Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds

This paper discusses the methodological and logistical complexities that underpin multimethod, multi-sited, multi-phased research with vulnerable communities. The project on which we draw was a 3-year Australian government-funded, longitudinal and cross-sectional exploration of students from refu...

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Main Authors: Baker, S., Irwin, E., Taiwo, M., Singh, S., Gower, Shelley, Dantas, Jaya
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Johns Hopkins University Press 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75501
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author Baker, S.
Irwin, E.
Taiwo, M.
Singh, S.
Gower, Shelley
Dantas, Jaya
author_facet Baker, S.
Irwin, E.
Taiwo, M.
Singh, S.
Gower, Shelley
Dantas, Jaya
author_sort Baker, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper discusses the methodological and logistical complexities that underpin multimethod, multi-sited, multi-phased research with vulnerable communities. The project on which we draw was a 3-year Australian government-funded, longitudinal and cross-sectional exploration of students from refugee backgrounds (SfRBs) as they moved into, through and out of higher education from three different contexts, educational pathways and localities in Australia. While all students entering and participating in higher education may experience challenges, for SfRBs these are compounded by their linguistic and cultural diversity, instability, possible trauma and disrupted schooling. In the project presented in this article, these complexities and their relationships with transitions to higher education were captured through diverse methods and methodologies at three research sites, including longitudinal research with repeat interviews and cross-sectional, explorative methods. The opportunities provided by this methodological approach far outweighed the ethical and practical difficulties navigated by each of the research teams. The ‘thick’ data produced through prolonged and repeat engagements with a small cohort of participants at one site were made richer through explorations of differing social and geographical contexts across all three sites. Further, our collective interpretations of the data were made more robust through the reciprocity and reflexivity inherent in ethically researching with (not on) SfRBs and through multiple cross-site research team interactions. Introduction In order to make meaning of complex and dynamic phenomena like the transitions people make over time and space, a commensurately dynamic and flexible research design is required. In the case of educational transitions, the changes that students experience can include moving between educational levels (with their attendant practices, procedures, expectations and epistemologies), between geographic spaces, social networks, disciplines, modules and relationships. It is therefore important to develop rich pictures of how students experience their transitions because these changes in the student’s lives can significantly impact on their sense of self, on their
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-755012019-05-15T06:51:44Z Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds Baker, S. Irwin, E. Taiwo, M. Singh, S. Gower, Shelley Dantas, Jaya This paper discusses the methodological and logistical complexities that underpin multimethod, multi-sited, multi-phased research with vulnerable communities. The project on which we draw was a 3-year Australian government-funded, longitudinal and cross-sectional exploration of students from refugee backgrounds (SfRBs) as they moved into, through and out of higher education from three different contexts, educational pathways and localities in Australia. While all students entering and participating in higher education may experience challenges, for SfRBs these are compounded by their linguistic and cultural diversity, instability, possible trauma and disrupted schooling. In the project presented in this article, these complexities and their relationships with transitions to higher education were captured through diverse methods and methodologies at three research sites, including longitudinal research with repeat interviews and cross-sectional, explorative methods. The opportunities provided by this methodological approach far outweighed the ethical and practical difficulties navigated by each of the research teams. The ‘thick’ data produced through prolonged and repeat engagements with a small cohort of participants at one site were made richer through explorations of differing social and geographical contexts across all three sites. Further, our collective interpretations of the data were made more robust through the reciprocity and reflexivity inherent in ethically researching with (not on) SfRBs and through multiple cross-site research team interactions. Introduction In order to make meaning of complex and dynamic phenomena like the transitions people make over time and space, a commensurately dynamic and flexible research design is required. In the case of educational transitions, the changes that students experience can include moving between educational levels (with their attendant practices, procedures, expectations and epistemologies), between geographic spaces, social networks, disciplines, modules and relationships. It is therefore important to develop rich pictures of how students experience their transitions because these changes in the student’s lives can significantly impact on their sense of self, on their 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75501 10.1002/rev3.3133 English Johns Hopkins University Press restricted
spellingShingle Baker, S.
Irwin, E.
Taiwo, M.
Singh, S.
Gower, Shelley
Dantas, Jaya
Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
title Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
title_full Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
title_fullStr Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
title_full_unstemmed Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
title_short Methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
title_sort methodological diversity as an asset for transition-focused higher education research with students from refugee backgrounds
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75501