Top-Down and Outside-In: Breaking Boundaries between Research, Theory and Practice in Education

Authors

  • Daniel Gregson University of Sunderland
  • Maggie Gregson University of Sunderland
  • Trish Spedding University of Sunderland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jmpp.v20i3.2229

Keywords:

Management, Management Policy, Practice-focused Research, Further Adult and Vocational Education, Practitioner-research, Educational Evaluation and Improvement, Stories, England, Education

Abstract

This article challenges divisions which have been set up between practice, research and theory in relation to the discipline of Education. It questions the epistemic positions upon which positivist metanarratives underpinning these divisions are founded. These include the separation of practice from research and theory and the creation of the notion of a vocational and academic divide. We provide insights into how a University-supported, practitioner-research programme (PRP), which draws upon Dewey’s pragmatic epistemology, is impacting upon the improvement of educational practice, processes of educational inquiry and the development of theory in the Further Adult and Vocational Education (FAVE) sector in England.

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Published

2019-09-10

How to Cite

Gregson, D., Gregson, M., & Spedding, T. (2019). Top-Down and Outside-In: Breaking Boundaries between Research, Theory and Practice in Education. Journal of Management Policy and Practice, 20(3). https://doi.org/10.33423/jmpp.v20i3.2229

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Section

Articles