Sonja Grover’s research while affiliated with Lakehead University and other places

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Publications (1)


Why Won’t They Listen to Us?On Giving Power and Voice to Children Participating in Social Research
  • Article

February 2004

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636 Reads

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362 Citations

Childhood

Sonja Grover

This article discusses the need for authentic social research with children given the fact that increasingly such research is being relied on to inform social policy which profoundly affects the lives of children. Authentic research is operationalized in this article as that research which gives power and voice to child research participants and which provides insights into their subjective world. Such research allows the children to a degree to be ‘subject’ or ‘collaborator’ in the research process rather than simply study ‘object’. Giving power and voice to children in the research context involves issues of research methodology and opportunities to contribute to research agendas and ethics guidelines such that the need and right to be heard is better met. Empathetic understanding in research with children as a byproduct of combining quantitative approaches with the phenomenological perspective is also discussed.

Citations (1)


... Importantly, we believe that expanding the theoretical perspective of success also provides a basis for truly understanding how young people feel, think, and create knowledge. This has further implications regarding how we uphold the rights of youth and how youth are viewed as agentic, competent social actors (Checkoway, 2011;Day and Wiesner, 2019;Grover, 2004;Skelton, 2002). In light of the potential implications of this research, the limitations must be considered. ...

Reference:

The fluidity of success over time: Understanding the experience of success through the voices of young people
Why Won’t They Listen to Us?On Giving Power and Voice to Children Participating in Social Research
  • Citing Article
  • February 2004

Childhood