Home Linguistics & Semiotics Chapter 12. Ethical research considerations in classroom and online spaces with bilingual students and their teachers
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Chapter 12. Ethical research considerations in classroom and online spaces with bilingual students and their teachers

  • Wayne E. Wright
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company

Abstract

In this chapter I discuss the macro- and micro-ethical ethical dilemmas I have faced in four past and current research projects with bilingual students in physical and online learning spaces. These include obtaining IRB approval, securing informed consent, ensuring participant confidentiality, addressing unanticipated ethical issues in the field, and making decisions about appropriate public uses of the data. I discuss how research in online learning spaces can introduce new macro- and micro-ethical issues. To illustrate macro-ethical issues, I will provide two examples from studies in heritage language programs to demonstrate challenges related to following IRB protocols. Next, to illustrate micro-ethical issues, I discuss a series of ethical questions which arose during a study of newcomer ELL students. Finally, I will discuss both macro- and micro-ethics issues myself and members of our larger research team have addressed or continue to grapple with in a large-scale longitudinal study of ELL and dual language bilingual education (DLBE) teachers. The chapter concludes by reaffirming the need for ethical reflexivity and responsible decision making during all phases of the research process, and offers suggestions for doing so.

Abstract

In this chapter I discuss the macro- and micro-ethical ethical dilemmas I have faced in four past and current research projects with bilingual students in physical and online learning spaces. These include obtaining IRB approval, securing informed consent, ensuring participant confidentiality, addressing unanticipated ethical issues in the field, and making decisions about appropriate public uses of the data. I discuss how research in online learning spaces can introduce new macro- and micro-ethical issues. To illustrate macro-ethical issues, I will provide two examples from studies in heritage language programs to demonstrate challenges related to following IRB protocols. Next, to illustrate micro-ethical issues, I discuss a series of ethical questions which arose during a study of newcomer ELL students. Finally, I will discuss both macro- and micro-ethics issues myself and members of our larger research team have addressed or continue to grapple with in a large-scale longitudinal study of ELL and dual language bilingual education (DLBE) teachers. The chapter concludes by reaffirming the need for ethical reflexivity and responsible decision making during all phases of the research process, and offers suggestions for doing so.

Chapters in this book

  1. 日本言語政策学会 / Japan Association for Language Policy. 言語政策 / Language Policy 10. 2014 i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Section I. Methodological approaches
  6. Chapter 1. A taxonomy of questionable research practices in quantitative humanities 10
  7. Chapter 2. Corpus linguistics and ethics 28
  8. Chapter 3. Ethical issues in educational action research 45
  9. Chapter 4. Doing research in culturally and linguistically diverse K-12 classrooms 59
  10. Chapter 5. Ethical considerations for research involving computer-assisted language learning, social media, and online environments 72
  11. Chapter 6. Transcription as ethics 87
  12. Commentary on Section I 110
  13. Section II. Specific populations and research contexts
  14. Chapter 7. The zero-sum game of beneficence 122
  15. Chapter 8. Ethical research with adult migrant language learners 136
  16. Chapter 9. Ethics in heritage language education 155
  17. Chapter 10. The ethics of indigenous language revitalization 172
  18. Chapter 11. “Where you from, who’s your Mob?” 192
  19. Commentary on Section II 210
  20. Section III. Pedagogy and policy
  21. Chapter 12. Ethical research considerations in classroom and online spaces with bilingual students and their teachers 218
  22. Chapter 13. Ethical issues in language testing 235
  23. Chapter 14. Navigating ethical challenges in L2 writing in transnational higher education 249
  24. Chapter 15. Challenges of justice and equity for ethical English as an additional language in school education 266
  25. Commentary on Section III 285
  26. Section IV. Personal and interactive aspects of research and scholarship
  27. Chapter 16. Managing publication expectations and collaborations 296
  28. Chapter 17. Ethical dilemmas of graduate students negotiating new roles and responsibilities 310
  29. Chapter 18. Research ethics and decisions 328
  30. Chapter 19. The ethical gray area 341
  31. Commentary on Section IV 355
  32. Afterword 364
  33. 日本言語政策学会 / Japan Association for Language Policy. 言語政策 / Language Policy 10. 2014 371
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