In this article I describe how a multiple perspectives framework drawn from the field of social work informed my analysis of interview data obtained from Australian preservice teachers who had gone on an international study trip. One incident recounted differently by three separate interviewees meant that the sometimes-similar and sometimescontradictory ‘tellings’ provided multiple perspectives of a particular incident in relation to one case study participant. These perspectives made possible a variety of readings of the incident and also facilitated greater insight into the nature of the relationships between the participants. I suggest that multiple perspectives research, with its emphasis on relationships, could be useful to education r...
The use of conversational interviews within a multiple-case framework (after Rosenwald, 1988) is des...
Interviews, in one form or another, have long been used by researchers interested in understanding p...
In the current debate about evidence based education comparisons between countries are in focus. Lea...
In this article I describe how a multiple perspectives framework drawn from the field of social work...
The purpose of this study was to investigate how experienced teachers infuse multiple perspectives i...
The use of interviews from related individuals has become increasingly common in social research. Th...
Explicating interview approaches is significant for education research in understanding how the nuan...
Multiple perspective interviews (MPIs) involve interviewing members of a social group separately and...
In this article, we address data interrelations that social researchers face when workingwith qualit...
The research question for this project is what are the tools and strategies teachers are using to pr...
It is not uncommon to explore the views of parents and children in qualitative research with familie...
It is not uncommon to explore the views of parents and children in qualitative research with familie...
Collecting multiple perspectives data (e.g. from related individuals) in a qualitative longitudinal ...
This article will address the issue of using understandings of psychodynamic interrelations as a mea...
The use of conversational interviews within a multiple-case framework (after Rosenwald, 1988) is des...
Interviews, in one form or another, have long been used by researchers interested in understanding p...
In the current debate about evidence based education comparisons between countries are in focus. Lea...
In this article I describe how a multiple perspectives framework drawn from the field of social work...
The purpose of this study was to investigate how experienced teachers infuse multiple perspectives i...
The use of interviews from related individuals has become increasingly common in social research. Th...
Explicating interview approaches is significant for education research in understanding how the nuan...
Multiple perspective interviews (MPIs) involve interviewing members of a social group separately and...
In this article, we address data interrelations that social researchers face when workingwith qualit...
The research question for this project is what are the tools and strategies teachers are using to pr...
It is not uncommon to explore the views of parents and children in qualitative research with familie...
It is not uncommon to explore the views of parents and children in qualitative research with familie...
Collecting multiple perspectives data (e.g. from related individuals) in a qualitative longitudinal ...
This article will address the issue of using understandings of psychodynamic interrelations as a mea...
The use of conversational interviews within a multiple-case framework (after Rosenwald, 1988) is des...
Interviews, in one form or another, have long been used by researchers interested in understanding p...
In the current debate about evidence based education comparisons between countries are in focus. Lea...