This article shares my experience as a doctoral student researching within the domain of art and design education. This is a professional doctorate bringing together my experience as an educator and that of researcher where boundaries between education and social science research disciplines cross. My research paradigm is situated within critical theory. It is an interpretive hermeneutic study where I am cast as a participant ethnographer. At the time of writing I wanted to make known the issues and tensions that I encountered with research protocols, such as permissions mechanisms and ethical gatekeepers. These tensions I still perceive as confining, but more significantly, I realise that knowing and understanding research methodology is k...
In recent years, research reports and articles highlight the benefits of participatory and creative ...
Much of the discussion and debate about Practice-Led Research (PLR) in the arts and creative industr...
How do we as ethnographic researchers form ethical con-nections with our research participants? Here...
The author will propose that the use of performative social science is a means to deliberately inter...
This thesis is based on the assumption that there are significant relationships between my art makin...
Drawing on experiences of research, and teaching research, and other current scholarship within loca...
Reflexivity is one of the key aspects of learning and doing qualitative research; however, it is dif...
This article is within the context of a prose writer immersed in creative practice. It takes into ac...
This ‘writing-story’ explores how reflexive and embedded methodologies may be conducive to theadopti...
This ‘writing-story’ explores how reflexive and embedded methodologies may be conducive to the adopt...
Embodied and creative research methods provoke honesty, emotion, and vulnerability in participants, ...
In 2002 I completed my doctoral thesis Daughters of Persephone: legacies of maternal 'madness' (Cath...
Conceived as a visual narrative inquiry (Bach, 2007), collaborative arts-based self-study researcher...
It has always been desired to describe and understand the reality of human life and its various elem...
In this inquiry, I turned to the arts to foster Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) students’ recogniti...
In recent years, research reports and articles highlight the benefits of participatory and creative ...
Much of the discussion and debate about Practice-Led Research (PLR) in the arts and creative industr...
How do we as ethnographic researchers form ethical con-nections with our research participants? Here...
The author will propose that the use of performative social science is a means to deliberately inter...
This thesis is based on the assumption that there are significant relationships between my art makin...
Drawing on experiences of research, and teaching research, and other current scholarship within loca...
Reflexivity is one of the key aspects of learning and doing qualitative research; however, it is dif...
This article is within the context of a prose writer immersed in creative practice. It takes into ac...
This ‘writing-story’ explores how reflexive and embedded methodologies may be conducive to theadopti...
This ‘writing-story’ explores how reflexive and embedded methodologies may be conducive to the adopt...
Embodied and creative research methods provoke honesty, emotion, and vulnerability in participants, ...
In 2002 I completed my doctoral thesis Daughters of Persephone: legacies of maternal 'madness' (Cath...
Conceived as a visual narrative inquiry (Bach, 2007), collaborative arts-based self-study researcher...
It has always been desired to describe and understand the reality of human life and its various elem...
In this inquiry, I turned to the arts to foster Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) students’ recogniti...
In recent years, research reports and articles highlight the benefits of participatory and creative ...
Much of the discussion and debate about Practice-Led Research (PLR) in the arts and creative industr...
How do we as ethnographic researchers form ethical con-nections with our research participants? Here...