Effective Practice Research - According to Hamilton and Jaaniste (2014, p. 233) research targeting a stated goal or solving a specific problem with the aim to improve the situation or process in some way. A research question is created in response to a specific situation and then determining what is required to solve that question using empirical analysis, defined by Merriam-Webster as "originating in or based on observation or experience" (empirical, n.d)
Evocative Practice Research - research with no particular goal, rather the exploration of some creative interest to provide insight in that area. Evocative research most often does not have a specific resolution initially, rather it seeks to broaden the researchers experiences through experiments and speculation. (Hamilton & Jaaniste, 2014, p. 234)
Use these methodologies to explain:
"Visualising Resilience" - Effective
"in another light" - Evocative
"More than half a life" - hybrid evocative to effective
"Designing Sound for health and well-being" - hybrid evocative to effective
"Investigating the Bat/Human problem" - hybrid effective to evocative
Analyse where my project fits within the Effective/Evocative paradigms. Use vocab from the reading, reflect on what impact this has on my project: Refining my question, Defining my outcome/artefact, Articulating my process of working.
References:
- Empirical. (n.d.) In Merriam-Webster’s dictionary. Retrieved from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/empirical
- Hamilton, J., & Jaaniste, L. (2014). The effective and the evocative: A spectrum of creative practice research. In E. Barrett & B. Bolt (Eds.), Material Inventions: Applying creative arts research (pp. 232-255). London, UK: I. B Tauris
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