An assessment of the transparency of contemporary technology education research employing interview-based methodologies
Date
2021-08-20Author
Buckley, Jeffrey
Adams, Latif
Aribilola, Ifeoluwapo
Arshad, Iram
Azeem, Muhammad
Bracken, Lauryn
Breheny, Colette
Buckley, Ciara
Chimello, Ismael
Fagan, Alison
Fitzpatrick, Daniel P.
Herrera, Diana Garza
Gomes, Guilherme Daniel
Grassick, Shaun
Halligan, Elaine
Hirway, Amit
Hyland, Tómas
Imtiaz, Muhammad Babar
Khan, Muhammad Bilal
Lanzagorta Garcia, Eduardo
Lennon, Paul
Manaf, Eyman
Meng, Jing
Sufian, Mohd Sufino Zuhaily
Moraes, Adrielle
Osterwald, Katja Magdalena
Platonava, Anastasia
Reid, Clodagh
Renard, Michèle
Rodriguez-Barroso, Laura G.
Simonassi-Paiva, Biana
Singh, Maulshree
Szamk, Tomaz
Tahir, Mehwish
Vijayakumar, Sowmya
Ward, Cormac
Yan, Xinyu
Zainol, Ismin
Zhang, Lin
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Show full item recordAbstract
A high level of transparency in reported research is critical for several reasons, such as
ensuring an acceptable level of trustworthiness and enabling replication. Transparency in
qualitative research permits the identifcation of specifc circumstances which are associ ated with fndings and observations. Thus, transparency is important for the repeatability
of original studies and for explorations of the transferability of original fndings. There has
been no investigation into levels of transparency in reported technology education research
to date. With a position that increasing transparency would be benefcial, this article pre sents an analysis of levels of transparency in contemporary technology education research
studies which employed interviews within their methodologies, and which were published
within the International Journal of Technology and Design Education and Design and
Technology Education: An International Journal (n=38). The results indicate room for
improvement, especially in terms of documenting researcher positionality, determinations
of data saturation, and how power imbalances were managed. A discussion is presented on
why it is important to improve levels of transparency in reported studies, and a guide on areas
to make transparent is presented for qualitative and quantitative research.
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