<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0123-1294</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Educación y Educadores]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[educ.educ.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0123-1294</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Universidad de La Sabana]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0123-12942010000100008</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Research as a means of empowering teachers in the 21st century]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[La investigación como medio de empoderamiento de los profesores en el siglo XXI]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Pesquisa como forma de empoderamento de professores no século XXI]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Fandiño]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Yamith J.]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidad de La Salle Facultad de Educación ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Bogotá, D. C. ]]></addr-line>
<country>Colombia</country>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>04</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>04</month>
<year>2010</year>
</pub-date>
<volume>13</volume>
<numero>1</numero>
<fpage>109</fpage>
<lpage>124</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0123-12942010000100008&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0123-12942010000100008&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0123-12942010000100008&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[The article proposes action research as a legitimate way to develop and empower teachers to be active knowers and critical agents who are capable of undertaking innovative action to transform their practices and circumstances as educators. It begins by considering the development and empowerment of teachers as intentional processes that allow teachers not only to question and resist means of regulation and control, but also to take command of their own lives in a way that enables them to develop their professional skills. It goes on to show how teachers can construct a personal and contextual theory of education or pedagogical know-how by systematically researching their teaching practices and classroom situations. Finally, it looks at what action research is, explains the different types and stages of action research, shows how it has been used in Colombia and proposes possible research problems and the types of empowerment that can result from them. The article ends by stating that teachers should resort to action research not only to gain and wield power, but also to make way for self-development and professional growth.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[Se busca proponer la investigación, la investigación acción en concreto, como unaforma legítima para desarrollary empoderar a los profesores para que, como conocedores activos y agentes críticos, puedan iniciar acciones innovadoras para transformar sus prácticas y realidades educativas, lo que les permitirá construir su propio saber pedagógico. Se empieza considerando el desarrollo y el empoderamiento docente como procesos intencionales que les permiten a los profesores no sólo cuestionar y resistir mecanismos de regulación y control sino tomar las riendas de sus vidas para desarrollar sus competencias profesionales. Luego, se muestra cómo ellos pueden construir una teoría educativa o saber pedagógico personal y contextual al investigar sus prácticas docentes y realidades de aula. Por último, se analiza la investigación acción, se explican sus tipos y etapas, se presenta cómo se ha usado en Colombia y se proponen posibles problemas de investigación y los tipos de empoderamientos que de ellos pueden surgir. Se concluye con la afirmación de que los profesores deberían recurrir a la investigación acción no sólo para ganar y ejercer poder sino para abrir espacios para el autodesarrollo y el crecimiento profesional.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[Este trabalho propõe apesquisa-ação como umaforma legítimade desenvolver e empoderar aos professores para que, como agentes ativos e conhecedores críticos, possam tomar medidas innovadoras para transformar suas práticas e realidades educacionais. Começa a considerar o desenvolvimento e o empoderamento de professores como um processo intencional que lhes permite não só desafiar e resistir uma regulação e os mecanismos de controle, mas também dirigir suas vidas para desenvolver suas habilidades profissionais. Em seguida, mostra como os professores podem construir uma teoria educacional ou conhecimento pedagógico pessoal e contextual ao pesquisar sistematicamente suas práticas docentes e as realidades da sala de aula. Finalmente, discute-se que é pesquisa-ação, explicam-se seus tipos e fases, mostra-se como tem sido utilizada na Colômbia e sugerem-se possíveis problemas de pesquisa e os tipos de empoderamento que possam surgir dela. O artigo conclui afirmando que os professores deveriam utilizar a pesquisa-ação não só para adquirir e exercer o poder, mas também para criar oportunidades de auto-desenvolvimento e crescimento profissional.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Education action research]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[education research]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[teaching practice]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[professional training]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[innovation in education]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Docencia]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[práctica pedagógica]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[formación profesional]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[innovación educacional]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[investigación]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Pesquisa-ação educacional]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[pesquisa educacional]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[prática pedagógica]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[formação profissional]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[inovação educacional]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font face="verdana" size="2">     <p align="center"><font size="4"><b>Research as a means of empowering teachers in the 21st century</b></font></p>     <p align="center"><b><font size="3">La investigaci&oacute;n como medio de empoderamiento de los profesores en el siglo XXI</font></b></p>     <p align="center"><font size="3"><b>Pesquisa como forma de empoderamento de professores no s&eacute;culo XXI</b></font></p>     <p align="center">&nbsp;</p>     <p align="right">Hoy se evidencia una diversidad sorprendente y a la vez,    <br>   estimulante de buscar y encontrar el conocimiento, darle    <br>   validez y cientificidad. Procesos que reclaman docentes    <br>   [...] interesados, no en repetir saberes, sino por el contrario,    <br>   docentes cuya labor est&eacute; &iacute;ntimamente relacionada con    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<br>   la construcci&oacute;n del conocimiento; en suma, docentes    <br>   dispuestos a aprender y desaprender para ser part&iacute;cipes    <br>   del desarrollo de la ciencia al servicio del ser humano.    <br>   <i>Isabel Hern&aacute;ndez Arteaga </i>(2009)</p>     <p><b>Yamith J. Fandi&ntilde;o</b></p>     <p>Mag&iacute;ster en docencia.    <br>   Docente, Facultad de Ciencias y Educaci&oacute;n, Universidad Distrital Francisco Jos&eacute; de Caldas, Bogot&aacute;, D. C., Colombia.    <br>   Docente, Facultad de Educaci&oacute;n, Universidad de La Salle, Bogot&aacute;, D. C., Colombia.    <br>   <a href="mailto:teacheryamith@gmail.com">teacheryamith@gmail.com</a></p> <hr>     <p><b>Abstract</b></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><i>The article proposes action research as a legitimate way to  develop and empower teachers to be active knowers and critical agents  who are capable of undertaking innovative action to transform their  practices and circumstances as educators. It begins by considering the  development and empowerment of teachers as intentional processes that  allow teachers not only to question and resist means of regulation and  control, but also to take command of their own lives in a way that  enables them to develop their professional skills. It goes on to show  how teachers can construct a personal and contextual theory of  education or pedagogical know-how by systematically researching their  teaching practices and classroom situations. Finally, it looks at what  action research is, explains the different types and stages of action  research, shows how it has been used in Colombia and proposes possible  research problems and the types of empowerment that can result from  them. The article ends by stating that teachers should resort to action  research not only to gain and wield power, but also to make way for  self-development and professional growth.</i></p>     <p><b>Key words</b></p>     <p><i>Education action research, education research, teaching practice,  professional training, innovation in education (Source: UNESCO  Thesaurus).</i></p> <hr>     <p><b>Resumen</b></p>     <p><i>Se busca proponer la investigaci&oacute;n, la investigaci&oacute;n acci&oacute;n en  concreto, como unaforma leg&iacute;tima para desarrollary empoderar a los  profesores para que, como conocedores activos y agentes cr&iacute;ticos,  puedan iniciar acciones innovadoras para transformar sus pr&aacute;cticas y  realidades educativas, lo que les permitir&aacute; construir su propio saber  pedag&oacute;gico. Se empieza considerando el desarrollo y el empoderamiento  docente como procesos intencionales que les permiten a los profesores  no s&oacute;lo cuestionar y resistir mecanismos de regulaci&oacute;n y control sino  tomar las riendas de sus vidas para desarrollar sus competencias  profesionales. Luego, se muestra c&oacute;mo ellos pueden construir una teor&iacute;a  educativa o saber pedag&oacute;gico personal y contextual al investigar sus  pr&aacute;cticas docentes y realidades de aula. Por &uacute;ltimo, se analiza la  investigaci&oacute;n acci&oacute;n, se explican sus tipos y etapas, se presenta c&oacute;mo  se ha usado en Colombia y se proponen posibles problemas de  investigaci&oacute;n y los tipos de empoderamientos que de ellos pueden  surgir. Se concluye con la afirmaci&oacute;n de que los profesores deber&iacute;an  recurrir a la investigaci&oacute;n acci&oacute;n no s&oacute;lo para ganar y ejercer poder  sino para abrir espacios para el autodesarrollo y el crecimiento  profesional.</i></p>     <p><b>Palabras clave</b></p>     <p><i>Docencia, pr&aacute;ctica pedag&oacute;gica, formaci&oacute;n profesional, innovaci&oacute;n educacional, investigaci&oacute;n (Fuente: Tesauro de la Unesco).</i></p> <hr>     <p><b>Resumo</b></p>     <p><i>Este trabalho prop&otilde;e apesquisa-a&ccedil;&atilde;o como umaforma leg&iacute;timade  desenvolver e empoderar aos professores para que, como agentes ativos e  conhecedores cr&iacute;ticos, possam tomar medidas innovadoras para  transformar suas pr&aacute;ticas e realidades educacionais. Come&ccedil;a a  considerar o desenvolvimento e o empoderamento de professores como um  processo intencional que lhes permite n&atilde;o s&oacute; desafiar e resistir uma  regula&ccedil;&atilde;o e os mecanismos de controle, mas tamb&eacute;m dirigir suas vidas  para desenvolver suas habilidades profissionais. Em seguida, mostra  como os professores podem construir uma teoria educacional ou  conhecimento pedag&oacute;gico pessoal e contextual ao pesquisar  sistematicamente suas pr&aacute;ticas docentes e as realidades da sala de  aula. Finalmente, discute-se que &eacute; pesquisa-a&ccedil;&atilde;o, explicam-se seus  tipos e fases, mostra-se como tem sido utilizada na Col&ocirc;mbia e  sugerem-se poss&iacute;veis problemas de pesquisa e os tipos de empoderamento  que possam surgir dela. O artigo conclui afirmando que os professores  deveriam utilizar a pesquisa-a&ccedil;&atilde;o n&atilde;o s&oacute; para adquirir e exercer o  poder, mas tamb&eacute;m para criar oportunidades de auto-desenvolvimento e  crescimento profissional.</i></p>     <p><b>Palavras-chave</b></p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><i>Pesquisa-a&ccedil;&atilde;o educacional, pesquisa educacional, pr&aacute;tica  pedag&oacute;gica, forma&ccedil;&atilde;o profissional, inova&ccedil;&atilde;o educacional (Fonte: Tesouro  da Unesco).</i></p> <hr>     <p><b><font size="3">Introduction</font></b></p>     <p>The twenty-first century has brought sweeping changes in education.  On the one hand, the increasing globalization and ever-changing  dynamics of the modern world demand the formation of a new type of  professional, one who is capable of dealing with the unexpected and the  complex. On the other hand, the ongoing debate and the intellectual  inquiries of the academic world have set forth the reasons for  developing better educational systems, specifically in the sense of  frameworks designed to favour creativity and questioning. As a result,  many countries have engaged in a series of educational reforms with  respect to infrastructure, curriculum, methods and evaluation.</p>     <p>One of the key elements in most educational reform is the teacher.  Societies are finally understanding, as stated by Eleonora  Villegas-Reimers (2003, p. 7), that the teacher is not just one of the  variables that must be changed if their educational systems are to be  improved. Societies are realizing the teacher is also one of the most  significant agents of change in such reforms. For Villegas-Reimers,  this dual role — being both the subject and the object of change —  makes the field of teacher development a challenging area, one that has  received major attention in past years.</p>     <p>Societies and educational institutions expect a great deal from their teachers<a href="#1" name="s1"><sup>1</sup></a>.  Teachers are expected to respond adequately to the pressing demands of  the modern world and to the growing concerns of the educational  community. They also are expected to be highly professional and to have  considerable expertise, so as to guarantee qualified and successful  educational processes and practices. Consequently, more and more  teachers are opting to participate in on-the-job training, training  courses and postgraduate education in order to grow professionally and  to develop as teachers. But, what exactly is teacher development? The  following section deals with that topic.