A demonstration of educational craft : an outdoor educator's autoethnography
Contribuinte(s) |
Applied Health Sciences Program |
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Data(s) |
28/01/2010
28/01/2010
28/01/2009
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Resumo |
Ellis (2004) argues that auto ethnography is a methodology that begins with the researcher as the site of study. Employing a qualitative storytelling structure shows, instead of tells. As the audience reads, they are encouraged to relate the research to their experiences, provoking reflective knowledge development. As an outdoor educator, I began to question the nature of my craft and how it was being shaped by my personal educational philosophy. So, drawing on a reflective journal I kept while employed as an outdoor educator in 2007, three outdoor educators published narratives, and a historical review of newspaper articles about Ontario-based outdoor education, conducted an autoethnographic inquiry and built a fictional story about my craft. I exposed five faultlines or areas of ideological tension, shaping my views about outdoor education and my craft. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Brock University |
Palavras-Chave | #Educational anthropology--Ontario. #Outdoor education--Philosophy. |
Tipo |
Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |