Doing Fieldwork at Home

The Ethnography of Education in Familiar Contexts

Loukia K Sarroub editor Claire Nicholas editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:24th Mar '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Doing Fieldwork at Home cover

This book engages readers via the international contributions from “home” field sites around the world and international authors. Importantly, the various chapters address a wide spectrum of educational contexts – ranging from higher education, to K-12 public and private schools, to prison schools. The realistic accounts portrayed in each of the chapters address how local collaborations are instantiated through the research process, from access and data collection to the write-up phases. The major themes that emerge across the chapters highlight 1) positionality and negotiation of multiple roles, i.e., researcher, educator, colleague, friend, community member; 2) reconciling multiple, hybrid, and intersectional identities with varying insider/outsider statuses vis-à-vis research participants; 3) resulting power dynamics in connection to relational identities – sometimes conflicting, consolidating, equalizing, and/or elevating; 4) innovative methodological responses to these dilemmas; and 5) integrated research designs and research ethics, offering possibilities for participation and insights on the social impact of research findings. The book’s chapters thus individually and collectively treat and resolve local ways of doing home (field) work and highlight the creation and sharing of knowledge among researchers and research participants.

his timely collection boldly engages new and fluid understandings of being in the “field” in “home” contexts. Drawing from the sustained ethnographic and theoretical work if its contributors, the book offers a critical global perspective on the enduring fieldwork tensions in education between distance and proximity (whether temporal or spatial), the role of teacher and researcher, and the complexities that arise when researchers committed to doing relational work within their own home fieldwork locations – the workplace, the university, the neighborhood, or the school — must document, and, at times, interrupt the very social reproduction processes in which they participate. The authors in this volume inspire ways to renegotiate the meanings of home and fieldwork, but more importantly, they also intervene in the broader disciplinary field by advancing new ways to renegotiate the meaning and purpose of ethnographic inquiry. -- Patricia Baquedano-López, Associate Professor, Graduate School of Education University of California, Berkeley
Doing Fieldwork at Home tackles an enduring question: how does educational ethnography change when it’s done in contexts familiar to the researcher? This brilliant book, edited by veteran ethnographers Claire Nicholas and Loukia Sarroub, examines questions of positionality, intersectionality, epistemology, power dynamics, and ethics in ethnographic research. The chapters illuminate how ‘home’ is negotiated and ‘strange-making’ is sustained over the course of the research project. This provocative book provides key insights regarding the interconnected methodological, ethical, and analytical dilemmas of doing fieldwork at ‘home.’ This provocative book, which provides key insights regarding the interconnected methodological, ethical, and analytical dilemmas of doing fieldwork at ‘home,' will be of great interest to ethnographers, education studies scholars, and students in qualitative research courses. -- Lesley Bartlett, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
It is past time for ethnographers to be recognized for the work they do and the contributions they make “at home.” This collection of chapters by ethnographers of education from around the world brings this subject to the fore, highlighting advantages and dilemmas of fieldwork at home; raising issues of positionality, collaboration, power, and methodology; and, introducing new avenues for ethnographic study and research in education and beyond. -- Margaret Eisenhart, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of Colorado-Boulder
Where we conduct ethnographic fieldwork matters since it sets the template for the context that shapes who ethnographers interact with and what sorts of data one can and cannot access. This book helps frame what is meant by 'local contexts' and reflects on how studying the local as implications for ethnographers' methodological, analytical and ethical practices. A must read for anyone who is doing ethnography in a familiar setting. -- Lisa Russell, University of Huddersfield

ISBN: 9781475857443

Dimensions: 241mm x 160mm x 19mm

Weight: 476g

196 pages