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Day 1 • Review of Course logistics
• Literature review development: develop the topics and title for the research projects using Card sort and graphic organisers
• Confirm and assign topics for the lit review
• Confirm presentations • Get a good overview of
the assignments
Research Topic – Resource Depletion/Eco-Sustainability
• what are the resource or climate change challenges for the future?
• what can we as individuals, communities and/or nations do to prevent climate change or resource collapse?
• what theories of change, of behaviour, of nature, of spirit, of power can make a difference in this area
Research Topic Te Punanga Haumaru Bully Banishing project
• How does ecosustainability play out in communities with few resources and relative poverty?
• How do we build community resilience and become ecosustainable (i.e. not increasing consumption and waste)?
• How do we address inequality when even our poorest communities may not be ecosustainable?
Te Punanga Haumaru Bully Banishing project • Teaching children and adults how to deflect/avoid
bullying• Creating an awareness of what constitutes bullying
and what ordinary citizens can do about it• Shifting the perception of the community away from
one of vulnerability and victimhood to one of energy and creativity with a zero tolerance of bullying
• Discovering the resources, including the ecological resources within the community and getting them shared and used
• Getting the community agencies and businesses to collaborate around anti-bullying messages, building community resilience and reducing inequality
Research Topic – Practicum students
• Self chosen topic• Working in
groups of two or three
• Research methods course used to prepare for the Research Practicum
Assessment tasks: Research Methods only Whole class group Resource Depletion/Eco-sustainability Research project
Weight Due date
Partial literature review: A written research essay covering an area of literature that is important to the development of a project
25% 3rd of April
Presentation: A 5 minute presentation on one area of the research project from the literature review
15% 8th April to 10th June
Method: Collect, input and transcribe data from the MPHS project
25% 13th May
Analysis of results: A report thematically analysing an aspect of grouped data
35% 3rd July
Assessment tasks: Research Practicum preparation
Weighting
Due date
Method : A written report on the method proposed for the research and an application to Ethics Committee
15% 8th of April/6th
May
Literature review: A written research essay covering an introduction to the research hypothesis or question, a justification of the value of committing resources to the hypothesis/question, and a literature review
30% 20th April
Data Collection and transcription : Interviews, Focus groups, Questionnaires or case studies, etc
5% 3rd July
Assessment tasks: Research Practicum preparation
Weighting
Due date
Results analysis: Compiling a demographic profile, breaking data into themes, creating narratives, quantising themes, managing contexts, statistical analysis
19% End of
July
Discussion, Conclusion and Abstract: Summarising, comparing results against literature, recommendations, etc
19% EO Nov
Presentation: A 20-25 minute presentation describing the project ands its outcomes
12% EO Nov
Topics and Titlesin small groups
Create a title for a research project that looks at • what are the resource or climate change challenges for
the future?• what can we as individuals, communities and/or
nations do to prevent climate change or resource collapse?
• what theories of change, of behaviour, of nature, of spirit, of power can make a difference in this area
Create a list of things you might have to explore for this project
Topics-Themes-Title Imagine that we live on a lake
Some earnest believable people say that the water level is going to rise 2 metres permanently and shatter
our way of life
All around the world. How do we react? What would we do to understand the possibilities of
the future and our part in them?
What are the
solutions?Can we change
and adapt to a new way of being?
If we can’t, why
not?
Cardsort“Cardsort is a generic name for any process that uses
statements written on cards and has participants sieve, cluster, or rank ideas or statements” (O’Reilly , 2008)
“Cardsorts are especially helpful with ethnic and minority groups. In today’s increasingly multi-cultural world where the norming of standardised psychometric instruments beyond Anglo-Saxon western culture lags behind, Cardsorts offer another distinct advantage. Interpretations are not dependent on predetermined norms…”(Stevens, 2006:2)
Dennis O’Reilly – consensus cardsort
whanau futures cardsort
Cardsort stage 1Form groups – 7-10 per groupEach individual writes their ideas (topic) on a
white ‘idea card’Write neatly one idea per card. If you have
more than one idea use another idea card – write at least 3 ideas
When you have finished writing all your ideas gather all the idea cards in your group together and shuffle them.
Cardsort stage 2• Distribute the shuffled idea cards equally amongst the
group• Cluster similar white idea cards into categories or
themes• Make sure that you all are in rough agreement
(consensus) with the categories created and the cards within each category – this may take some time and compromises will be needed. Categories with lots of idea cards may need to be broken into two or more categories. Idea cards could go into two categories
• Give a label to the category on a pink summary card and put this on top of the relevant pile
Create a title
Cardsort Stage 3• Each group states all their themes to the whole class.• Any theme that is ‘missing’ from your group gets
written down as a new theme, on a pink card (designate someone in your group to do this)
• Back to group work: each group distributes the pink theme cards equally amongst the group
• Cluster similar pink theme cards into no more than three or four categories
• Name these categories (on a blue card), and try to create a ‘title’ that links them to the idea of ‘sustainable communities’
Graphic organiser – mind map
Deconstructing our title
• Men’s movement – definition, participation, themes
• Direction – history, where’s it from?
• Development – where’s it going? Leaders, key ideas
• Aoteroa – NZ context, regions
What is a literature review?It defines the words in the title of your research projectIt gives a sufficient background and/or a history of the
topic so that the context of the research can be understood
It analyses the underlying ideas and theories that are suggested by the title
It describes the groups/populations that are most affected by the events and theories under examination
It analyses evidence from other research that supports or denies key theories related to the topic
Theme 1
Theme 1 Topic 1
Theme 1 Topic 2
Theme 1 Topics 1-4
Themes 1-5
All themes – all topics
Flexibility of Cardsort
Advantages• Adaptable • Inclusive process • Variety of ways to input • Open ended• Transportable• Cheap to run
Disadvantages• Takes time – about 2
hours• Groups tend to conform
to majority view• Depth of data
questionable
Accessibility of CardsortAdvantages Disadvantages• Helpful with ethnic and
minority groups - Cross cultural • Resonates with Maori• Useful method for hard to
reach communities • Enables engagement with
people who might otherwise be resistant to participation
• Lower literacy demands• Sensitive to community
symbols and voices
• Doesn’t capture group dynamics
• Not able to quantify how common a cards is in a cluster
Comfortability of CardsortAdvantages Disadvantages
• Participants feel at ease• Non-hierarchical• Mitigates personal
issues• Useful for conflict
resolution
• Views change over time and may shift
Effectiveness of CardsortAdvantages Disadvantages
• Good starting point• Fosters authority over
self• Promotes Puawaitanga
(study, strategic thinking)
• Fosters synergy• Results generally
exceed expectations
Next Week
• Morality and Connection • Do Moral and Carbon Footprint questionnaires
The Carbon Footprint questionnaire is a weblink on the Moral questionnaire. Sign in as an Australian. Later on, when asked where you live, say “Tasmania”.