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Facilitating research-informed educational practice for inclusion. Survey findings from 147 teachers and school leaders in England

Facilitating research-informed educational practice for inclusion. Survey findings from 147 teachers and school leaders in England
Facilitating research-informed educational practice for inclusion. Survey findings from 147 teachers and school leaders in England
This paper considers the engagement by teachers and school leaders in England in educational practices that are both ‘research-informed’ and supportive of inclusive education. We do so by seeking to understand the benefits, costs, and signifying factors these educators associate with research-use. In undertaking the study, we first worked to develop and refine a survey instrument (the ‘Research-Use BCS survey’) that could be used to uniquely and simultaneously measure these concepts. Our survey development involved a comprehensive process that comprised: (1) a review of recent literature; (2) item pre-testing; and (3) cognitive interviews. We then administered this questionnaire to a representative sample of English educators. Although response rates were somewhat impacted by the recent COVID-19 pandemic, we achieved a sufficient number of responses (147 in total) to allow us to engage in descriptive analyses, as well as the production of classification trees. Our analysis resulted in several key findings, including that: (1) if respondents see the benefits of research, they are likely to use it (with the converse also true); (2) if educators have the needed support of their colleagues, they are more likely to use research; and (3) perceiving research-use as an activity that successful teachers and schools engage in is also associated with individual-level research use. We conclude the paper by pointing to potential interventions and strategies that might serve (at least, in the English context) to enhance research-use, so increasing the likelihood of the development and use of effective inclusive practices in schools.
Jean Baudrillard, benefits of research, classification tree analysis, costs of research, research-informed practice, research-use, signification of research, teacher research use
2504-284X
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
MacGregor, Stephen
59ed2374-a7c9-4fc9-a1e7-ed9598354e11
Flood, Jane
4e966928-3355-4ef9-a07c-3912714c7762
Malin, Joel
1373e633-807c-4b05-97b4-1ff16e2c3770
Brown, Chris
42bbe788-54bf-4081-8c18-ead8b554f0fd
MacGregor, Stephen
59ed2374-a7c9-4fc9-a1e7-ed9598354e11
Flood, Jane
4e966928-3355-4ef9-a07c-3912714c7762
Malin, Joel
1373e633-807c-4b05-97b4-1ff16e2c3770

Brown, Chris, MacGregor, Stephen, Flood, Jane and Malin, Joel (2022) Facilitating research-informed educational practice for inclusion. Survey findings from 147 teachers and school leaders in England. Frontiers in Education, 7. (doi:10.3389/feduc.2022.890832).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper considers the engagement by teachers and school leaders in England in educational practices that are both ‘research-informed’ and supportive of inclusive education. We do so by seeking to understand the benefits, costs, and signifying factors these educators associate with research-use. In undertaking the study, we first worked to develop and refine a survey instrument (the ‘Research-Use BCS survey’) that could be used to uniquely and simultaneously measure these concepts. Our survey development involved a comprehensive process that comprised: (1) a review of recent literature; (2) item pre-testing; and (3) cognitive interviews. We then administered this questionnaire to a representative sample of English educators. Although response rates were somewhat impacted by the recent COVID-19 pandemic, we achieved a sufficient number of responses (147 in total) to allow us to engage in descriptive analyses, as well as the production of classification trees. Our analysis resulted in several key findings, including that: (1) if respondents see the benefits of research, they are likely to use it (with the converse also true); (2) if educators have the needed support of their colleagues, they are more likely to use research; and (3) perceiving research-use as an activity that successful teachers and schools engage in is also associated with individual-level research use. We conclude the paper by pointing to potential interventions and strategies that might serve (at least, in the English context) to enhance research-use, so increasing the likelihood of the development and use of effective inclusive practices in schools.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 March 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 April 2022
Keywords: Jean Baudrillard, benefits of research, classification tree analysis, costs of research, research-informed practice, research-use, signification of research, teacher research use

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483881
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483881
ISSN: 2504-284X
PURE UUID: 8821205b-2f38-4bf8-bc7a-c6be63eea376
ORCID for Chris Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9759-9624

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Date deposited: 07 Nov 2023 18:03
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: Chris Brown ORCID iD
Author: Stephen MacGregor
Author: Jane Flood
Author: Joel Malin

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