יוזמה - מרכז לידע ולמחקר בחינוך - Activities - in chronological order
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Working Group for the Topic of Promoting Research-Practice Partnership Processes (RPP) in Israel

Activity type: Expert Team
Activity coordinator: Dr. Nirit Topol
Activity period: Active group - From 2021

Working Group for the Topic of Promoting Research-Practice Partnership Processes (RPP) in Israel

Addressing the relationship between research and practice in the field is not new and has gone through various iterations under different conceptual and research frameworks in the areas of improvement science, implementation science, design research, and more. Research has focused on improving educational processes in the field and the development of mechanisms to transmit research findings to practitioners. This is done through the use of abstracts surveying effective practices, attempts to create effective prescriptions for teaching, or consultations with researchers.

At the same time, the attempts to translate research findings into classroom education were only partially successful. With the years, a more complex system of interactions and influences developed, out of the understanding that there is a gap between research knowledge and the knowledge teachers use in their teaching processes.[1]

In recent years, the concept of partnerships between research and practice (RPP – research-practice partnership) has become common. Such partnerships are generally long term, focused on problems of practice and based on reciprocity.[2] These are not about collaboration in order to integrate research findings or consultations for practitioners but rather, a reciprocal relationship to which the two sides are partners and from which both derive benefit.

Such partnerships can help to assimilate scientific and research knowledge in the policy-making processes and the educational processes that take place in the field, promote research into topics that challenge education staffs in their daily work, and create a knowledge base and data base which can serve all the partners. In practice, several key examples of this kind of partnership have been developed and they differ from one another in terms of their aims, joint work methods and outputs.[3] Nonetheless and despite the aforementioned developments and the engagement with this topic, partnerships of this kind are still rare in Israel.

At the request of the Ministry of Education, the Yozma established a working group whose aim is to study research-practice partnership processes in Israel and to promote them.[4] Researchers, policymakers and practitioners, all with diverse perspectives, are members of the working group. The working group’s objective is to formulate guidelines for policy that will support partnership processes between research and practice.

The working group will address several areas:

a. Conducting wide-ranging discourse among stakeholders in partnerships of this kind.

b. Pooling existing knowledge in the field in Israel.

c. Mapping the challenges involved in creating partnerships in the education system in Israel.

d. Formulation of solutions for coping with the mapped challenges.


[1] Hiebert, J., Gallimore, R., & Stigler, J.W. (2002). A knowledge base for the teaching profession: What would it look like and how can we get one? Educational Researcher, 31(5), 3-15.

[2] Coburn, C.E., & Penuel, W.R. (2016). Research–practice partnerships in education: Outcomes, dynamics, and open questions. Educational Researcher, 45(1), 48-54.

[3] Blecher, N. (2021) EBP Report: Partnerships between academic, headquarter and field teams in education research. Jerusalem: Yozma – Center for Knowledge and Research in Education.

[4] The group is completing other activities initiated by the Chief Scientist’s Office at the Ministry of Education in 2021, such as the working group on the topic of Assimilating Research into Policy and the EBP Report which reviewed the types of partnerships between research and practice around the world.