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This resource explores a children's rights approach to research as advocated by Kay Tisdall, Programme Director of MSc in Childhood Studies at the University of Edinburgh. It emphasizes the need for research aims, processes, and outcomes to align with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) standards. By engaging children as rights-holders, the approach empowers them to claim their rights while equipping duty-bearers to fulfill their obligations. Participatory methods are highlighted for their ethical and epistemological benefits, promoting inclusivity and enhancing understanding of children's perspectives.
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Research methodology about children’s rights Kay Tisdall, k.tisdall@ed.ac.uk Programme Director of MSc in Childhood Studies, University of Edinburgh Co-Director CRFR
What might be a children’s rights approach to research? • Research aims should be informed by the CRC standards; • Research processes should comply with the CRC standards; and • Research outcomes should build the capacity of children, as rights-holders, to claim their rights and build the capacity of duty-bearers to fulfil their obligations. http://www.qub.ac.uk/research-centres/CentreforChildrensRights/ChildrensRights-BasedResearch/#d.en.335811
What do young people advise? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nB6rDYLPf0A
http://www.ncb.org.uk/media/110695/pear_leaflet_final_lores2.pdfhttp://www.ncb.org.uk/media/110695/pear_leaflet_final_lores2.pdf
Turning to the person next to you … Introduce yourself and then talk about … What implications do children’s rights have for research methods?
Claims for ‘participatory’ methods • Epistemological benefits: participatory techniques “access and valorize previously neglected knowledges and provide more nuanced understandings of complex social phenomena.” Kesby (2000, p.423). Helping to improve decision making and efficiency.
2. Ethical Benefits: “effective methodology and ethics go hand in hand…the reliability and validity, and the ethical acceptability, of research with children can be augmented by using an approach which gives children control over the research process and methods which are in tune with children’s ways of seeing and relating to their world.” (Thomas and O’Kane 1998, p.336-337) 3. Inclusive: • Multiple methods allow for multiple ways of communicating • Creative or arts-based methods are ‘levellers’, so all can participate
More information on CRFR, University of Edinburgh .. Continuing Professional Courses on research and consultation with children and young people … http://www.crfr.ac.uk/eventsandtraining/training/cpd-training/ MSc/Diploma in Childhood Studies http://www.sps.ed.ac.uk/pgtcs