Bagian 2 Metopel
Bagian 2 Metopel
Bagian 2 Metopel
theory
An emerging fourth paradigm in educational
research is that of complexity theory (Morrison
2002a). Complexity theory looks at the world in
ways which break with simple cause-and-effect
models, linear predictability, and a dissection
approach to understanding phenomena, replacing
them with organic, non-linear and holistic
approaches (Santonus 1998: 3) in which relations
within interconnected networks are the order
of the day (Youngblood 1997: 27; Wheatley
1999: 10). Here key terms are feedback,
recursion, emergence, connectedness and selforganization.
Out go the simplistic views of
linear causality, the ability to predict, control and
manipulate, and in come uncertainty, networks
and connection, self-organization, emergence over
time through feedback and the relationships of
the internal and external environments, and
survival and development through adaptation and
change.
Chaos and complexity theories argue against
the linear, deterministic, patterned, universalizable,
stable, atomized, modernistic, objective,
mechanist, controlled, closed systems of law-like
behaviour which may be operating in the laboratory
but which do not operate in the social world
of education. These features of chaos and complexity
theories seriously undermine the value of
experiments and positivist research in education
(e.g. Gleick 1987; Waldrop 1992; Lewin 1993).
Complexity theory suggests that phenomena
must be looked at holistically; to atomize
phenomena into a restricted number of variables
and then to focus only on certain factors is
to miss the necessary dynamic interaction of
several parts. More fundamentally, complexity
theory suggests that the conventional units of
analysis in educational research (as in other
fields) should move away from, for example,
individuals, institutions, communities and systems
(cf. Lemke 2001). These should merge, so
that the unit of analysis becomes a web
or ecosystem (Capra 1996: 301), focused on,
feminist research
involving the researcher and the people being
Researched
variable
double standards: using male criteria, measures
women’s responsibility
familism: treating the family, rather than the
academic experts.
Collective research is necessary: women need
rejected.
Positivism and objectivity as male mythology
are rejected.
There is an increased use of qualitative,
experience is recognized.
Hierarchies in social research are rejected.
democracy)
building community (through collaborative
learning)
privileging the individual voice (not only the
lecturer’s)
of knowledge).
Gender shapes research agendas, the choice of
topics and foci, the choice of data collection
techniques and the relationships between researchers
and researched. Several methodological
principles flow from a ‘rationale’ for feminist
research (Denzin 1989; Mies 1993; Haig
1997, 1999; De Laine 2000):
The replacement of quantitative, positivist, objective
conversational analysis.
The use of textual analysis such as deconstruction