The Role and Value of Fieldwork
The Role and Value of Fieldwork
This article draws on research undertaken with geography teachers from six
state secondary schools in a northern English city1 in 2005. The research
demonstrated the variety of different roles that fieldwork can fulfil. Since
different fieldwork strategies prioritise different learning outcomes it is perhaps
unsurprising that there are so many educational justifications for doing
fieldwork. Job et al (1999) have grouped these into five broad educational
purposes, and although there is some overlap between the categories this
provides a useful means of organising a substantial body of research.
1. Conceptual development
1
Quotes from some of the teachers who were interviewed for this research are included in
this article. Pseudonyms have been used to protect the confidentiality of those involved with
the research.
2. Skills
Well, it’s the laboratory isn’t it? You can’t prove things without actually
doing some concrete data collection and analysis. It brings everything to
life. (Clifford School, geography teacher)
3. Aesthetics
Fieldwork is frequently valued for its ability to fulfil such a wide range of roles,
many of which link to the wider curriculum. Crucially, it’s fieldwork’s ability to
combine different educational objectives that makes it a potentially effective
method of learning (Hall et al 2002). However, there are other reasons why
fieldwork is valued. For example, fieldwork may be valued for its ability to
raise the profile of geography within a school. For others, fieldwork is simply
integral to the discipline’s ethos, culture and pedagogy (Holmes and Walker
2006). Sauer’s assertion that “the principal training of the geographer should
come, wherever possible, by doing field work” (1956, 296) is a reflection of the
importance traditionally attached to fieldwork within the discipline.
However, evidence from this research suggested that, for some geography
teachers, the value of fieldwork had become overshadowed in recent years by
the constraints facing those organising fieldwork. It is therefore important that
all those involved in the fieldwork planning process recognise the variety of
different roles that fieldwork can fulfil as well as its potential to inspire and
motivate a future generation of geographers:
I think it’s a completely integral part of geography. I don’t see how you
can teach geography without doing it. (Clifford School, geography
teacher)