Interchange, Vol. 39/3, 303–325, 2008. © Springer 2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10780-008-9068-x
Notes Toward a Naturalistic Study
of Education Research Methodology
DAVID BOOTE
University of Central Florida
ABSTRACT: As the educational research community has
struggled with research issues over the last few decades, we have
turned almost exclusively to epistemologically oriented
methodology for answers. Implicit in this methodological discourse
are three questionable presuppositions about the relationship
between methods and methodology and between researchers and
methodologists. First, it presumes that that the relationship is
deontic, implying that researchers have a duty to follow the
methods prescribed by particular methodologies. Second, it
presumes that the relationship is universalistic, meaning that it is
the responsibility of a researcher to apply the methods prescribed
by a methodology without regard to contextual contingencies.
Third, it presumes that that the relationship is individualistic,
meaning that it is the responsibility of an individual researcher to
demonstrate fidelity to prescribed methods. This paper refutes
these presuppositions by drawing on naturalistic studies of
research to argue that good educational research is a social activity
concerned with persuading an audience by contributing to our
collective concerns. In doing so, researchers use methodologies and
methods as resources in generating persuasive research that is
improvisational in nature. However, this description of educational
research is only preliminary so this article also suggests studies of
educational research that will describe key aspects of doing good
research.
KEYWORDS: Research methodology, educational research,
sociology of science, faculty publication, rhetoric, improvisation,
social cognition, epistemology.
Consider the following questions:
(1) How ought educational researchers arrive at their beliefs about
educational issues?
(2) How do educational researchers arrive at their beliefs about
educational issues?
Almost without exception, educational research methodologists presume
that question (1) is their proper domain. They also believe that