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Using participative techniques to mediate power relationships between the researcher and child participant

journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-28, 16:42 authored by Cheryl Greyson, Sara Spear
<p dir="ltr">Purpose: This study aims to explore how power dynamics affect research with children, focusing on how the projected and perceived role of the researcher and the use of participative techniques, can mediate power relationships between the researcher and child, and impact children’s agency. </p><p dir="ltr">Design/methodology/approach: The research formed part of a wider study on children’s digital device use, with children aged 4 to 11 in a UK school. Eight pairs of children participated in buddy interviews, completing several creative and arts-based activities using a choice of equipment and materials, including PlayDoh, LEGO and most innovatively, Minecraft. </p><p dir="ltr">Findings: The study found the researcher’s projected role, and children’s interpretation of this, impacted the power relations in the interviews. A consistent projection was challenging however, and it was necessary for the researcher to adapt their role according to children’s needs and behaviour. Offering children a choice of activities was an effective power sharing strategy, and children’s absorption in these tasks provided a wealth of data from observations and children’s on-task “chatter”. </p><p dir="ltr">Originality/value: Using Minecraft as a participative method enabled the children to use their superior technical abilities to take power in the interview, and show their own personal geographies virtually in 3D, and offers potential for other qualitative researchers in conducting research with the agentic child.</p>

History

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

24

Issue number

4

Page range

500-512

Publication title

Young Consumers

ISSN

1747-3616

Publisher

Emerald

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Affiliated with

  • ARU Peterborough Outputs