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Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell, Rose Wiles Graham Crow, Melanie Nind [email protected]
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Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Researching InnovationIn search of the mother of invention in an

academic culture of necessityMethods@Plymouth 19th-20th 2011

Andrew Bengry-Howell, Rose Wiles

Graham Crow, Melanie Nind

[email protected]

Page 2: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

“There is a cultural expectation of innovation and ceaseless change in the modern world caused by the market economy and the growth of the state, and one can also find this in qualitative research…no one would dispute that qualitative research is a consumer product and has to be marketed to mass audiences, nor that as researchers we need to demonstrate innovation in grant proposals, and in other activities and that these organizational and cultural pressures have intensified in recent times…This, however, still leaves a number of questions both about the nature of innovation in qualitative research and about how one should respond…It also raises the question of how we should respond to institutional or commercial pressures to innovate, and how to assess new developments and advances.”

Travers (2009)

Page 3: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Defining methodological innovation• Varying definitions but key elements:

– Should be rooted in genuine attempt to improve some aspect of the research process (not just gimmickry or innovation for innovation sake)

– Can comprise developments to established methods as well as new methods

– Should (arguably) be some level of dissemination, acceptance and take-up in the social science community (but process slow …)

– (Travers, 2009; Coffey and Taylor, 2008)

Page 4: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

• Part of programme of research on methodological innovation being undertaken by the NCRM Hub

Two studies: • A narrative literature review (2009-2010)• Innovation case-studies (2010-2011)

• Brief summary of findings (study one)• Preliminary findings/emerging themes (study two)

Studying innovation

Page 5: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Research questions• What is methodological innovation?• What are the antecedents to specific

innovations?• How have/do disciplines responded to them?• How have the methods been publicised and

promoted; what impact has this had on their uptake?

Page 6: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Study 1 - Innovation in qualitative research methods:

A narrative literature review

Page 7: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Study 1: Narrative Literature Review (2009-2010)

• Social sciences’ bibliographic databases searched for ‘method’ or ‘qualitative’. 14 journals identified.

• Journal contents searched using innovat*, new, novel and emerg* in the title or abstract.

• Authors’ self-definition of innovation, through the use of ‘novel’, ‘new’, ‘innovative’ or ‘innovation’

• Filtered for relevance (n=57)

• Categorised by area/topic

• Categorised by type of claim [Inception (n=32); Adaptation (n=6); Adoption (n=19)]

Page 8: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Findings: topics covered

Seven topics were identified:

Creative methods

Online and e-research

Software tools

Focus group methods

Mixed methods

Narrative methods

Other

Page 9: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Findings: innovation type

• Authors rarely defined what they meant by innovation• Their narratives suggested three categories of claims:

– Inception (n=32)– Adaptation (n=6)– Adoption (n=19)

• Closer analysis of ‘innovation’ at inception level revealed over-claiming

• Majority of ‘innovations’ involve adapting SS methods or transferring & adapting methods from other disciplines

Page 10: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Study 2 - Innovation Case Studies

Page 11: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Study 2: Innovation case studies(2010-2011)

• What is the process whereby an innovation is developed?

• How is it publicised, promoted and disseminated?• Who are the key ‘champions’?• Who are the ‘early adopters’? • What is the uptake in the core discipline … in different

disciplines?• Has it been adapted?• To what extent does the innovation address important

methodological challenges (is it really an innovation?) ????

Page 12: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

The CasesOnline/Virtual ethnography … Netnography

Robert Kozinets

Creative methods … Lego Serious Play David Gauntlett

Child-led research … Children as Researchers Mary Kellett

Page 13: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

MethodsSemi-structured interviews:• Developers of the method/methodological approach• Champions/supporters of method/approach • Established academic in topic area • Early career user of method/approach • User from different discipline to the innovator• User from different country to the innovator• Author of book review

Page 14: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

MethodsExploration of Literature:

Social sciences’ bibliographic databases searched for published journal articles/conference papers, in which:

(a) Method/approach is applied/adapted/discussed/ referred to/related book reviewed

(b) Method/approach is specifically linked to innovators we are studying.

(c) Innovators are not authors/co-authors, or otherwise linked to instance of uptake.

