authenticity (LSA Publication), Vol. 107, pp. 1-20.
Holmes, A. G. D. (2020) Researcher Positionality – A Consideration of Its Influence and Place in Qualitative Research – A new Researcher Guide, International Journal of Education, 8(4), pp. 1-10. DOI: 10.34293/education.v8i4.3232.
Manohar, N., Liamputtong, P., Bhole, S. and Arora, A. (2017) Researcher Positionality in Cross-Cultural and Sensitive Research, Handbook of Research Methods in Health Social Sciences, pp. 1-15. DOI: 10.1007/978-981-10-2779-6_35-1.
Milner, H. R. (2007) Race, Culture, and Researcher Positionality: Working Through Dangers Seen, Unseen, and Unforseen, Educational Researcher, 36(7), pp. 388-400, DOI: 10.3102/0013189X07309471.
Savin-Baden, M. and Major, C. H. (2013) Qualitative Research: The Essential Guide to Theory and Practice, London: Routledge.
Singh, S. and Wassenaar, D. R. (2016) Contextualising the role of the gatekeeper in social science research, South African Journal of Bioethics and Law, 9(1), pp. 42-46. DOI: 10.7196/SAJBL.465
Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis
The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation
counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings
are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that
only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into
account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed
Variations on the Author
“Variations on the Author” discusses two of Eduardo Coutinho’s recent films (Um Dia na Vida, from 2010, and Últimas Conversas, posthumously released in 2015) and their contribution to the general question of documentary authorship. The director’s filmography is characterized by a consistent yet self-effacing form of authorial self-inscription: Coutinho often features as an interviewer that rather than express opinions propels discourses; an interviewer that is good at listening. This mode of self-inscription characterizes him as an author who is not expressive but who is nonetheless markedly present on the screen. In Um Dia na Vida, however, Coutinho is completely absent form the image, while Últimas Conversas, on the contrary, includes a confessional prologue that moves the director from the margins to the center of his films. This article examines the ways in which these works stand out in the filmography of a director who offers new insights into the notion of cinematic authorship
The persistence and impact of appropriating controlling images to Black female teachers in schools in England
Whilst there are a number of studies that examine the experiences of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic school leaders in England, less is known specifically about the gendered and racial intersectional experiences of Black female teachers as they navigate white-dominated educational workspaces. This study illuminates the
experiences of ten Black female teachers at different stages of their careers through the lens of Crenshaw’s (1991) representational intersectionality (one of three dimensions of her intersectional analytical framework) to understand how “white gaze” (Good, 2000:105), where white perceptions persistently stereotype Black
women through controlling images (Collins, 2000) to objectify and dehumanise them, positions Black female teachers in racialised school spaces. Using narrative inquiry, a semi-structured interview approach was used to elicit accounts from the participants about their experiences of the role of ‘race’ and racism and the impact of
whiteness through white gaze in a range of state-funded schools across England.
Thematic analysis (Braun and Clarke, 2012) was undertaken deductively to draw out gendered and racial intersectional experiences of stereotyping and negative representation of Black female teachers to accumulate knowledge from the richness
of individual narratives. Findings show that seven out of the ten participants had experienced explicit stereotyping of their identities against four specific controlling images of ‘Mammy’, ‘Mule’, ‘Crazy Black Bitch’ (Reynolds-Dobbs et al., 2008:130) and ‘Jezebel’. All participants spoke of issues of under-representation in their school
environments and intersectional stereotyping of their abilities, which acted as barriers to their career progression at all levels and resulted in being allocated specific roles and responsibilities, such as managing behaviour, that are not always valued when applying for promotional positions. Despite demonstrating resistance
and resilience, these experiences also potentially take an emotion toll that affects their health and wellbeing. This study provides a rationale for school leaders to drive for inclusive cultural change.
References:
Braun, V. and Clarke, V. (2012) Thematic Analysis, in: Cooper H., Camic, P. Sher, K., Panter, A.T., Long, D and Rindskopf, D. (eds.) APA Handbook of Research Methods in Psychology. Vol. 2 Research Designs: Quantitative, qualitative, neuropsychological, and biological. Washington D.C.: American Psychological Association, pp. 57-71.
Collins, P.H. (2000) Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, consciousness, and the politics of empowerment. London: Routledge.
