Educational Research in Social Settings: Why Perfect Research Is Impossible

Reference & EducationCollege & University

  • Author Kim Writers
  • Published May 28, 2013
  • Word count 919

Introduction

In one of her writings, Griffiths observes that educational research can never be perfectly done. Why she says so can be well understood and even agreed with if one has some knowledge of the field of research, including educational research specifically conducted for furthering social justice. Indeed, Griffiths has been involved for many years in the research for social justice and she feels strongly about social justice as being the ultimate desirable outcome of sociological research. It is difficult not to agree with her views. As a student who has put in several years of schooling and having been involved in a couple of educational research projects while at school, I must agree and support all that she has to say on the subject. This paper relates my own experiences during two research projects and how that experience corroborates the post-modernistic outlook of expert academics like Griffith.

Problems of Research in Social Settings

In order to understand the import of Griffith’s observation, it is necessary to first know about research in social settings, which are ever changing. It is also necessary to mention certain characteristics that generally govern all research studies. Social research is usually concerned with qualitative research although some statistical applications may often be needed for analysis. Any social research involves humans and necessarily depends for success on various factors like social attitudes of researchers and the researched. For example, the commitment of a participant or researcher may present problems during the course of the research. Again, the researcher may feel torn between gaining the trust of the participating subjects and revealing to them only as much as conducive for the research. There is also the question of power and empowerment and how this can influence relationships between researchers and the researched and in turn influence research outcomes. Relationships include those between research sponsors and researcher, writer and readers, etc.

The scope and outcome of a research study also depends on finance and sponsorship. An institutionally sponsored one can be promoted by the large amount of finance available, yet be inhibited in direction and content by the power of the sponsors to exercise control over the entire process. An individual or a group of individuals conducting research on their own are severely limited by low finance and institutional support, although they can be more independent in their research outlook. However, such individual researchers often face problems in accessing critical information resources whereas a sponsored effort could have helped access large institutional databases.

The researcher’s social, cultural, political, racial or ethical bias is another crucial factor that can hamper a research study or even alter its direction. A researcher may be driven by personal gains, monetary or academically, thus circumscribing his broader research vision. Any social research depends upon trust, commitment to the research objective, the interrelationships between the individual and society at large, the need of the individual to maintain privacy, the time that a participant can give for the research, etc. Since all these are unpredictable and beyond the control of any single researcher, any research design is challenging and the entire process complex and often problem-ridden. Griffith rightly observes that research is unpredictable and not at all perfect; rely as it does on humans and social environment, both being imperfect and changeable.

My Own Experiences

It is relevant to mention here some of my own experiences while involved in research at school. In one research, we attempted to record the observations of a select group of students coming from various racial and ethnic origins. Thus, some students were of Latin-American origin, while some were Asian, some Chinese settled in the UK, some whites from the USA and UK, etc. The objective was to know their attitudes towards using English as the medium of instruction in schools in England. The study as simple as it appeared to be was unfortunately struck by various problems. It appeared that many of the students from outside the UK and who were studying in England were biased in favor of their own native languages and were also against the languages of other countries. Extreme nationalistic feelings surfaced in course of several focus groups when the study topic had to be altered suitably in order to proceed with the facilitation at all.

In another research study in which I participated, it was observed that a few participants-some were my friends-were either not fully committed towards the proceedings, or often did not turn up citing lack of time to attend. This particular research had to be abandoned in favor of another that involved same-age students who did not know one another.

Conclusion

Griffith’s observation is borne out by my experiences. Although some basic rules of research had been violated in those studies, no research can prepare for any and every event. Thus, in case of the focus groups, it was found that members often involved in break-away conversations, the number of recruits could have been increased, since several of those invited often did not turn up, and the conversation tended too quickly towards personal issues. Neuman recounts well of the many advantages and limitations of focus groups, including of the "polarization effect" signifying the extreme attitudes after such focus group discussions. Similarly, Dawson points out to how an individual’s views (participating in a focus group) can be contaminated by another (in that group). All this only reinforces Griffith’s statement that research cannot be hoped to be done perfectly and that there is ‘no existence of utopia."

Kim Writers is an expert academic essay writer and editor at one of the top US colleges. For over 10 years she has been assisting students with their research and custom writing and has been an author of several academic research tutorials for students. For more information about essay writing services, visit: http://www.essayscam.org/.

Article source: https://articlebiz.com
This article has been viewed 1,792 times.

Rate article

This article has a 5 rating with 4 votes.

Article comments

rasnajacob
rasnajacob · 7 years ago
Writing associate degree essay means that over finding and recording facts. It means that thinking critically: analysing material and reaching a conclusion. It means that showing that you just perceive the fabric you’ve been learning. Above all, it means that presenting a coherent argument.Thank you so much for sharing this information.

Related articles