Page 15: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Rationale for the innovation New/more effective tools for the 21st century

Page 16: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Netnography (Robert Kozinets)

Changed WorldDevelopment of Internet/Social Media;

Easier access to social worlds.

Cultural Shift The way in which human beings form culture & community changed because of technology.

Necessity Adapt research methods/techniques to online context.

OpportunityTo access/utilise new forms of cultural data; explore new social environment; overcome methodological problems; data overload.

Ethical Issues Anonymity; consent; access; guidelines; procedures.

Page 17: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Child-led Research (Mary Kellett)

Changed World Global uptake in children’s rights (UNCRC); participation agenda.

Cultural Shift Governments/populations more receptive to children’s rights/agency than ever before in history.

Necessity To give children a valid research voice not mediated by adults; encourage/support children’s agency.

OpportunityNew forms of knowledge; deeper understandings of children’s lives/perspectives; insider-perspective on childhood.

Ethical IssuesAdult agendas/exploitation of children for their own ends; how child-led research should be evaluated/critiqued.

Page 18: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Creative Methods (David Gauntlett)

Changed World Interest in Identity; participatory methods.

Cultural Shift Increasing interest in new methodologies/research innovation; richer/deeper understandings.

Necessity

Problem: language-based methods – participants expected to have formed opinions/generate instant responses/different capacities to articulate; questions reliability/validity of findings.

Opportunity Generate richer/more valid & reliable data; ‘what people really think’; utilise quick/reflective process.

Ethical Issues Accessibility of language; research experience; power relations – generating/interpreting data.

Page 19: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

An ‘organic’ process of development and acceptance

• Organic process: ‘I didn’t set out to invent method’ (RK); ‘accidental discovery’ (DG)

• Support and encouragement – ‘big names’; senior colleagues; established professors; academic champions: ‘you should definitely keep doing that’ (RK); ‘empowering professor’ (MK)

• A journey – from ‘abyss of cynicism’ (MK) to ‘academic legitimation’ (RK); addressing critiques; theoretical bolstering; promotion/dissemination – web sites (being ‘out there’)

Page 20: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

“I don’t think you go searching and seeking innovation necessarily… it’s asking good questions about stuff that’s really happening right now…and if you, if you can’t answer it then you’re gonna have to innovate. And find a way to figure out how you’re gonna answer that. That’s where innovation comes from. Necessity’s the mother of invention.”

Robert Kozinets (12.01.11)

“I mean, no-one likes to sit around on a park bench and say I’m an innovator…but…since you ask…I do think, it’s, it’s pushing the way in which we do qualitative research in a particular, more innovative direction. And there does seem to quite a lot of, what you might call, complacency about using sort of the tried and tested tools that we already have.”

David Gauntlett (18.01.11)

Page 21: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Constituting/Preserving the innovation• Coining a distinctive name• Set of procedures to be followed/clear procedural

guidelines (RK); stage-process (DG); specific training programme (MK)

• Books (training manuals)• Teaching method to students; business clients (RK)• Comprehensive training programme for children and

adults (MK)• Workshops: Learn about the process by doing the

process (DG)

Page 22: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Academic response to innovations

• Common theme – gradual/incremental process • Distinct profile for each case

Netnography – 148 citations; applied – marketing, business (75%)

Child-led research – 87 citations; referred/referenced – education (38%), childhood studies, social sciences.

Creative Research Methods – 38 citations; referred/referenced – media studies (23%), education, health. Applied – early career researchers.

Page 23: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

What makes an innovation?Primary conditions• Dissatisfaction with existing methods/approach• Identification of new phenomena• Opportunity to develop something new• Innovation must address ‘need’ (individual/social

science).• Innovation must be feasible/workable/accessible

Page 24: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Secondary Conditions• Marketing of innovation – publications, training,

web sites etc.• Evaluation – response/received• Academic legitimacy• Uptake• Duration

What makes an innovation?

Page 25: Researching Innovation In search of the mother of invention in an academic culture of necessity Methods@Plymouth 19 th -20 th 2011 Andrew Bengry-Howell,

Are our cases innovations?• ‘New’ (and to a degree) distinctive approaches• Address specific methodological issue• Evidence of uptake/acceptance/legitimacy

BUT• Claims to distinctiveness a problem (similar

approaches)• Unique attributes hard to assess• Durability unknowable