Shaping qualitative research: the significance of shape in collaborative inquiry and other circles
Shaping qualitative research: the significance of shape in collaborative inquiry and other circles
This article explores the use of the circle as a shape metaphor in qualitative and education research and particularly in research designs. Circles dominate the shape metaphors found in the literature and the paper argues that this is because circles have key features that align well with designing and conducting qualitative research. Circles represent non-hierarchical dialogic spaces with horizontal interaction. These are often safe spaces for sharing stories, experiences, emotions, information and support, communicating a sense of belonging to a community. The paper examines the structure and intent of sharing circles, talking circles, yarning circles, belonging circles, research circles, diary circles and collaborative inquiry circles in qualitative research, including the influence of concepts from indigenous methods. The authors reflect on their own experiences in using an online diary circle and collaborative inquiry circles and the circular aspects of the research supervision at the heart of their collaboration. The paper concludes that shape matters in conceptualising qualitative research as places of belonging and dialogue and that research training will benefit from understanding how circles suit particular kinds of people and particular kinds of qualitative research endeavour when seeking collaboration and equitable participation.
research design,, collaborative inquiry circles,, sharing circles,, diary methods,, metaphor,, dialogue
Nind, Melanie
b1e294c7-0014-483e-9320-e2a0346dffef
O Dwyer, Sadhbh Dara Maire
b08d787f-0a3d-4b78-a681-d6b1c7cd67d2
Azaola, Marta Cristina
9ac43b18-a969-4877-a1b8-62bb4541da82
Nind, Melanie
b1e294c7-0014-483e-9320-e2a0346dffef
O Dwyer, Sadhbh Dara Maire
b08d787f-0a3d-4b78-a681-d6b1c7cd67d2
Azaola, Marta Cristina
9ac43b18-a969-4877-a1b8-62bb4541da82
Nind, Melanie, O Dwyer, Sadhbh Dara Maire and Azaola, Marta Cristina
(2024)
Shaping qualitative research: the significance of shape in collaborative inquiry and other circles.
International Journal of Research and Method in Education.
(In Press)
Abstract
This article explores the use of the circle as a shape metaphor in qualitative and education research and particularly in research designs. Circles dominate the shape metaphors found in the literature and the paper argues that this is because circles have key features that align well with designing and conducting qualitative research. Circles represent non-hierarchical dialogic spaces with horizontal interaction. These are often safe spaces for sharing stories, experiences, emotions, information and support, communicating a sense of belonging to a community. The paper examines the structure and intent of sharing circles, talking circles, yarning circles, belonging circles, research circles, diary circles and collaborative inquiry circles in qualitative research, including the influence of concepts from indigenous methods. The authors reflect on their own experiences in using an online diary circle and collaborative inquiry circles and the circular aspects of the research supervision at the heart of their collaboration. The paper concludes that shape matters in conceptualising qualitative research as places of belonging and dialogue and that research training will benefit from understanding how circles suit particular kinds of people and particular kinds of qualitative research endeavour when seeking collaboration and equitable participation.
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 April 2024
Keywords:
research design,, collaborative inquiry circles,, sharing circles,, diary methods,, metaphor,, dialogue
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Local EPrints ID: 490049
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490049
ISSN: 1743-727X
PURE UUID: 7ba16819-98d2-4faa-8bcd-e3b2f3c26b50
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Date deposited: 14 May 2024 16:33
Last modified: 05 Jun 2024 01:43
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Author:
Sadhbh Dara Maire O Dwyer
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