</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Teacher Development</font></b></p>     <p>Broadly speaking, teacher development is the professional growth a  teacher achieves by gaining added experience and by methodically  examining his or her teaching. It is a long-term process that includes  routine opportunities and systematic experiences planned to foster  growth and development in the teaching profession. It is broader than  career development, which is the growth that results from moving  through the professional career cycle, and broader than staff  development, which involves the provision of organized in-service  programmes (Glatthorn, 1995, p. 41, cited in Villegas-Reimers, 2003, p.  11).</p>     <p>With regard to professional development, Ingvarson (1998) contrasts a <i>traditional system, </i>identifying it as in-service training with goals established by governments and employers, with a <i>standard-base system </i>where  professional bodies decide on goals and models. Cochran-Smith and Lytle  (2001, p. 47) described three systems of professional development that  coexist in the educational world and are used to explain and justify  different approaches to improving teaching and learning. They are: <i>knowledge-for-practice </i>(formal theory generated by university-based researchers and used by teachers to improve their practice), <i>knowledge-in-practice </i>(practical knowledge that is embedded in practice), and <i>knowledge-of-practice </i>(reflective knowledge that emerges when teachers ponder their practice).</p>     <p>Robison Acosta Roa (2006) is of the opinion that teacher development  must reflect on pedagogical, epistemological, historical and social  elements if they are to interpret the changes that mankind has  undergone. To do so, as explained by Acosta Roa, teachers need to  develop their capacity for proposing innovative strategies and to  strengthen their skill for intervening in the transformation of  education. Teacher development, then, should centre on creating methods  designed to bring together disciplinary and investigative relations  that are conducive to the formation of upright and well-around  teachers. Acosta Roa believes teacher development is intended to help  teachers attain a critical comprehension of what to teach, how to teach  and why.</p>     <p>Nevertheless, the premise that permeates this article is the belief  that teachers are not supposed to develop professionally to meet the  demands of today's society and to address the concerns of the  educational system but, more importantly, to take control of their own  lives and to develop their professional competence. Here, I concur with  Jack Whitehead (1989) who views professional development not as the  development of a technical/propositional teaching experience  (encyclopaedic knowledge applied in teaching practice to achieve  predetermined results) or merely as the development of a  reflective/critical philosophy of teaching (reflection used in  educational practice to bring into play a critique and transformation  of sociocultural contexts),<a href="#2" name="s2"><sup>2</sup></a> but as the construction of a living educational theory (a living form  of question and answer to view your own life and work; that is, a  living enquiry conducted by oneself to ask why one is the way one is  and why one does the things one does<a href="#3" name="s3"><sup>3</sup></a>).</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Jack Whitehead (1989) says teachers can, and should, develop  professionally by entering into a critical and systematic inner  dialogue to understand their own practices and circumstances. Teacher  development, therefore, needs to shift from propositional forms of  theory that deal with facts to dialectic forms of theory that show how  people explain their actions in terms of their own values and  intentions. Consequently, I understand teacher development as a process  of self-discovery, updating and fulfilment in which teachers are <i>active knowers </i>who are responsible for expounding their insights about the nature of their professional lives and <i>critical agents </i>who  are capable of acting on that knowledge to transform their practices  and circumstances. For me, teacher development is a process of  self-examination that helps teachers to become dynamic knowers and  analytical agents who are capable of realizing and understanding how  and why they do what they do and are committed to sharing and  communicating their findings and conclusions to others. It is,  therefore, a process that must provide teachers with empowerment and  pedagogic know-how. The following sections elaborate on that idea.</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Empowerment</font></b></p>     <p>Nanette Page and Cheryl E. Czuba's (1999) literature review of  articles with a focus on empowerment resulted in no clear definition of  the concept across disciplinary lines. They found that many who used  the term cope with its lack of a clear, shared meaning by employing the  concept in a very narrow sense, and using only their specific scholarly  discipline or program to inform them. Others did not define the term at  all. As a result, Page and Czuba concluded that many had come to view  empowerment as nothing more than a popular buzz word to be thrown in to  make sure old programs get new funding.</p>     <p>Page and Czuba (Op. cit., p. 3) claim that empowerment is <i>a  multi-dimensional social process that helps people to gain control over  their own lives and society, by acting on issues they define as  important. </i>It is multi-dimensional in that it occurs within  sociological, psychological, economic and other dimensions at various  levels (e.g. individual, group and community). Empowerment is social,  since it occurs in relation to others. Empowerment is a process,  because it is similar to a path or journey, one that develops as people  walk through it. For Page and Czuba, at the core of the concept of  empowerment is the idea of power, understood not merely as domination,  authority, control or influence, but also as a process of change within  the context of a relationship between people or things.</p>     <p>Alfonso S&aacute;nchez Pilonieta (2002) explains that empowerment, as a construct, refers to the development or increase of <i>power for </i>(a  means of or vehicle for action, generation or accomplishment) and  expansion of the capacity of a person or group to question and resist <i>power over </i>(a  mechanism for domination, obedience and submission). In his opinion,  empowerment seeks a close tie between the constitution of the subject  and the psychosocial ways of exercising power. Consequently, he defines  empowerment as <i>an ongoing, intersubjective, and intentional process  of converting individuals into subjects who are conscious of themselves  and their social circumstances, through comprehensive, critical and  transformative action on their own social interactions.</i></p>     <p>Following Foucault, S&aacute;nchez Pilonieta says the intentional process  of converting individuals into conscious subjects is comprised of two  moments. The first involves self-discovery of external chains and one's  own limitations, as well as the potential of one's community and one's  right to search for a better future. The second moment consists of the  exercise of social and political action that gradually permits the  transformations required for development as a free individual and  member of a community. Therefore, empowerment demands a political and  collective transformation that breaks the prevailing dominance, so  those who have been excluded or silenced can come into being.