Background: Approaches to conducting research with children afford them varying degrees of participatory power. Despite children’s varying roles within research, more needs to be understood about the influences of unintentional power plays and, in particular, interactions between participant and non-participants on children’s participation in in situ research. Purpose: This paper considers the methodological and practical dimensions of research data collection in situ, and the effect of adult–child power relations within child-centred research. Method: Participants were children involved in a wider research project across five Australian primary schools that explored how 8 to 12-year-old children conceptualised and defined the notion of wel...
This paper draws on an international literature to consider ways in which children work as researche...
This paper draws on a Participatory Action Research (PAR) project carried out in the secondary schoo...
Children's research capacities have become increasingly recognised by adults, yet children remain ex...
Background: Approaches to conducting research with children afford them varying degrees of participa...
In recent years, there has been an increasing focus among childhood researchers on the concept of ch...
Engaging with children as research informants and supporting their participation in research is incr...
© 2020 Katitza Andrea Marinkovic ChavezParticipatory research with children aims to actively collabo...
Primary school children participating as researchers has become a moral obligation to meet the goal ...
AIM: This paper seeks to add to the debate regarding children as researchers by exploring the ...
In this article, we examine methodological issues qualitative researchers encounter when they engage...
This chapter reviews how recent scholarship examining the nature of childhood can enable insight int...
Engaging with children as research informants and supporting their participation in research is incr...
Research with children is viewed often as, potentially, different from research with adults, mainly,...
The focus of this chapter is on research with younger children, and on what Corsaro (2005) describes...
This paper explores the concept of children as researchers, positioning this from a rights perspecti...
This paper draws on an international literature to consider ways in which children work as researche...
This paper draws on a Participatory Action Research (PAR) project carried out in the secondary schoo...
Children's research capacities have become increasingly recognised by adults, yet children remain ex...
Background: Approaches to conducting research with children afford them varying degrees of participa...
In recent years, there has been an increasing focus among childhood researchers on the concept of ch...
Engaging with children as research informants and supporting their participation in research is incr...
© 2020 Katitza Andrea Marinkovic ChavezParticipatory research with children aims to actively collabo...
Primary school children participating as researchers has become a moral obligation to meet the goal ...
AIM: This paper seeks to add to the debate regarding children as researchers by exploring the ...
In this article, we examine methodological issues qualitative researchers encounter when they engage...
This chapter reviews how recent scholarship examining the nature of childhood can enable insight int...
Engaging with children as research informants and supporting their participation in research is incr...
Research with children is viewed often as, potentially, different from research with adults, mainly,...
The focus of this chapter is on research with younger children, and on what Corsaro (2005) describes...
This paper explores the concept of children as researchers, positioning this from a rights perspecti...
This paper draws on an international literature to consider ways in which children work as researche...
This paper draws on a Participatory Action Research (PAR) project carried out in the secondary schoo...
Children's research capacities have become increasingly recognised by adults, yet children remain ex...