Volume V of The Handbook of Research in Middle Level Education
highlights action research in middle grades education. As a method of
inquiry, action research compels educators to take action and think
reflectively about those actions in order to effect positive educational
change (Mills, 2000). Teachers, administrators, university professors,
and other professionals conduct action research in different ways to
examine classroom practices and school issues. Educational action
researchers initiate their inquiries in various contexts: alone, in
small peer teams, or larger faculty groups (Zeichner, 2001). Using
individual and collaborative approaches, educators gain insights into
teaching and learning processes. As evidenced throughout this volume,
action research in the middle grades occurs in a variety of
configurations. This volume examines the dynamic ways that preservice
and inservice teachers, school administrators, university faculty, and
educational consortia use action research.