Action research is a practice-based research method, designed to bring about change in a context. In the context of schools, it might be a teacher-led investigation, usually conducted within the teacher’s own school or classroom.
When a problem or question is identified, an initiative is devised to address it. Following implementation, the impact is then assessed and reflected upon. This reflection may lead to amendments to the initiative, before repeating the process again.
Where can I see this in action?
In 2021, teacher and apprenticeship manager Dave Shurmerconducted research that looked at the impact that increased physical activity has on pupils’ academic attainment in literacy and numeracy.
He asked pupils to skip for two minutes before English or maths lessons. At the end of the term, pupils sat a Sats practice paper. Shurmer compared the data from before and after the term for a conditioned and unconditioned group, and found that when the pupils skipped before lessons once a week, they went on to gain an extra mark on their test papers. When they skipped twice a week, they gained an extra two marks.
In 2022, English teacher Katie Packman wrote about heraction research project for Tes: after struggling to enthuse key stage 3 students in creative writing, she decided to introduce a workshopping approach. For one hour a week, students were given free rein to choose a creative writing project to develop. She held one-on-one tutorials to give feedback, and students had to plan and then draft their piece, and continue to work on it or start planning their next piece, until their next tutorial. In the end-of-year assessment results, 27 out of 28 students had made expected progress, and 65 per cent of those had made higher-than-expected progress.
The Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) is an independent charity dedicated to breaking the link between family income and educational achievement.
To achieve this, it summarises the best available evidence for teachers; its Teaching and Learning Toolkit, for example, is used by 70 per cent of secondary schools.
The charity also generates new evidence of “what works” to improve teaching and learning, by funding independent evaluations of high-potential projects, and supports teachers and senior leaders to use the evidence to achieve the maximum possible benefit for young people.