Crenshaw, K. (1991). Mapping the margins: Intersectionality, identity politics, and violence against women of color. Stanford Law Review, 43(6), 1241–1299. https://doi.org/10.2307/1229039
Good, R. (2000) Chapter Six - The Blues: Breaking the Psychological Chains of Controlling Images, Counterpoints, Vol 73 (Dismantling White Privilege: Pedagogy, Politics and Whiteness), pp. 103-126. Available from:https://www.jstor.org/stable/42976124.
Reynolds-Dobbs, W., Thomas, K. M. and Harrison, M. S. (2008) From Mammy to Superwoman: Images That Hinder Black Women’s Career Development, Journal of Career Development, 35(2), pp. 129-150. DOI: 10.1177/089484530832564
Racialised researcher reflexivity in research involving Black female teachers: “Why are you researching us?”
No Abstract Available
Challenging and reconstructing controlling images of Black women teachers in school workforces: counter-narratives of agency, commitment, and resistance through consciousness of Black feminist thought
Educational research examining the lived experiences and the value of Black women teachers within the teaching workforce in England has remained under-explored. Tereshchenko et al. (2020) acknowledges that “research has not attended to the impact of nuanced inequalities that matter in the professional lives of teachers from different ethnic subgroups” (2020, p. 22). Further, Bradbury et al. (2022) state “there is a lack of research which examines the experiences of women of colour in teaching” (2022, p. 4). The ways in which Black women teachers in England experience their school workplaces as racialised spaces tend to be embedded and essentialised within broader conversations about a much wider aggregated demographic of ‘minority teachers’ or ‘BAME (Black Asian and Minority Ethnic) teachers’ and is often highlighting their oppression. Addressing the research vacuum specifically involving Black women teachers, beyond the leadership lens, this paper provides a platform for 10 participants at various stages of their careers to voice their racialised and gendered intersectional experiences of working in English schools. Moreover, rather than contributing to existing discourses on oppression and subjugation, its focus turns to positive counter-narratives of Black women teachers and the benefits of their presence in school spaces. It utilises the little used consciousness of Black feminist thought framework (Collins, 2000) to create counter-narratives of success, activism, and navigational capital (Yosso, 2005) to challenge dominant normative stereotyped views of Black women at work, which is rarely found in literature. This paper, therefore, adds to the discourse of Black feminist literature and provides an England-wide positive perspective of Black women teachers, which is scarce. To answer the research question, ‘How do Black women teachers successfully navigate and operate in white-dominated educational workspaces?’, this paper presents the outcomes of interviews with 10 Black women teachers to understand how they challenge normative assumptions of stereotypes or controlling images (Collins, 2000) and oppression to form professional identities grounded in agency, resistance, and commitment to enhancing social justice within their school workplaces. Counter-narratives were produced by examining their personal stories through the four lenses of consciousness of Black feminist thought (Collins, 2000), as a mechanism to challenge and reconstruct prevailing stereotypes placed on Black womanhood. Through the four lenses of self-definition, self-valuation, self-reliance, and self-knowledge, thematic analysis (Braun and Clarke, 2012) illuminated stories which revealed how Black women teachers engaged in activities of personal empowerment, despite facing racialised oppression and appropriated stereotyping within their schools. Inductively emerged themes illustrate examples of research participants championing their own skills, qualifications and abilities, their commitment to young people’s education and the teaching profession, utilising their agency for positive change, and resisting the practices of normative group members which maintain Black women teachers’ subordination. Black feminist research recognises the importance of enabling participants to share their stories to create counter-narratives. Hence, narrative inquiry methodology was utilised, which centralised the lived experiences of those who chose to participate in this research. Narrative inquiry allows storied lives, which frame lived experiences, to act as windows to comprehend individual’s social realities (O’Toole, 2018). Recruited through mutually known contacts who acted as trusted gatekeepers, the participants met the criteria of defining as ‘Black or Black British’, ‘female’, ‘qualified as a teacher’ and ‘working in a predominantly white school staff demographic’. Personal stories were collected through unstructured interviews to provide participants freedom to narrate their experiences how they wished to. Further, Osler (1997) notes, interviews enabling Black women to share their personal stories can be painful as they recall incidents of perceived oppression. Therefore, participants’ vulnerabilities were considered in the university's ethical approval process to mitigate any emotional harm and possible adverse effects of researcher/researched power dynamics. Each interview was audio recorded and transcribed creating a rich and powerful dataset. To build trusting relationships, researcher positionality was also considered in depth, with assumed insider/outsider researcher positions interrogated, particularly as the researcher is not ‘race’ matched (Vass, 2017). As Black women teachers can contribute to the success of underrepresented learner groups, there are significant institutional implications and benefits to increasing their representation at all levels and recognising their value as staff members beyond stereotyped roles supporting behaviour and Black History Month (Haque and Elliot, 2017). Recruitment and retention could potentially improve with narratives which demonstrate how Black women teachers can thrive and be agents of change for social justice. Reverse mentoring schemes can develop school leaders’ racial literacy to drive for structural and cultural changes to create more inclusive workplaces which acknowledge the value of Black women teachers
