At last an engaging and well-reasoned defense of scientific rationality. This is a powerful antidote to the myriad critics who disparage or dismiss the social sciences.
- David C. Berliner, Regents' Professor Emeritus, Arizona State University,
This book is a must-read for all who are concerned with the mission and nature of educational research.
- Gavriel Salomon, University of Haifa, Israel,
Phillips and Burbules, two leading philosophers of education, have produced a much needed examination of just how far the possibility for social science has been undercut by critiques intended to undercut the credibility of scientific knowledge. Their clearly written book will help educational researchers understand how effective, disciplined research is possible in a post-positivist world. The authors systematically examine the problems created by the fallibility of knowledge, the inevitable value-ladenness of research, and the existence of varying perspectives, showing how the pursuit of truth can remain a reasonable activity. The book should be required reading for those learning to do educational research, filling the gap between how-to books on research method and post-positivist accounts that embrace, or at least flirt with, relativism. By blending careful argument with concrete examples, Phillips and Burbules help students recognize the limits of research without abandoning the quest for warranted claims to knowledge.
- Robert E. Floden, Michigan State University,
Chapter 1 What is Postpositivism?
Chapter 2 Philosophical Commitments of Postpositivist Researchers
Chapter 3 Objectivity, Relativity, and Value Neutrality
Chapter 4 Can, and Should, Educational Inquiry be Scientific?
This series is designed to explore some of the most important philosophical and theoretical positions influencing educational research today, in a manner that does justice to the substance of these views and shows their relevance for research purposes and practices. A distinguished international group of scholars explains these positions in straightforward terms, making these books suitable for courses in Educational Research Methods and Foundations of Educational Research. The overall goal of the series is to keep a wider discussion about these positions relevant to educational research at a time when the tendency is toward a narrowing of methods and methodologies. Each volume will show how a particular set of philosophical and theoretical positions affects the methods and aims of educational research; and each will discuss specific examples of research that shows these orientations at work. The emphasis is on lively, accessible, but theoretically sound explorations of the issues. These books are intended to be of interest not only to educational researchers but to anyone in education wanting to understand what these various "isms" are about.
Series Editor: Nicholas C. Burbules