FEResearchmeet. A Further Education (FE) practitioner-researcher led initiative to share and develop capacity for research and scholarship across Wales and England: analysing and theorising the period of initial development.

Samantha Jones, Kerry Scattergood, Jodie Rees, Norman Crowther

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper analyses emergent issues from four conceptualisers of FEResearchmeet. FEResearchmeet claims to be a free and democratic model for building and supporting engagement with research, led by practitioners. The narratives presented seek to document and analyse FEResearchmeet as a movement across the first three years since its inception (2017–2020). After setting out the context and methodology of the work, narrative one explores how a reaction against New Public Management (NPM) sparked an event and how this grew into a movement of collaborating individuals seeking to reposition their voices and knowledge. The second narrative looked at how an early ‘meet’ was used to challenge norms and barriers to research by creating safe spaces for the development of expertise. Narrative three journeys through the early months of COVID-19 to explore how capacity building through collaboration allows sector workers to value their voices. These narratives lead to a critique of the epistemological changes these experiences have developed and have the potential to develop in the future. The paper concludes by arguing that FEResearchmeet was a reaction against NPM by agentic practitioners who used collaboration and capacity building as tools to create new pools of knowledge in an attempt to change this position.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)428-451
Number of pages24
JournalResearch in Post-Compulsory Education
Volume29
Issue number3
Early online date20 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 20 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Further education
  • New Public Management
  • capacity building and knowledge
  • collaboration
  • research

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