</p>     <p>One way to achieve such a radical transformation is narration.  According to S&aacute;nchez Pilonieta, through narrative action, what is  instituted is reaffirmed, what has not been taken into account can  become the foreground, and vice versa. Narration allows for listening  to people's stories and amplifying and valuing them in ways that allow  people to discover those stories and to create new ones. It can be used  to change a person's position in the world, since those who dominate  can lose or hand over their rank and those who were dominated can act  and be heard. Accordingly, narration can be a basic strategy for  approaching the practice and understanding of empowerment, because it  promotes processes whereby people can discover, believe and publicize  collective narratives containing their own story, a process free of the  predominant discourse and capable of achieving personal and social  change.</p>     <p>Pursuant to Page, Czuba and S&aacute;nchez Pilonieta, I understand empowerment as <i>a  multi-dimensional social process that helps individuals to gain and  exercise power over their own lives, practices and circumstances. It is  an ongoing and intentional process in which people become aware of  themselves, their sociocultural milieu and contextual factors. As a  result, not only can they question and resist mechanisms of regulation,  domination and control, they also can undertake critical and  transformative actions to generate better sociocultural interactions  and to accomplish personal and/or professional objectives. </i>Basically,  empowerment is obtained when one can generate a personal and social  narrative that distances itself from the dominant discourse, a  narrative that allows one to construct one's own discourse.<a href="#4" name="s4"><sup>4</sup></a> Therefore, empowerment can first be gained when one has the possibility of discovering and creating one's own "voice".<a href="#5" name="s5"><sup>5</sup></a> For me, in the case of teachers, the concept of voice is linked  inherently to the construction of their living educational theory; that  is, the structuring of their pedagogical know-how. I will come back to  this point later, but first let me discuss teacher empowerment in some  detail.</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Teacher Empowerment</font></b></p>     <p>Bruce Romanish (1993) maintains the meaning of teacher empowerment  should be considered before anyone can state that teachers are on the  road to a broader voice in educational affairs. He argues against  understanding it as simple actions to increase teacher knowledge,  because enhanced teacher preparation does not translate directly into  increased influence over the decisions that affect their capacity to  teach. Nor does improving the teacher's knowledge challenge the  top-down hierarchical structure of the status quo in which teachers are  merely the means through which the system exercises its will in the  classroom.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Instead, Romanish argues for an understanding of teacher empowerment  as validating the role and authority of the teacher's experience in  ways that enable teachers to overcome the barriers to effective  practice that their daily experiences deemed as necessary. This  understanding also demands that schools be regarded as sites for the  creation of democratic understanding and sympathies that guarantee  teachers' decision-making authority and increased power.</p>     <p>Thus, for Romanish, teacher empowerment revolves around helping  teachers to become central shapers of the educational enterprise by  validating their experience, decision-making authority and power, and,  ultimately, by making sure they have a genuine say in school practices  and circumstances.</p>     <p>Paula M. Short (1994), in concurrence with Zimmerman and Rappaport  (1988), regards it as a construct that ties teachers' personal  competence and ability to educational environments that provide  opportunities for a choice in demonstrating that competence. On the one  hand, teachers believe they have the skills and knowledge to act on a  situation and to improve it. On the other hand, schools create  opportunities for competence to be developed and displayed. For Short,  teacher empowerment is a process whereby school participants develop  the competence to take charge of their own growth and to resolve their  own problems, while school systems increase the capacity to distribute  roles in decision-making and to increase opportunities for meaningful,  collective participation.</p>     <p>According to M. Short, there are six dimensions of teacher empowerment:</p>     <p>- <i>Professional development: </i>Teachers' belief that the schools  where they work provide them with opportunities to grow and develop  professionally, to learn continuously and to expand their own skills  through the work of the school.</p>     <p>- <i>Autonomy: </i>Teachers' confidence in the sense of freedom to make decisions and to control aspects of their work life.<a href="#6" name="s6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>     <p>- <i>Involvement in decision making: </i>Teachers' participation in  and responsibility for critical decision-making that directly affects  their work: budgets, teacher selection, scheduling, curriculum and  other programmatic areas.</p>     <p>- <i>Teacher impact: </i>Teachers' perception that they have an impact and influence on school life.</p>     <p>- <i>Teacher status: </i>Teachers' belief that others truly respect  their professional knowledge and that they have the genuine support of  their colleagues.</p>     <p>- <i>Teacher self-efficacy: </i>Teachers' perception that they have  the skills to help students learn and are competent in building  effective programs to institute positive changes in student learning.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>In "Innovar e investigar: Dos modos de visibilizar el  posicionamiento y empoderamiento del docente," Mar&iacute;a Cristina Mart&iacute;nez  Pineda (2008) maintains that teacher empowerment can become visible  through research and innovation, because assuming educational practice  as an object of reflection produces an effect on the subjectivity of  teachers that increase their capacity for analysis, observation and  insight. Consistency and strength in innovation and research empower  teachers, since these activities position them as professionals who can  produce knowledge of education and exercise power over it. According to  Mart&iacute;nez Pineda, not only does assuming research and innovation  rigorously help teachers to develop attitudes towards inquiry,  criticism and communication, it also and, more importantly, helps them  to construct pedagogical know-how, which ultimately produces a  transformation of practices and subjects. Thus, teacher empowerment  enables teachers to be subjects of knowledge who are recognized,  requested and followed by others, a situation that facilitates the  emergence or strengthening of collectives, groups and networks of  teachers.