This article discusses the everyday politics surrounding research on a controversial government policy. The research in question is the Research, Analysis and Insight into National Standards (RAINS) project on National Standards in New Zealand primary schools being undertaken by the author. This three-year study was funded by the New Zealand primary teachers' union, the NZEI, an organisation opposed to the National Standards policy. The project was quickly attacked by a cabinet minister and the media but there have also been significant accomplishments in carrying out and reporting the research and in relevant activism. As the article discusses the political setbacks and successes while undertaking the research, it reflects on issues such a...
Political science is a discipline which purports to study power as a process, a distinct but insepar...
Government sponsored educational research is increasingly subject to contractual control over the de...
It is with enormous pleasure that I deliver the 24th Herbison Lecture. I thank the NZARE Council for...
This article discusses the everyday politics surrounding research on a controversial government poli...
Hotly contested debates about evidence-based educational research, policy development and practice h...
Researchers have an obligation to reflect on the politics of their research and of whose interests i...
Bulk funding as an education policy was immensely controversial, and served to polarise the New Zeal...
This is the first report of the Research, Analysis and Insight into National Standards (RAINS) proje...
Researchers are guided by their ideological and ethical viewpoints when conducting research. Doing r...
This paper reports on the start of an analysis of recent research work in tertiary education in New ...
In this article we argue that a refined understanding of ‘public’ and ‘public engagement’ can help r...
Calls for educational policy and practice to be evidence-based have become insistent, yet there is o...
Calls for educational policy and practice to be evidence-based have become insistent, yet there is o...
The starting point for this paper is the ongoing debate about the relation between research and poli...
Journals with a primary focus on methods in social research play an important role in debates about ...
Political science is a discipline which purports to study power as a process, a distinct but insepar...
Government sponsored educational research is increasingly subject to contractual control over the de...
It is with enormous pleasure that I deliver the 24th Herbison Lecture. I thank the NZARE Council for...
This article discusses the everyday politics surrounding research on a controversial government poli...
Hotly contested debates about evidence-based educational research, policy development and practice h...
Researchers have an obligation to reflect on the politics of their research and of whose interests i...
Bulk funding as an education policy was immensely controversial, and served to polarise the New Zeal...
This is the first report of the Research, Analysis and Insight into National Standards (RAINS) proje...
Researchers are guided by their ideological and ethical viewpoints when conducting research. Doing r...
This paper reports on the start of an analysis of recent research work in tertiary education in New ...
In this article we argue that a refined understanding of ‘public’ and ‘public engagement’ can help r...
Calls for educational policy and practice to be evidence-based have become insistent, yet there is o...
Calls for educational policy and practice to be evidence-based have become insistent, yet there is o...
The starting point for this paper is the ongoing debate about the relation between research and poli...
Journals with a primary focus on methods in social research play an important role in debates about ...
Political science is a discipline which purports to study power as a process, a distinct but insepar...
Government sponsored educational research is increasingly subject to contractual control over the de...
It is with enormous pleasure that I deliver the 24th Herbison Lecture. I thank the NZARE Council for...