Enhancing racial and ethnic representation in performing arts curricula
How do we tackle the lack of ethnic and racial diversity and representation in university performing arts programmes? Ethnic and racial underrepresentation remains an issue in disciplines like music, drama and dance, not helped by Eurocentric curricula, lack of diversity of discipline staff and continued uneven attainment and retention (Sharma et al., 2019), with implications for attracting diverse groups into an industry which does not fully represent them (Daly, 2022). Our university’s Inclusive Curriculum Framework, created and piloted in 2022/23, became the required tool to identify necessary changes to curriculum design, delivery and assessment in the School of Acting. This project looked to evaluate the effectiveness of implementing the Inclusive Curriculum Framework, in part designed to enhance racial and ethnic representation across curricula. Adopting the Critical Race Theory (CRT) tenet of centralising voices of people of colour, narrative inquiry was utilised to interview fifteen racially minoritised final year undergraduate and postgraduate racially minoritised students to understand ethnic and racial curricula omissions through their training experiences. Findings illuminated learning experiences that lacked racial authenticity, perceived disadvantage in casting decisions and experiences of stereotyping and essentialising. Findings also highlighted the different challenges faced by ‘home’ students and ‘international’ students. However, their experiences could improve with more external diverse creatives contributing to their learning and developing staff’s racial awareness. Implementing the framework enabled the School of Acting’s staff to identify meaningful actions towards delivering inclusive and anti-racist pedagogies, practices and programmes. Areas identified as key for development include (but not limited to) replicating and implementing the methodology of this research project as standard in student voice capture, specific modifications to curriculum design to ensure diverse acting and performance teaching practices for authentic learning experiences, creating a bank of diverse creatives as contacts and community of practice to be invited in to enhance representation and authenticity of training and creating opportunities for staff to complete or refresh training to enhance their racial awareness. The Inclusive Curriculum Framework successfully provided the mechanism for sustainable and authentic changes, by centralising racially minoritised students’ voices as the key driver.
Daly, D. (2022). Actions speak louder than words. An investigation around the promises and the reality of representation in actor training. Theatre, Dance and Performance Training. https://doi.org/10.1080/19443927.2022.2078873
Sharma, S., Catalano, E., Seetzen, H., Julia Minors, H., & Collins-Mayo, S. (2019). Taking Race Live: Exploring experiences of race through interdisciplinary collaboration in higher education. London Review of Education, 17(2)
Black women educators’ stories of intersectional invisibility: experiences of hindered careers and workplace psychological harm in school environments
Current research that specifically examines the racialised experiences of Black women school educators in England at different stages of their careers is scarce, creating a vacuum of understanding that can challenge barriers to their recruitment and retention. This article focusses on how race and gender identities mutually and simultaneously hinder and harm Black women as education professionals and sustain their inferiority in the eyes of whiteness through intersectional invisibility. Findings are drawn from personal stories of four Black women educators, shared through narrative inquiry methodology, to illuminate ways in which androcentric and ethnocentric prototypical social group members maintain dominant power structures and reinforce the subordination of Black women educators as non-prototypical to manifest as experiences of invisibility and harm. Individual stories illustrate experiences of the invisible/hyper-visible dichotomy impeding career progression, of undertaking invisible work, of assumptions about their legitimacy in school spaces and of wellbeing concerns. From the standpoint of intersectionality’s ability to create critical citizenry, this article raises awareness of the need for action by senior leaders in English schools and beyond, to challenge and eliminate the intersectional invisibility experienced by their Black women staff. Conclusions signpost to actions that can shape localised policy and practices to improve Black women educators’ experiences. As Black women educators contribute to the success of underrepresented learner groups, there are significant institutional benefits to reducing Black women educator attrition, increasing representation at all levels and improving their wellbeing
Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis
We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis
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