Abstract
Over the past decade we have been learning how to research learning - in
classroom settings and elsewhere. Research into learning in classroom
settings is widely practised. Increasingly, research is addressing teaching and
learning events in the workplace. Historically, the research methods
employed to investigate learning have been refined and replaced as our image
of learning and, consequently, the goal of our research has changed. The
availability of new technologies offers researchers the capability to compile
rich data sets with a level of complexity not previously possible. The
analysis of such complex data sets poses a significant challenge. While new
technological tools also offer the possibility of new forms of analysis
(particularly of qualitative data), it is the sophistication of our theories and
analytic frameworks that will determine whether we are able to utilise the
potential of the new techniques. Central to the realization of this
sophistication is the operationalization of the constructs with which our
theories are expressed. This paper explores contemporary approaches to
researching learning and some of the questions associated with this type of
research.
David Clarke
Learning Research