</p>     <p>Taking into account Romanish, Short and Mart&iacute;nez Pineda's views, I understand teacher empowerment as <i>a  process whereby teachers develop, increase and validate their  experience, decision-making, and authority in order to have an  effective say in their educational practices and circumstances. It is  based on schools' commitment to sharing decision-making roles, to  creating room for significant collaborative participation, and to  ensuring the creation of democratic understanding. Teacher empowerment  helps teachers to exercise power over their educational lives, to  resist control mechanisms and to transform the educational system,  which ultimately challenges the top-down hierarchical structure of the  educational status quo. </i>Through research and innovation, teacher  empowerment can help teachers to generate and amplify their voice or  discourse on educational affairs, to build their living educational  theory, and to construct their pedagogical know-how.</p>     <p>Here, the point I am trying to make is that, if teachers are to be  empowered, they need to be able to exercise control over their own  educational lives, to gain the agency to realize and understand how and  why they do what they do, to have the competence to achieve personal  and social transformation, to become dynamic knowers and analytical  agents of their educational contexts, and to create their own  narratives free from dominant discourse. In brief, if teachers are to  be empowered, they need to be able to discover their own voice, to  construct their own living educational theory and to construct their  pedagogical know-how.</p>     <p><b><font size="3">The Construction of Pedagogical Know-how</font></b></p>     <p>According to Bernando Restrepo G&oacute;mez (2004), there is no consensus  on what pedagogy is, neither is there a consensus on what pedagogical  know-how is. Nevertheless, when the latter is mentioned, there is an  allusion to practical professional knowledge that deals with  formalization of the pedagogical know-how constructed by individual  teachers. For Restrepo G&oacute;mez, pedagogical know-how is the adaptation of  pedagogical theories to professional practice, in accordance with the  particular circumstances of the teacher's personality and the setting  in which he/she acts. It is more individual and personal. It is related  closely to the competence needed for effective practice and, although  it is based on pedagogical theories, it often is obliged to distance  itself from the official pedagogical discourse.</p>     <p>The construction of pedagogical know-how, says Bernan-do Romero,  involves a continuous dialogue between theory and practice. In this  dialogue, pedagogical adaptation deals with the disciplinary and  pedagogical spheres. The disciplinary sphere includes declarative and  procedural knowledge of the discipline being taught. The pedagogical  sphere, on the other hand, involves research and the construction of  know-how that allows students to assimilate a discipline and to  interiorize attitudes and values.</p>     <p>Besides facilitating a dialogue between theory and practice, the  construction of pedagogical know-how allows teachers to pass from  empirical/practical doing to reflective/critical practice. Initially,  they do so when they weave their daily pedagogical work in an effort to  respond adequately to the conditions of their working environment and  to the learning needs and sociocultural agenda of their students. Yet,  for the most part, they do so through reflection on their actions,  reflection that takes teachers from applying learned pedagogical  discourse to creating pedagogical know-how, specifically know-how that  enables them to criticize and transform their practice and reality.<a href="#7" name="s7"><sup>7</sup></a></p>     <p>In a similar vein, Gloria Calvo (2003) states that teachers'  know-how is professional knowledge that emerges from practice. It is  pragmatic knowledge linked to teachers' profession, duties and everyday  life, knowledge that leads to professional competence. It can be  legitimized through reflective and democratic studies on the  construction and reconstruction of educational practice. Therefore,  teachers need to recognize and use their capacity to produce theory  based on the daily actions and practices they implement in their  classrooms and educational institutions. For Calvo, teachers need to  realize they can write about their practice, they can ask research  questions, they can generate knowledge and they can give and receive  feedback on educational matters. In short, teachers' capacity to  understand their professional behaviour can be qualified, developed and  enhanced through systematic and profound research studies, which  eventually can favour the creation of a critical professional culture  founded on analysis, confrontation and transformation.</p>     <p>Based on the preceding sections, it seems reasonable to assume that  the construction of teachers' pedagogical know-how through research can  help to develop and empower teachers, because they can construct their  own living educational theory and find or enhance their voice in the  educational system. To recapitulate, research can:</p>     <p>- help teachers embark on a process of self-discovery, updating and fulfilment as <i>active knowers </i>responsible for elucidating the nature of their professional lives and <i>critical agents </i>capable of acting on that knowledge to transform their practices and circumstances (teacher development);</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>- enable teachers to generate a personal and social narrative that  distances itself from the dominant discourse and allows them not only  to resist mechanisms of submission and control, but also to undertake  critical and transformative actions to accomplish personal and/or  professional objectives (empowerment);</p>     <p>- aid teachers in developing, increasing and validating their  experience, decision-making, authority and power in order to have a  voice/discourse on their educational practices and the educational  circumstances of their schools, which ultimately prepares them to  accomplish social transformation/improvement (teacher empowerment); and</p>     <p>- allow teachers to have a constructive dialogue between theory and  practice and to pass from empirical/practical doing to  reflective/critical action, which permits them to systematize and  consolidate their educational practice, discourse and knowledge  (construction of pedagogical know-how). Research, then, seems to be a  key element in a teacher's development and empowerment. But, in  education, what is research? How should it be done? The following  sections focus on conducting research on education.</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Teacher Research</font></b></p>     <p>According to Virginia LoCastro (2000, p.1), when seeing or hearing  the phrase "teachers as researchers" most classroom practitioners  dismiss the idea as something they might do in the future, but for  which they have no time at present. Teachers also feel less than  confident with the notion of "research," as they may believe they lack  the training to carry out classroom research (CR). These reactions,  explains LoCastro, seemed understandable, since they derive from  traditional generalizations and beliefs about what research is and how  it should be done.</p>     <p>However, Bernando Restrepo G&oacute;mez (2000) says that teachers, in fact,  can do research when they submit their daily practice to rigorous  self-examination in order to respond adequately to their working  environment and to the needs and social agenda of their students. In  his opinion, teachers can use retrospection, introspection and  participatory observation to clarify guiding theories and to specify  pedagogical interventions in order to resignify and transform  unsuccessful practices. If done systematically and consistently,  Restrepo maintains teachers' empirical doing can become a reflective  practice.