In this article the author discusses some issues with conducting historical research, rooted in her own experiences. She focuses on four main points: minimising one's own biases, choosing a suitable research question, evaluating the quality of the sources and providing a balanced interpretation of events. She argues that using a historical approach to understand an educational phenomenon is both a fact-finding process and an opportunity to revisit one's own values, and is an important way to confirm or reinterpret what we know about current educational practices.
CITATION STYLE
Li, A. (2013). Historical research in comparative education: A discussion of some methodological issues. Research in Comparative and International Education, 8(1), 17–26. https://doi.org/10.2304/rcie.2013.8.1.17
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