Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings

I report on a phenomenological investigation into teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings during their participation in the Resilient Educators (REds) intervention. All 18 teacher participants came from rural communities challenged by HIV & AIDS. I reflect critically on the a...

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Main Author: Linda C Theron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Education Association of South Africa 2012-01-01
Series:South African Journal of Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-01002012000400005&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-97f40ce6424c4a20a187211c83aa838a2020-11-24T23:08:38ZengEducation Association of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Education2076-34332012-01-01324381392S0256-01002012000400005Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawingsLinda C Theron0Northwest UniversityI report on a phenomenological investigation into teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings during their participation in the Resilient Educators (REds) intervention. All 18 teacher participants came from rural communities challenged by HIV & AIDS. I reflect critically on the ambivalence in teacher experiences of drawings to highlight the complexity of employing drawings as visual method. Then, I interpret the teachers' methodological experiences through the lens ofsocial-ecological understandings of resilience in order to address the question of how drawings, as form of visual participatory methodology, may make a positive difference and nurture participant resilience. What the teachers' experiences suggest is that drawings offer methodological opportunities for participants to make constructive meaning of adversity, to take action, to experience mastery, and to regulate emotion associated with adversity. All of the aforementioned are well documented pathways to resilience. I theorise, therefore, that researchers with a social conscience would be well advised to use drawings, albeit in competent and participatory ways, as this methodology potentiates participant resilience and positive change.http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-01002012000400005&lng=en&tlng=endrawingsHIV & AIDSqualitativeresilienceteachersvisual participatory methodology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda C Theron
spellingShingle Linda C Theron
Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
South African Journal of Education
drawings
HIV & AIDS
qualitative
resilience
teachers
visual participatory methodology
author_facet Linda C Theron
author_sort Linda C Theron
title Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
title_short Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
title_full Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
title_fullStr Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
title_full_unstemmed Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
title_sort does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
publisher Education Association of South Africa
series South African Journal of Education
issn 2076-3433
publishDate 2012-01-01
description I report on a phenomenological investigation into teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings during their participation in the Resilient Educators (REds) intervention. All 18 teacher participants came from rural communities challenged by HIV & AIDS. I reflect critically on the ambivalence in teacher experiences of drawings to highlight the complexity of employing drawings as visual method. Then, I interpret the teachers' methodological experiences through the lens ofsocial-ecological understandings of resilience in order to address the question of how drawings, as form of visual participatory methodology, may make a positive difference and nurture participant resilience. What the teachers' experiences suggest is that drawings offer methodological opportunities for participants to make constructive meaning of adversity, to take action, to experience mastery, and to regulate emotion associated with adversity. All of the aforementioned are well documented pathways to resilience. I theorise, therefore, that researchers with a social conscience would be well advised to use drawings, albeit in competent and participatory ways, as this methodology potentiates participant resilience and positive change.
topic drawings
HIV & AIDS
qualitative
resilience
teachers
visual participatory methodology
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-01002012000400005&lng=en&tlng=en
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