In this 33-minute episode, researchers Asma Noureen and Kristi Koons from the Department of Educational Psychology and Leadership Studies reflect on their early journeys as graduate researchers committed to fostering social change. Grounded in activist roots and driven by a desire to make meaningful contributions, they explore a range of research methodologies that align with their values and research goals.
They discuss:
🔍 Critical Discourse Analysis
🪶 Indigenous Methodologies
🌀 Post-Qualitative Inquiry
📖 Narrative Inquiry
📜 Inclusive Policy Models
🤝 Participatory Action Research
This recording was originally created for an EDCI Research Design course. The conversation is part of the Critical Research Methodologies podcast series—an open invitation to all UVic students to engage in thoughtful, justice-oriented dialogue.
See the references: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1q-TLF0mVkEn8MwP6TH_rkfGTc9aBkGld/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=110744774306606548496&rtpof=true&sd=true
#SocialJusticeResearch #CriticalMethodologies #GradStudentVoices #ResearchDesign
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In this 33-minute episode, researchers Asma Noureen and Kristi Koons from the Department of Educational Psychology and Leadership Studies reflect on their early journeys as graduate researchers committed to fostering social change. Grounded in activist roots and driven by a desire to make meaningful contributions, they explore a range of research methodologies that align with their values and research goals.
They discuss:
🔍 Critical Discourse Analysis
🪶 Indigenous Methodologies
🌀 Post-Qualitative Inquiry
📖 Narrative Inquiry
📜 Inclusive Policy Models
🤝 Participatory Action Research
This recording was originally created for an EDCI Research Design course. The conversation is part of the Critical Research Methodologies podcast series—an open invitation to all UVic students to engage in thoughtful, justice-oriented dialogue.
See the references: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1q-TLF0mVkEn8MwP6TH_rkfGTc9aBkGld/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=110744774306606548496&rtpof=true&sd=true
#SocialJusticeResearch #CriticalMethodologies #GradStudentVoices #ResearchDesign
Alan Chaffe is a sessional professor at the University of Victoria’s Department of Economics and a PhD student in the Faculty of Education’s Leadership Studies program.
Chaffe’s research is taking him across Canada to visit queer theatre festivals. Looking not at the actual content of the performances, but rather at the festivals themselves within the broader LGBTQ+ movement, Chaffe is researching what effects these festivals have on the communities that hold them and on society as a whole.
Chaffe completed over 60 hours of interviews with 70 participants. His research is teaching us a lot about the ways communities are built and bonds are formed between performers. In towns that lack queer spaces, these kinds of festivals are depended on to fuel confidence for members of the LGBTQ+ community and also to help educate allies.
In this episode, Chaffe talks more about the educational process fostered by these festivals and the ways in which they address broader social movements.
Faculty of Education
In this 33-minute episode, researchers Asma Noureen and Kristi Koons from the Department of Educational Psychology and Leadership Studies reflect on their early journeys as graduate researchers committed to fostering social change. Grounded in activist roots and driven by a desire to make meaningful contributions, they explore a range of research methodologies that align with their values and research goals.
They discuss:
🔍 Critical Discourse Analysis
🪶 Indigenous Methodologies
🌀 Post-Qualitative Inquiry
📖 Narrative Inquiry
📜 Inclusive Policy Models
🤝 Participatory Action Research
This recording was originally created for an EDCI Research Design course. The conversation is part of the Critical Research Methodologies podcast series—an open invitation to all UVic students to engage in thoughtful, justice-oriented dialogue.
See the references: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1q-TLF0mVkEn8MwP6TH_rkfGTc9aBkGld/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=110744774306606548496&rtpof=true&sd=true
#SocialJusticeResearch #CriticalMethodologies #GradStudentVoices #ResearchDesign