Does visual participatory research have resilience-promoting value? Teacher experiences of generating and interpreting drawings
Abstract
I report on a phenomenological investigation into teacher experiences of generating
and interpreting drawings during their participation in the Resilient Educators
(REds) intervention. All 18 teacher participants came from rural communities
challenged by HIV&AIDS. I reflect critically on the ambivalence in teacher experiences
of drawings to highlight the complexity of employing drawings as visual
method. Then, I interpret the teachers’ methodological experiences through the lens
of social-ecological understandings of resilience in order to address the question of
how drawings, as form of visual participatory methodology, may make a positive
difference and nurture participant resilience. What the teachers’ experiences suggest
is that drawings offer methodological opportunities for participants to make constructive
meaning of adversity, to take action, to experience mastery, and to regulate
emotion associated with adversity. All of the aforementioned are well documented
pathways to resilience. I theorise, therefore, that researchers with a social conscience
would be well advised to use drawings, albeit in competent and participatory
ways, as this methodology potentiates participant resilience and positive change
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/17854http://www.sajournalofeducation.co.za/index.php/saje/article/view/656/314
Collections
- Faculty of Humanities [2042]