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Interview with
Mary Kellett - Director of the Children’s Research Centre at
the Open University in the UK:
Source: Qatar Teachers Net website
This interview has been conducted with Mary Kellett, director
of the
Children’s Research Centre (CRC) at the Open University in
Great Britain. Mary's primary research interest is empowering
children as active researchers. She played a leading role in
establishing the Children's Research Centre after extensive
pilot work exploring effective ways to teach children the
knowledge and skills needed to undertake their own research
studies. A former primary school teacher and social worker,
Mary is Programme Director for Childhood and Youth Studies at
the Open University. Other research includes work with
children and young people who have learning difficulties.
Q1: The
Children’s Research Centre (CRC) at the Open University in
Great Britain is a pioneering Centre that supports children to
undertake their own research, offering training to children
and teachers in research skills.. The Centre, explores and
evaluates different training delivery models
and provides a dissemination platform for children's research.
Being Director of the Children’s Research Centre and, at the
same time, a member of the steering committee of the
Research Skills Development Unit, how do you think that
the Education Reform here in the State of Qatar can benefit
from projects carried out by the CRC?
Part of the Education Reform initiative here in Qatar is to
develop research skills in Independent schools. This is what
the CRC has been doing for the past 5 years and now has a
website featuring about 70 original research studies by
children. When you start out on something new, it is always
valuable to be able to draw on others’ prior experience. The
CRC has developed a training programme specifically for
children and this can be used as a platform on which to create
a research training programme that is culturally appropriate
for Qatari students. Research projects that CRC children have
carried out can be studied by teachers and students here in
Qatar to explore the range and scope of topics reflecting
children’s interests and concerns e.g. studies about the
environment, social issues and children’s school experiences.
They demonstrate that children as young as 9 can carry out
valuable research if they have appropriate training and
support. This will give a level of confidence to the Qatari
research initiative that much can be achieved at all ages.
Q2: You are known to be an advocate for projects that would
enhance pupils' research skills. How important do you see
research skills for the development of independent life-long
learners?
Research skills are crucial to life-long learning. They
develop valuable critical thinking skills, foster creativity,
encourage problem solving and promote sceptical analysis .
Having to work with self-generated data develops organisation
and management skills and presenting research is a wonderful
way to polish communication skills. Most importantly engaging
in research nurtures independent learning. All of these are
life skills which we need if we are to function optimally in
society. These skills will help students do their future jobs
more proficiently, be better citizens, adopt problem-solving
approaches to life, make ethical decisions and be sceptical
about commercial promotions and media spin.
Q3: You are the author of How to Develop Children as
Researchers, a step-by-step guidance for teachers. Are there
any requirements for teachers to engage in the project of
enhancing pupils' research skills? Or can just any teacher do
that? Are there any necessary skills teachers have to gain
prior to engaging in such a project?
The
Research Development Skills Unit, supported by a team of
excellent teachers from Qatari schools, is designing a
culturally appropriate research programme to help teachers
work with students in their schools. This is going to be a
fantastic resource and a great help for any teacher. However,
delivering a training programme and supporting students with
their research projects is very different from reading about
it. Teachers need to be supported with ‘hands-on’ training
workshops where they can engage with the practicalities of
programme delivery and explore how to adapt materials to suit
their own individual students’ needs. I am hopeful that
training programmes will soon be facilitated for interested
teachers.
Q4: We understand that one of your responsibilities is to
provide training and mentoring to some of the target schools,
which are engaged in the development of research projects
during 2007-2008. Could you give us insight on how this task
is going to be accomplished?
I
only have a small part to play as I am in Qatar for just a few
days in the year. Dr Eugene Jongsma has responsibility for
this and I am happy to offer what help and advice I can to
assist him in facilitating research skills workshops to train
teachers from Qatari schools to take this forward. I also plan
to support and advise a couple of target schools to get
research initiatives started and help them to establish
research links with international schools.
Q5: As a special advisor to the Steering Committee, the
oversight body for the Research Skills Development Projects,
what do you see as the major obstacles that the project will
have to face during the implementation period? How do you
think that these obstacles can be overcome?
This is a very ambitious and exciting programme and,
understandably, there are many obstacles to be overcome. The
main obstacle is getting quality training to teachers as this
has to be done in workshops outside teaching time. We need to
train a core of experts from Qatari schools who can support
the roll out of this training programme. The other obstacle is
being able to put together quality training materials in a
short time and having them translated into Arabic. This is an
important step to ensure that resources are accessible to all
interested teachers in Qatar. Beyond that, I think there is
an ideological battle to be won to persuade people that this
is a long-term initiative which will have major benefits for
Qatari students. A range of research initiatives such as
elective research courses in the curriculum and after school
research clubs will foster a new research culture in Qatar
that will produce a generation of higher order thinkers able
to compete with the best. |