</p>     <p>In 1975, Stenhouse called for educational research centred on  educational processes and done by teachers. His student and  collaborator, John Elliot, continued this line of inquiry and published  a book on action research in education (1994) to develop that proposal.  According to Stenhouse and Elliot (1993, 1994), teaching should not be  an activity done by teachers and research on teaching should not be a  separate activity conducted by outside researchers. For them, the  practice of teaching should be regarded as a reflective activity, which  would dispel the division between teachers and researchers. In other  words, teaching and research should be assumed as an integrated action  on the part of educational practitioners.</p>     <p>Based on the foregoing theoretical appraisals, I argue in favour of regarding <i>teachers  as researchers who should permanently submit their daily practice to  rigorous self-examination in order to overcome their repetitive routine  and to transform their teaching practices and circumstances. At the  heart of teachers' research endeavours, there should be a focus on  critical inquiry into their own practice. </i>In other words, teachers  should use research to think about their own contexts, to analyze their  judgments and interpretations and to distance themselves in order to  open the basis of their work to inspection (Finch, 2005). However, an  obvious question arises: how can teachers use research in their  classrooms? The following sections will discuss classroom research and  action research in detail.</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Classroom Research</font></b></p>     <p>Daniel Madrid (2000, p. 2-3) indicates that classroom research (CR) is normally <i>practical  research, which is centred on the classroom. It aims to explain what  actually happens inside the classroom, the direct and indirect  influence of internal and external factors related to the student, the  teacher and the ELT curriculum. </i>As Van Lier (1988, p. 7) points  out, we know very little about what goes on in classrooms. Accordingly,  classroom research becomes an important tool to explain the  relationship between the diversity of variables that continuously  interact.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>According to Nunan (1989, p. 15), CR can shed light on the  interaction between two of the most important variables in classrooms:  teachers and learners. However, it can do so from two different, but  complementary perspectives. On the one hand, teacher-focused CR can  examine factors such as the classroom decision-making processes of  teachers and what is referred to as "teacher talk". On the other hand,  research focused on the learner can examine the developmental aspects  of learners' processes or the learning styles and strategies used by  different learners. It also can analyze the type of communication  prompted by various types of materials and pedagogic tasks, the  classroom interaction that takes place between learners and the effect  of that interaction on learner development.</p>     <p>Melba Libia Cardenas (2000) explains that classroom research has  become a medium to promote critical thinking about our own teaching  practices and to evaluate, change and grow professionally. Citing  Allright and Bailey (1981), she states that CR can be directed towards  trying to understand and deal with the immediate practical problems  facing teachers and learners. Such problems and initial research can  provide a starting point for highly specific classroom exploration. For  Cardenas, regardless of the approach used in classroom research, it is  important to afford it relevance within the teaching-learning process,  so it not only improves one classroom or one school in particular, but  the entire educational system. One way to do so is action research (AR).</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Action Research</font></b></p>     <p>In literature, the definition of action research has been provided by many scholars:</p>     <blockquote>       <p><i>AR is the reflective process whereby, in a given  problem area where one wishes to improve practice or personal  understanding, inquiry is carried out by the practitioner --; first, to  clearly define the problem; secondly, to specify a plan of action -- ;  including the testing of hypotheses by application of action to the  problem. Evaluation is then undertaken to monitor and establish the  effectiveness of the actions taken. Finally, participants reflect upon,  explain developments and communicate those results to the community of  action researchers. AR is systematic self-reflective inquiry by  practitioners to improve practice." (McKernan, 1996)</i></p>       <p><i>AR  is a term which refers to a practical way of looking at your own work  to check that it is as you would like it to be... it is often referred  to as practitioner based research; and because it involves you thinking  about and reflecting on your work, it can also be called a form of  self-reflective practice... In action research, researchers do research  on themselves. AR is an enquiry conducted by the self into the self.  You, a practitioner, think about your own life and work, and this  involves you asking yourself why you do the things that you do, and why  you are the way that you are. (McNiff, 2002) </i></p> </blockquote>     <p>It seems possible to argue that AR is studying what is happening in  our classroom and deciding how to make it a better place by changing  what and how we teach and how we relate to students and the community.  Teachers-researchers study a problem systematically and consistently,  ensuring the intervention is informed by theoretical considerations.  For its capability to raise awareness, Rory O'Brien (2001) situates AR  in a specific research paradigm: the paradigm of praxis.<a href="#8" name="s8"><sup>8</sup></a> He maintains that by sharing a number of perspectives with the  interpretive paradigm, and making considerable use of its related  qualitative methodologies, neither it nor the positivist paradigms are  sufficient epistemological structures in which to place action  research. Rather, a paradigm of praxis is where the main affinities  lie, because - for O'Brien - a cornerstone of AR is that knowledge is  derived from practice and practice informed by knowledge as part of an  ongoing process.</p>     <p><b>Types of Action Research</b></p>     <p>There are several varieties of action research. James McKernan  (1996, p. 16-27), for example, identified the three following types of  AR: a scientific-technical view of problem solving,  practical-deliberative action research and critical-emancipatory action  research. These types of AR are explained in the following table.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p align="center"><img src="img/revistas/eded/v13n1/v13n1a08i1.jpg"></p>     <p><b>Stages in Action Research</b></p>     <p>A variety of procedural plans have been developed by different  scholars. All adopt methodical and interactive research sequences to  systematically introduce innovations in teaching and learning. Also,  these sequences or stages strive to bring theory and practice together.  