RSE4801 ASSIGNMENT 2 2026
DUE 6 JULY 2026
Assignment Question
Write an academic essay of approximately 1500 words in which you explain how
the context of research influences educational research. In your essay, you
should discuss:
What is meant by the context of research in education.
How the Context of Research Shapes Educational Research
1. Introduction
Educational research is not something that happens in a clean laboratory, far away from
real life. It always takes place in a real world full of people, politics, money, history, and
even environmental problems. This surrounding world is called the "context" of
research. Context in educational research refers to the social, political, economic,
cultural, and environmental conditions in which research takes place. Small, medium,
and large factors (called micro, meso, and macro) all affect the research process.
Research is not only shaped by context; it can also help to create and change context.
Important ideas such as neoliberalism, capitalism, globalisation, neocolonialism, and the
Anthropocene influence what educational researchers study and how they conduct their
research. The main point is that no research is completely neutral or independent. Good
researchers need to understand the context in which they work and how it influences
their research.
,2. What is Meant by the Context of Research in Education?
According to the RSE4801 Informed by contexts ofresearch (unit 2), "context" means all
the factors that have an influence on our world, our lives, our educational practices, and
our research. These factors can be personal, social, institutional, political, economic,
historical, or environmental. Context matters because it shapes everything about a
research project: the questions the researcher asks, the methods they choose, the kind
of knowledge they produce, and how their findings are used.
It explains that we often classify contexts into three levels: micro, meso, and macro. The
micro-level refers to small, personal interactions, the classroom, the teacher, the
learner, the family. The meso-level refers to things in between, like the school as an
institution, local education departments, or university policies. The macro-level refers to
large, global factors, such as national government, the economy, international politics,
and even the climate crisis. However, the study guide warns that we should not see
these levels as separate circles, one inside the other. Power and ideas can flow directly
from the global level down to a single person's feelings. For example, the macro-idea of
neoliberalism (competition and markets) can be felt at the micro-level when a teacher
feels anxious about test scores. So, context is not simple or fixed.
Importantly, the Unit also states that context is not an objective thing that exists outside
of us. Research does not just happen within a context; it also participates in creating
that context. If we see research as an intervention (Unit 1), then it changes the very
reality it investigates. This means that when we do research, we are not just describing
the world, we are helping to build it, for better or for worse.
, 3. How Micro, Meso, and Macro Factors Influence Educational Research
More specific examples of how each level of context influences research.
Micro factors include learners, teachers, classrooms, identities, language, lived
experiences, gender, culture, and local communities. Imagine a researcher who wants
to understand why young boys in a specific township school are falling behind in
reading. The micro-context forces the researcher to look closely at the boys' home lives,
their relationships with their teacher, the language spoken at home versus the language
of instruction, and their own feelings about school. The research question itself comes
from this micro-level. The methods must also fit for example, interviews or classroom
observations rather than a cold, distant survey. A researcher who ignores these micro-
factors will produce useless knowledge.
Meso factors include schools, universities, education departments, policies, institutional
culture, and funding structures. Consider a research project on teacher burnout in a
particular province. The meso-context includes the school's management style, whether
teachers have a voice in decision-making, the availability of resources, and the pressure
from the district office to improve results. In Unit 2, it gives the example of South Africa
as a constitutional democracy. This is a meso- or macro-level fact, but it does not mean
every classroom is democratic. A researcher studying classroom democracy must look
at the meso-level of school rules and leadership. Meso factors often act as a bridge or a
barrier between micro experiences and macro forces.
DUE 6 JULY 2026
Assignment Question
Write an academic essay of approximately 1500 words in which you explain how
the context of research influences educational research. In your essay, you
should discuss:
What is meant by the context of research in education.
How the Context of Research Shapes Educational Research
1. Introduction
Educational research is not something that happens in a clean laboratory, far away from
real life. It always takes place in a real world full of people, politics, money, history, and
even environmental problems. This surrounding world is called the "context" of
research. Context in educational research refers to the social, political, economic,
cultural, and environmental conditions in which research takes place. Small, medium,
and large factors (called micro, meso, and macro) all affect the research process.
Research is not only shaped by context; it can also help to create and change context.
Important ideas such as neoliberalism, capitalism, globalisation, neocolonialism, and the
Anthropocene influence what educational researchers study and how they conduct their
research. The main point is that no research is completely neutral or independent. Good
researchers need to understand the context in which they work and how it influences
their research.
,2. What is Meant by the Context of Research in Education?
According to the RSE4801 Informed by contexts ofresearch (unit 2), "context" means all
the factors that have an influence on our world, our lives, our educational practices, and
our research. These factors can be personal, social, institutional, political, economic,
historical, or environmental. Context matters because it shapes everything about a
research project: the questions the researcher asks, the methods they choose, the kind
of knowledge they produce, and how their findings are used.
It explains that we often classify contexts into three levels: micro, meso, and macro. The
micro-level refers to small, personal interactions, the classroom, the teacher, the
learner, the family. The meso-level refers to things in between, like the school as an
institution, local education departments, or university policies. The macro-level refers to
large, global factors, such as national government, the economy, international politics,
and even the climate crisis. However, the study guide warns that we should not see
these levels as separate circles, one inside the other. Power and ideas can flow directly
from the global level down to a single person's feelings. For example, the macro-idea of
neoliberalism (competition and markets) can be felt at the micro-level when a teacher
feels anxious about test scores. So, context is not simple or fixed.
Importantly, the Unit also states that context is not an objective thing that exists outside
of us. Research does not just happen within a context; it also participates in creating
that context. If we see research as an intervention (Unit 1), then it changes the very
reality it investigates. This means that when we do research, we are not just describing
the world, we are helping to build it, for better or for worse.
, 3. How Micro, Meso, and Macro Factors Influence Educational Research
More specific examples of how each level of context influences research.
Micro factors include learners, teachers, classrooms, identities, language, lived
experiences, gender, culture, and local communities. Imagine a researcher who wants
to understand why young boys in a specific township school are falling behind in
reading. The micro-context forces the researcher to look closely at the boys' home lives,
their relationships with their teacher, the language spoken at home versus the language
of instruction, and their own feelings about school. The research question itself comes
from this micro-level. The methods must also fit for example, interviews or classroom
observations rather than a cold, distant survey. A researcher who ignores these micro-
factors will produce useless knowledge.
Meso factors include schools, universities, education departments, policies, institutional
culture, and funding structures. Consider a research project on teacher burnout in a
particular province. The meso-context includes the school's management style, whether
teachers have a voice in decision-making, the availability of resources, and the pressure
from the district office to improve results. In Unit 2, it gives the example of South Africa
as a constitutional democracy. This is a meso- or macro-level fact, but it does not mean
every classroom is democratic. A researcher studying classroom democracy must look
at the meso-level of school rules and leadership. Meso factors often act as a bridge or a
barrier between micro experiences and macro forces.