Action Research Recherche-action

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Definition

Action Research is an approach that seeks to articulate, through a back-and-forth dynamic, the acquisition of scientific knowledge with the transformation of a fieldwork. Taken up notably in the fields of sociology and psychology, this method thus asks researchers to develop and test tools of social action within specific contexts – in situ – and to critically evaluate their effects. Action Research presents a strong participatory dimension in the sense that its research protocol implies the involvement and commitment of actors in the field who see to the identification of needs, construction of the research framework, implementation, and, eventually, data evaluation.

Cite: “Action Research”, Performascope: Interdisciplinary Lexicon of Performance and Research-Creation, Grenoble: Université Grenoble Alpes, 2021, [online]: http://performascope.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr/en/detail/177881

Perspective

Arts and medical humanity studies
Léa Andréoléty, Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Litt&Arts, 38000 Grenoble, France

My doctoral research falls within the interdisciplinary field of medical humanities: performing arts with a focus on theatrical improvisation, dance and somatic practices, within the curriculum of nursing sciences. This applied research, which extends beyond the realm of aesthetics, consists in a partnership with the Institute of Nursing Sciences of the University Hospital of Grenoble. I use the concept of action-research as a methodological approach to guide the action carried out in the research field provided by this pedagogical framework. The use of action-research in this specific context is driven by a noted lack of methodological criticality when applying artistic practices to health training and the need of transcribing these artistic practices into body training for nursing. 

The concept of action research combines three aspects: participation, action and research. The nature of this research process is participative and its objective is to facilitate changes in a situation and/or its structure. The use of this approach in this context is also justified by the principles of co-construction with the people involved (as I myself am not a nursing specialist, it appears essential to place their expertise and experience at the center of the action and analysis).

This approach, to which I was introduced on a theoretical level primarily through the works of René Barbier developed in the second half of the 20th century, has a number of practical applications. Within my research, the concept of action-research has evolved from a theoretical point of view to its practical implementation through the proposals for theatrical and somatic practice workshops with a group of student volunteers over their three years of studies. It is this transition from theory to practice that allowed me to identify issues and questions the notion of professional positionality as a researcher and fieldworker.

Questioning the professional positionality - which is determined by the way of embodying one’s function, the approach and the way of doing things within this research process - seems to be a primordial issue: how can we take into account and recognize the participants theoretical knowledge and experience? And more concretely, what positionality should we acquire with the participants within this pedagogical proposition? The "research" element of the action-research concept leads to the production of knowledge within the study. The approach implies a transformative field logic, beginning with an initial assessment established with the institution on one hand, and the participants on the other. Moreover, the approach is based within the field experiences of these participants, and their theoretical contributions. It seems therefore necessary to consider a number of issues brought into question by this approach: my involvement with the institution, decision makers, and participants, my degree – not inconsequential – of neutrality and objectivity in relating and constructing this research, the reciprocal influence between participants, the institution, and myself. Concretely, the construction of this pedagogical practice is achieved together with the students, who suggest real-life situations that they find problematic or questionable. These situations are then dissected, explored, tested, and worked on through various dimensions – relational, ethical, or technical, for example – and using various tools – improvisational theater, Contact Improvisation, or other somatic practices. Choosing to position myself as a participant-observer allows me to, at the same time, collaborate, intervene, create, and develop a link between practice and theory, as well as between the institution and the participants. The workshop content evolves according to feedback from students and what springs to their mind in relation to these reflections and experiences. The implementation of an action-research initiative makes it possible for participants to appropriate a scientific approach towards their training and, furthermore, for them to take a more active role in the construction of this training.

Cite this item: Léa Andréoléty, “Action research”, translated by Kieran Puillandre, Performascope: Interdisciplinary Lexicon of Performance and Research-Creation, Grenoble: Université Grenoble Alpes, 2022, [online]: http://performascope.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr/en/detail/177881

Quotation

« Il s’agit de recherches dans lesquelles il y a une action délibérée de transformation de la réalité ; recherches ayant un double objectif : transformer la réalité et produire des connaissances concernant ces transformations. »

Marie-Anne Hugon, Claude Seibel, Recherches impliquées, recherches action : le cas de l’éducation, Bruxelles : De Boeck, 1988, p.13


« L’ensemble des méthodes de recherche-action revendique un double objectif de changement concret dans le système social et de production de connaissances sur celui-ci. Elles se démarquent ainsi des recherches conventionnelles (comme l’étude de cas par exemple) en posant le changement de l’objet investi comme objectif à part entière de la recherche.Ceci implique pour le chercheur d’intervenir délibérément sur la réalité étudiée, démarquant par là son rôle de celui de l’observateur neutre prescrit par les démarches scientifiques traditionnelles. Dans cette même perspective, parce que les connaissances élaborées doivent améliorer l’action et le management social (Lewin, 1946), les changements visés par la recherche-action doivent résoudre des problèmes concrets: ‘la recherche qui ne produit que des livres ne suffit pas.’ »

Florence Allard-Poesi, Véronique Perretin, « La Recherche-Action », in Conduire un projet de recherche, une perspective qualitative, Yves Giordano (dir.), Caen : EMS, 2003, p.86

Bibliography

Jean McNiff, Action Research. Principles and practice, Londres : Routledge, 2013 [1988]

Jean McNiff, Jack Whitehead, Doing and writing action research, Thousand Oaks : Sage, 2009

Jean McNiff & Jack Whitehead, Action research: living theory, Londres : Sage, 2006