In other words, they seek to put the teacher in the role of a producer  of educational theory and a user of that theory. The following table  offers an overview of several AR models.</p>     <p align="center"><img src="img/revistas/eded/v13n1/v13n1a08i2.jpg">    <br>     <img src="img/revistas/eded/v13n1/v13n1a08i3.jpg"></p>     <p>As shown in the foregoing table, AR embraces problem identification,  action planning, implementation, evaluation and reflection. It involves  a spiral of steps, beginning with identification of the problem area.  Then, the scope of the problem is narrowed down to make it manageable.  Through research (e.g. observation, interviews, surveys, recording,  etc.), the teacher identifies when the problem occurs, what affects it,  what causes it, etc. To suggest a solution, talking with other teachers  and/or reading is needed, and the researcher considers what evidence to  collect so as to decide whether his/her action is successful or not.  Later, the hypothetical solution is implemented, and evidence to be  analyzed is gathered to decide whether the aim is achieved or not.  After the analysis, reflection identifies the results of the research  and whether or not the problem has been solved. If not, the next step  is to begin a new research cycle. However, if the results point to  positive improvements, it is important to circulate the research, not  so much in terms of the findings, but as research orientation towards  teaching (Sarac-Suzer, 2007).</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Action Research in Colombia</font></b></p>     <p>Cristina Frodden (1999) says the promotion of AR was necessary  because teachers' involvement in research on their own classrooms was  an effective way to tackle the conflict between theory and practice,  and to enhance teachers' professional development. In her study on  using collaborative AR in a graduate program for EFL teachers, she  found that collaboration, time management, and student and teacher  growth were enhanced. She concluded that researching and reflecting  helps teachers to discover there are many skills that need to be  developed, but are usually taken for granted.</p>     <p>Ciro Parra Moreno (2002) opted to adopt AR as a useful research  method because he did not want to assume research as a simple  methodological technique or to reduce his role as a teacher to that of  an instructor who follows a series of didactic procedures predetermined  by educational researchers. He regarded AR as an effective way for  teachers to develop professionally and for the interpretation of  educational knowledge as practical know-how. He characterized AR as  focusing on an analysis of human actions and educational situations,  striving to deepen teachers' understanding about their everyday  problems, aiming to improve and change circumstances and, ultimately,  dealing with the stimulation of teachers' reflection.</p>     <p>Josefina Quintero, Ra&uacute;l Munevar, and Juan Carlos Yepes (2007) say  that curricular change and teachers' professional development are  related directly to AR. For them, AR helps teachers to act autonomously  and to propose, experiment, take decisions and promote educational  transformation with enthusiasm and satisfaction. They explain that  curriculum quality can be achieved through AR, because it is teachers  who are better positioned to make changes and innovations in settings  that require ongoing improvement. In short, AR on the curriculum  constitutes an effective way to re-negotiate consciously and to  transform reflectively educational interactions and regulations.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Based on the foregoing theoretical considerations, it seems feasible to state that <i>teaching  should involve research and research should lead to teachers' learning;  learning new things about their educational practices and  circumstances, their personal strengths and weaknesses, and their  professional challenges and opportunities. Undoubtedly, research can  help to empower teachers, since it allows them to engage in critical  reflection about what teaching and learning are, why certain actions  are successful or not in the classroom, and, ultimately, how valid and  justifiable their pedagogical know-how is. </i>Preferably, teachers  should strive to conduct research not simply to create new or improved  activities, materials or procedures, but to bring to light the  rationale behind those activities, materials or procedures because, as  Bernard Dufeu (1994, p. 11) put it, "We do not leave our personal  attitudes and preoccupations behind when we enter our professional  world. Our teaching reflects who we are."</p>     <p><b><font size="3">Possible Action Research Problems and Types of Empowerment for Colombian Teachers</font></b></p>     <p>It seems reasonable to claim that research is not merely an  expectation of today's society or a requirement of current education,  but an opportunity and a possibility in teachers' lives to understand  who they are as professionals, to generate pedagogical knowledge based  on their everyday practices, and to challenge and transform the  educational status quo. But, what sort of action research problems can  Colombian teachers tackle? And, more importantly, what kind of  empowerment can they achieve through action research? I will briefly  propose three main research problems that Colombian teachers should  address. In time, doing so can produce three types of empowerment.</p>     <p>Josefina Quintero, Carmen T. Zulia and Odilia Ram&iacute;rez (2005)  indicate that teachers should pursue action research to exploit the new  perspectives of education derived from the development of science,  technology, society, culture and pedagogy to contend with the new  systems of education, which expect teachers to construct an integrated  body of pedagogical knowledge, and to meet the new expectations of  education based on an identification of what it means personally to  improve and qualify teachers' action. More concretely, Omaira Vergara  Luj&aacute;n, Fanny Hern&aacute;ndez Gaviria and Rosalba C&aacute;rdenas Ramos (2009) assert  that Colombian teachers should do educational research to be able to:</p>     <p>- develop a positive and decisive attitude towards making research  processes a part of their daily work and professional development;</p>     <p>- develop a capacity to reflect on and evaluate their own academic  processes and those of their colleagues and students in a constructive  light;</p>     <p>- develop a good level of knowledge and competence in their field,  not only with respect to content but also pedagogic knowledge; and</p>     <p>- develop tools to build a strong cultural and professional identity manifest in their role as agents of social change.</p>     <p>These authors present a broad range of possibilities through which  teachers can find problems, issues, concerns and dilemmas to which  action research can be applied. However, I believe Colombian teachers  should observe, describe, interpret, reflect, question and act on  problems that emerge in their lives as teachers, in their immediate  communities (classrooms and schools), and in their global societies  (city, country, academic field). In other words, Colombian teachers  should use research, specifically action research, to investigate three  basic types of problems: <i>personal problems </i>derived from their role as educators (decision-making process, teacher talk, use of ICTs, types of assessment, etc.), <i>communal problems </i>that  result from being part of a particular classroom and school (students'  fear of speaking, learners' use of learning strategies, curriculum  development, syllabus design, etc.), and <i>social problems </i>attributed  to being citizens of a specific city or country and agents of an  academic field (educational inequalities, value system, cultural  practices, knowledge creation, professional competences, etc.). Here,  the point I am trying to make is that the person, the community and  society are the areas or dimensions that provide Colombian teachers  with the basic problems they should research.