Author:
Muhammad Yaar,Safdar Samina,Saif Sajida
Abstract
In this paper, we explore the critical role of action research in realizing educational reform within Pakistan. It posits that the gap between educational theory and classroom practice has historically hindered significant improvements in Pakistan’s education system. This makes action research and its process comprising of planning, acting, and reflecting cycle an excellent method to meet these two opposite ends. Action research is a highly formative exercise; it calls for empowering educators as researchers in their classrooms, building an organizational culture tuned to inquiry and evidence-based decision-making. This paper reviews an approach that can meet the unique educational challenges of Pakistan that arise due to complex socio-economic contexts, multilingual classrooms, and resource constraints. We illustrate case studies and review the literature to indicate how action research has supported teaching innovation, improved student learning outcomes, and created greater policy ownership. The review argues for the potential of action research in Pakistan and how it can be beneficial as a tool that fosters reflection among practitioners and as a source enriching teacher professional development and thereby triggering broader educational change. The paper concludes with suggestions of how action research might be integrated into teacher education and school improvement initiatives.
Publisher
Research for Humanity (Private) Limited
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