I am interested to do research on schooling system and its role in reproduction of race and gender inequality. Overall, this research attempt to analyse the current school curriculum, teaching methodologies and student perceptions on schooling. I have tentatively planing to do semi-structure interviews, focus group discussion, and field notes.I want to visit at least 2 schools from two different regions and 14 children ( girls age of 12-16) from each school. ( 7 children from school and 7 from school drop out children).
Similarly, I like to do focus group discussion with same children parents ( separately) and schools teacher separately).
Do you have any suggestion that I might do to collect the empirical data?
Thanks
Hi explorer1. Congratulations on choosing this vitally important topic. There is sooooo much sexism in education these days that the very thought of it can make me physically ill for days on end. If you are looking for advice on research methodology and tools can I suggest IPA analysis with NVivo software.
I think that firstly you have to see where you will find participants. I mean, it's obviously OK with children who are in schools, but what about the never-schooled ones?
Then, if I were you I would look at other studies on similar subjects and see their methodology. I know there are plenty of studies from alla around the world, so, it won't be that difficult.
After that, you will form your own research methodology.
I don't think that anybody can advise you to choose this or that methodology. After all, it is your research and you are the only one who knows exactly what you want to study
I come from the science, and I think that your sample is too small. This limits the generalisability of your findings.
Consult with a statistician early when planning out the fieldwork. In order to control for other factors, you need more schools ( level2 units), which might be more important than number of students (level 1 units).
Good luck
Hi explorer1,
I agree with enmaki. I would read lots of qualitative studies which have focussed on issues of race, gender and education. I would also do a pilot study and spend some time analysing the pilot data and reflecting on whether my interview/focus group questions could be improved before going for the main data collection. I changed my questions quite a lot after my pilot study. If it's qualitative it doesn't have to be large scale, so two sites should be fine - it might even be better to do a more in-depth ethnographic study of just one site.
That's a lot of stuff to cover! Do you have a hypothesis on how they are reproduced that you are working from or are you going to use the data to generate your own theory. E.g. There's an American analysis on how your name reproduces inequality through teacher expectations and he started with a hypothesis whilst Willis in Learning to Labour looked at why working class boys got working class jobs (reproduction of class inequality in school) and he generated theory from the data.
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