Systematic observation in educational research (DUH135)

The course presents a broad orientation on central issues on research applying systematic observation in education. The course introduces students to research on classroom interaction and methodological aspects of such research. Further, the course offers an introduction to research design particularly related to systematic observation. Aspects of validity, reliability and research ethics in observational studies are addressed. Also, combining observation and other data sources will be addressed.


Course description for study year 2024-2025. Please note that changes may occur.

Facts

Course code

DUH135

Version

1

Credits (ECTS)

5

Semester tution start

Autumn

Number of semesters

1

Exam semester

Autumn

Language of instruction

English

Content

The course consists of three parts:

1. Voluntary participation in a two-day European workshop on systematic observation. At the workshop the participants will meet updated knowledge on systematic observation in educational research from international researchers in the field and take part of discussions and seminars. For participants attending the workshop, it is possible to present their own ongoing work. Participation and travel expenses will be at their own cost.

2. Four days with lectures and seminars going into depth of themes relevant for systematic observation. These will be held at campus or digital. The two first days are held before the European workshop and the last two days will be held after (see specific dates).

3. In addition, a reading component is included containing key literature in the field that prepare participants for the workshop and the required documentation.

The two-day European workshop will contain keynote speakers and presentations from researchers concerned with the use of systematic observation in kindergarten through high school.

During the four days, there will be lectures introducing participants to systematic observation. The lectures will also address methodological aspects (both quantitative and qualitative) of systematic observation (e.g. validity, reliability, and combination with different data sources). Additional, seminars will provide opportunities for participants to put questions related to their own work up for discussion.

Required documentation for participants is a manuscript for an oral presentation in the seminar part of the course or at the European workshop, or an individual paper on a topic relevant for systematic observation in educational research.

Learning outcome

By completion of this course, the PhD candidate will:

    • Have a deeper understanding of the issues surrounding systematic classroom observation
    • Have knowledge of research design in observational studies
    • Have knowledge of classroom research and the combination of observational data with other data sources
    • Have knowledge of Classroom assessment scoring system (CLASS) and similar research protocols.

By completion of this course, the PhD candidate will have gained the following skills:

    • design systematic observational studies
    • consider aspects of validity and reliability of systematic observation studies
    • consider weaknesses and strengths of systematic observation studies
    • critically evaluate aspects of classroom observation studies and apply observational research design to their own Research

By completion of this course, the PhD candidate will have gained the following general competencies:

    • Knowledge on research approaches to classroom interaction processes and their impact on students’ learning outcome
    • Knowledge on systematic classroom observation
    • Knowledge on theoretical and methodological variety in systematic classroom (observation) research

Required prerequisite knowledge

None

Recommended prerequisites

Participants must meet the requirements for enrollment in PhD programs. Participants will benefit from in-depth knowledge of the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS) or similar observation protocols.

Exam

Form of assessment Weight Duration Marks Aid
Individual paper 1/1 Passed / Not Passed

Evaluation will be based on an individual paper (3000 words +/- 10%) addressing systematic observation or on a manuscript for an oral presentation in the seminar part of the course or at the European workshop (1500 words +/- 10%). The paper may be written in English or in a Scandinavian language. The paper is evaluated pass/fail.

Coursework requirements

Participation

Participation at least 80 % is mandatory for participants in the PhD-course.

Course teacher(s)

Course coordinator:

Maren Stahl Lerang

Course teacher:

Sigrun Karin Ertesvåg

Study Program Director:

Hein Berdinesen

Method of work

The course will consist of lectures and seminars. The seminar part welcomes different types of discussions based on participant’s ongoing work. Language: English

Open for

International and local students enrolled in a doctoral program. Applicants may be turned down due limitations in the number of places (max. 15 participants).

Course assessment

There must be an early dialogue between the course supervisor, the student union representative and the students. The purpose is feedback from the students for changes and adjustments in the course for the current semester.In addition, a digital subject evaluation must be carried out at least every three years. Its purpose is to gather the students experiences with the course.

Literature

Search for literature in Leganto