posted on 2023-11-23, 09:59authored byMichelle O’Reilly, Sarah Adams, Rachel Batchelor, Diane Levine
<p>A critical analysis of the benefits and challenges of adopting a hybrid approach to conducting qualitative research in schools with children as co-researchers is presented. The study involved 18 children (10–11-years), working as co-researchers in pairs to interview each other with a goal of understanding their experiences online, particularly in terms of digital citizenship and mental wellbeing. Children participated in a pre-research lesson for the acquisition of interviewing skills. Analysis identified three key methodological lessons. First, the co-research approach with foundational learning enabled children to be active and responsible interviewers. Second, the adult researcher and school staff had a role in empowering children through empathy, reassurance, positive praise, and supporting them when upset. The final theme recognised the challenges of research being conducted remotely with implications for future research.</p>
History
Author affiliation
School of Psychology and Vision Science, University of Leicester
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
International Journal of Social Research Methodology