</p>     <p>Consequently, it is worth mentioning that personal, communal and  social problems can allow for three types of empowerment: individual,  collective and social. As Page and Czuba (Op. cit.) explain, this is  because empowerment is a process that fosters power (that is, the  capacity to wield it) in people for use in their own lives, their  communities and their societies. Individual empowerment will help  teachers to become subjects who are fully conscious of themselves,  their strengths, their circumstances and their possibilities.  Collective empowerment will help teachers to be agents who are capable  of critical and transformative action in their social interactions with  students and other teachers. Social empowerment will position teachers  as professionals who can produce knowledge about education and exercise  power over society. In other words, empowerment can enable teachers to  become "powerful" subjects, agents and professionals who are prepared  to solve the complex issues facing education in a creative and  realistic way.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b><font size="3">Conclusion</font></b></p>     <p>Today, the teacher's role is changing rapidly from a traditional  perspective to a modern one. Instead of being followers of new  methodologies, teachers are supposed to be the author and source of the  theoretical basis for their own practices; they are supposed to be  researchers within the territory of their own classroom and/or  institution (Sarac-Suzer, Op. cit.). Therefore, teachers should know  and feel they are the practitioners and theorists of modern-day  educational systems. Observing and investigating their practices  systematically and understanding and transforming their circumstances  critically are fundamental and irrefutable ways to gain and exercise  power, to break existing dominance and to open space for self-updating  and fulfilment. In brief, research is a legitimate means of empowering  teachers in the twenty-first century.</p>     <p>The theoretical considerations presented in this article suggest  that it is worth integrating teaching and research to help develop and  empower teachers professionally. This integration, however, requires a  type of research whereby teachers can search for solutions to real  everyday problems and look for ways to transform the educational  establishment. I, therefore, encourage teachers to resort to AR so that  teaching, research, learning and self-updating can take place in their  classroom practices and circumstances. Rightly, Martin Parrot (1996, p.  3, cited in Madrid, 2000) defined AR as:</p>     <blockquote>       <p>.. .not so much something that we do in addition to  our teaching, as something that we integrate into it. In many ways, it  is a state of mind — it is scepticism about assumptions and a  willingness to put everything to the test. It is a way of ensuring that  we continue to learn even as we teach. It helps to stave off staleness  and routine.</p> </blockquote> <hr>     <p><a href="#s1" name="1">1</a> In  &iquest;Qu&eacute; espera la sociedad colombiana de los profesores de lenguas  extranjeras?, Ligia Cort&eacute;s, Jairo Hern&aacute;ndez, &amp; Rafael Arteaga D&iacute;az  (2008) state that EFL teachers are expected to extend their conceptual  horizon, to qualify their teaching practice and basic expertise, and to  foster in students an awareness of a diverse world made up of different  cultures and world views.</p>     <p><a href="#s2" name="2">2</a> See  Contreras's (2001) discussion on teacher autonomy via three types of  teachers: the expert technician, the reflexive professional, and the  intellectual critic.</p>     <p><a href="#s3" name="3">3</a> Based  on Whitehead, Jean McNiff (2002), who explained teachers' professional  development as a self-reflective practice carried out through  practitioner-based action research.</p>     <p><a href="#s4" name="4">4</a> Here,  I do not understand discourse within linguistics (language or  linguistic structures above the level of the sentence) or within  discourse analysis (those elements that are viewed as rule-governed and  systematic, but do not occur at the level of the word or the phrase).  Rather, I am in favour of regarding it as the space and process where  intersubjectivity is established, objects of knowledge are produced,  and values are assigned (See Bahktin, 1986, Speech Genres and Other  Later Essays). I also find Foucault's view of discourse very useful:  discourse is the system of thought composed of ideas, attitudes,  courses of action, beliefs and practices that systematically construct  the subjects and the worlds of which they speak (See Foucault, 1972,  Archaeology of Knowledge).</p>     <p><a href="#s5" name="5">5</a> In  "Teacher Voice: How is it Shaped?", Claudia Yolanda Becerra Camargo  (2005) claims the concept of voice deals with gaining the agency to  express one's life and with developing one's possibilities to  articulate alternative realities. For her, voice not only represents  the kind of values, beliefs, ideologies and structuring principles one  has; it also is shaped by other factors and other internal and external  voices. With regard to the teacher's voice, she considers it important  to take into account political relations of power, government policies  and the inner voice and the curricular choices teachers make.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><a href="#s6" name="6">6</a> For a thorough discussion of teacher autonomy, see Usma (2007).</p>     <p><a href="#s7" name="7">7</a> Bernando Restrepo Gomez (2003) maintains that teachers need research if  they want to systematize and consolidate their know-how. For him,  research in general and educational action research in particular allow  teachers to behave as long-life learners, since research teaches them  how to learn to learn, how to understand the structure of their own  practice and how to transform their pedagogical practice permanently  and systematically.</p>     <p><a href="#s8" name="8">8</a> Praxis, a term used by Aristotle, is the art of acting upon the conditions one faces in order to change them.</p> <hr> <b><font size="3">References</font></b>     <!-- ref --><p>ACOSTA, R. (2006). "Formaci&oacute;n de profesores en el paradigma de la complejidad." <i>Educaci&oacute;n y Educadores, </i>9(1), 149-157. 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(1981). <i>Focus on the language classroom. </i>Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000127&pid=S0123-1294201000010000800002&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p>AGUIRRE-GARC&Iacute;A, J. and JARAMILLO-ECHEVERRI, L. (2008).  "Consideraciones acerca de la investigaci&oacute;n en el aula: m&aacute;s all&aacute; de  estar a la moda." <i>Educaci&oacute;n y Educadores, </i>11(1), 43-54. 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