Ph.D. programs in action research
Can they be housed in universities?
Can universities ever become a greenhouse for education in Action Research? Would it be possible to create Ph.D. programs in Action Research that are loyal to the genuine characteristics of Action Research?
The hegemony of conventional researcher education has dominated university activities. Action Research has inherent characteristics that break radically with the academic tradition. The core challenge is to assess whether high-level training in Action Research can find a home in universities. Training action researchers in conventional academic institutions will in itself be an action research project.
The paper presents three different AR projects, all aimed at training cohorts of students to become professional Action Researchers through obtaining a Ph.D. The first program started in 1989, the second in 1995, and the new program began in May 2003.
The main conclusion is that it is a feasible strategy to create action research learning opportunities within a conventional academic context. This is partly due to a change in conceptualization of what constitutes knowledge, adding onto a stronger demand for practical and useful knowledge. At the local design and implementation level, curriculum design — both collective learning processes and theses that were closely connected to real life change activities — were important factors for success.
Cited by
Cited by 3 other publications
Coghlan, David
2011.
Action Research: Exploring Perspectives on a Philosophy of Practical Knowing.
Academy of Management Annals 5:1
► pp. 53 ff.

Coghlan, David
2011.
Action Research: Exploring Perspectives on a Philosophy of Practical Knowing.
Academy of Management Annals 5:1
► pp. 53 ff.

Greenwood, Davydd J.
2007.
Teaching/learning action research requires fundamental reforms in public higher education.
Action Research 5:3
► pp. 249 ff.

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