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Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Gardner's Blessing of Influences

Howard Gardner (2006) of the multiple-intelligences fame wrote "I see my research and writing as having four phases. First I studied how minds developed. Then I studied how minds break down. Third, I studied how minds are organized. Now I study how minds change." I suppose after 62 years, one's professional and research interests can be viewed with greater clarity.

See, I'm not a psychologist like Gardner, I'm an instructional-designer-researcher who doesn't seem to have a content background to fall back on. When I was teaching in Singapore, I taught English Language/General Paper/Communication Skills and Physical Education. Soft skills as they would say. Do I possess any solid content area to focus my research on?

Second RAP drafted

I finished a complete draft of my second RAP, but after letting it settle a bit, I started to pick on a few things. Well, it's a narrative research paper. But I do have visual representations of ideas based on my observation and interview data. Is it ok to have some preliminary theoretical framework based on the small sample of my single case study data?

Then I started thinking which journal such a paper might be tailored to fit in. Narrative Inquiry? International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education? Qualitative Inquiry? Looked at those publications and had this 'hmm' moment, :(. I have a LOT of work to do before it gets to a stage resembling THOSE journal articles. First, I need someone to guide me to write in those journalistic style. As Gardner wrote, "Unlike most colleagues I have always written books as well, and now the bulk of my writing is either in book form or in articles intended for a wider audience. Such technical writing as I still do is almost always in collaboration with students, who require training in scientific writing." Hooray for him!

I also thought about which tradition is really suitable for my research interest. I don't know how narrative research about meanings of lived experiences match my topic if I don't want to quantify my narratives. Questions questions.

Free blog background from Aqua Poppy

Just wanted everyone to know that I got my free blog background from Aqua Poppy Designs. Check out the site (button on left sidebar). Thank you Aqua Poppy! There are many options to choose from and it was hard to settle on one.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

AERA 2010

This time, it's Denver, here I come! Air tickets are not booked yet. But I am planning to be there (at AERA's Annual Convention) because I have a poster session to co-present with my peer, ML and I have fun stuff to do as a Junior Rep. I am very excited about the people I'll be meeting up with. My first time too at an AERA conference. I hope to talk to some experts in my research area and attend some mentoring sessions. Just checking out the online program and I am all psyched about the great stuff I'm going to be learning.

One minor setback is I will have to miss a bit of the public events connected with my Imagining America Access project with Profs M, M and R. : ) Although this semester is jam-packed, I'm enjoying all the rich experiences.

The theme for this year's convention is "Understanding Complex Ecologies in a Changing World". It's an appropriate concept to capture the interconnections among learners in multiple settings across time and space in an evolving world system.

This blurb on the conference site (http://aera.net/Default.aspx?id=7588)introduces the theme:

"Opportunities to learn within and across both formal and informal settings occur in the complex ecologies of peoples’ lives, not isolated in a single setting such as a school or family. These complex ecologies include people’s participation within and across multiple settings, from families to peer and intergenerational social networks, to schools and a variety of community organizations; and participation within and across these settings may be either physical or virtual. Our attempts to understand and influence such learning often try to strip away complexity for presumed efficiency.

Opportunities to participate in multiple settings and the norms for participation are influenced by larger cultural, political, and economic forces and institutions. Ubiquitous technologies empower and encourage all forms of communication and movement within and across all kinds of borders; transnational border crossing is increasingly common throughout the world. Different settings demand different norms for participation and, as a consequence, require that we recruit what and how we have learned in other settings of our lives as resources to help us make sense of new tasks and the new settings in which these tasks are carried out. There is also the question of how each new setting is organized to facilitate or constrain our recruitment of what and how we have learned in other settings. It is in this sense that learning entails cultural navigations.

The theme of AERA’s 2010 Annual Meeting...is intended to encourage submissions that address the conceptual, methodological, and practical challenges and opportunities inherent in understanding how and what people learn across time and space. We encourage submissions that move beyond a narrow focus on individual sites or on purely cognitive or psychosocial explanations, or on singular conceptions of identity. Such an ecological focus encourages education researchers to draw on interdisciplinary constructs and theories, complex research designs, and multiple methods of data analysis."

Sounds complex alright!

Friday, March 5, 2010

Beyond cognition

Back to my research focus on motivating creativity. As Amabile (1997, 1998) posited in her Componential Theory of Creativity, abilities and skills alone are insufficient to bring about creativity in a domain unless one is motivated and willing to do so. How can we motivate people to be innovation-oriented? What is it in the environment - including human and non-human resources - that can inspire someone to be creative and willing to work at it? Let me know.

Just finished submitting my AECT 2010 proposal. Yay!