Creating sustainable services: Minority world SLPs in majority world contexts
108
JCPSLP
Volume 18, Number 3 2016
Journal of Clinical Practice in Speech-Language Pathology
Building collaboration
A participatory research initiative with Vietnam’s first
speech-language pathologists
Marie Atherton, Bronwyn Davidson, and Lindy McAllister
KEYWORDS
COLLABORATION
PARTICIPATORY
ACTION
RESEARCH
SPEECH-
LANGUAGE
PATHOLOGY
VIETNAM
THIS ARTICLE
HAS BEEN
PEER-
REVIEWED
Marie Atherton
(top), Bronwyn
Davidson
(centre), and
Lindy McAllister
sharing new knowledge, and developing new insights into
practices, situations, and processes that could be improved
(Chaiklin, 2011).
PAR is considered a methodology in its own right rather
than a set of research methods (Liamputtong, 2008).
Through iterative cycles of reflecting, planning, engaging in
action, and reflecting upon the outcomes/consequences
of actions undertaken (Figure 1), researchers and those
impacted by a problem develop new insights into the
problem and how it might best be addressed. Findings from
each cycle of the action spiral are fed into the next, with
the overall aim being the identification of actions that effect
positive practical change in relation to the issue of concern
(Kemmis et al., 2013).
A group of Vietnam’s first speech-language
pathology graduates and the primary author,
an Australian speech-language pathologist,
are participating as co-researchers in an
exploration of the emerging practice of
speech-language pathology in Vietnam. This
paper details the initial phases of this
collaborative research program. A description
of the research methodology and the
rationale for utilising participatory action
research are provided. Initial learnings from
the research, including those relating to the
vital role of the interpreter; challenges in
developing a shared understanding of
collaboration in research; and the impact of
distance and technology are described.
Speech-language pathologists from minority
world contexts are encouraged to consider
how they might develop partnerships with
international colleagues to support
collaborative initiatives to progress the
practice of speech-language pathology in
underserved communities.
P
articipatory action research (PAR) is an umbrella term
for a heterogeneous group of research practices
in which researchers and “the researched” work
together to examine a situation (or problem) and identify
strategies and actions to change the situation for the better
(Kemmis, McTaggart & Nixon, 2013; Kingdon, Pain, &
Kesby, 2007). PAR is situated within the genre of
action
research
, a research approach credited to Kurt Lewin,
a social psychologist, who demonstrated the benefit
of workers participating in research that would inform
decisions impacting their work (Lewin, 1946, as cited in
Adelman, 1993). In the latter half of the twentieth century,
Brazilian educator Paulo Freire further developed the
concept of participation and collaboration in research by
arguing that through participation in decisions regarding
their lives, every person, regardless of the level of their
impoverishment or disempowerment, could be empowered
to make changes in their lives for the better (Friere, 1970).
Critical to Friere’s position was the value of conducting
research
with
(not on) people as a means of creating and
Reflect
Reflect
Reflect
Plan
Plan
Act
Act
Observe
Observe
Figure 1. Action research cycles. Retrieved from
http://cei.ust.hk/teaching-resources/action-research. Copyright 2010–2016
by Centre for Education Innovation, HKUST. Reprinted with
permission.