BARLEY, Ruth, CARTER, Caron and OMAR, Arwa (2024). Researching children’s Covid-19 friendship experiences online: methodological and ethical opportunities and challenges. Qualitative Research. [Article]
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Barley-ResearchingChildren'sCovid-19(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
Barley-ResearchingChildren'sCovid-19(AM).pdf - Accepted Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.
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Abstract
In March 2020 when the Covid-19 pandemic was rife and global lockdowns were
implemented research restrictions were also put in place curtailing established
research practice with children. These restrictions required researchers to reflexively
navigate the interplay between responsiveness and responsibility to ensure that
ethical processes continued to be fluid and co-produced. Teasing out the ethical
dilemmas, this article examines the enforced online research experience with
children during this time to show its complexities and idiosyncratic nature. It draws
upon data examples from a pilot case study project with ten 7-11-year-olds
investigating how children maintained their friendships during lockdown in the UK.
Data were collected through a range of creative participatory research methods
accompanied by an open-ended online unstructured interview. This paper has
implications for researchers and educators for future online data collection with
children as it reflects on the ethical maze of doing research with children online.
Reflections provide new insights into how allowing children to choose their creative
method facilitated the production of agentic knowledge.
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