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Ethical Issues in Teacher Research by Floyd M. Hammack — 1997This article identifies and examines the ethical issues surrounding teacher research,
especially when the participants of the research are the teachers' own students. I first
explore the movement to increase the relevance and applicability of research on and
for teachers, and then address ethical issues in teaching and in research, especially
as they stem from federal regulation requiring the protection of human subjects. The
article then turns to the specific issues that arise in teacher research. Dual-role conflicts
are described, as are the difficulties of assuring unfettered informed consent.
The article relates these problems to the difficulties of deciding what is research and
what is normal educational practice in the classroom setting, especially when qualitative
research methodologies are used. Suggestions as to how the potential conflicts
and ethical problems can be addressed are provided, but teacher researchers are cautioned that work with their own students raises particularly thorny issues.To view the full-text for this article you must be signed-in with the appropropriate membership. Please review your options below:
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- Floyd Hammack
New York University
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