, The Embedded Gaze: How Micro, Meso, and Macro Contexts Shape Educational Research
Introduction
Educational research is not a neutral pursuit of universal truths. Rather, it is a deeply situated
activity, influenced by the social, political, economic, and environmental conditions within which it
is conceived, conducted, and consumed. To understand why certain research questions are asked,
why particular methods are privileged, and how findings are interpreted, one must first understand
the context of research. Context refers to the intersecting set of relationships, structures, and
ideologies that surround and permeate the research process. In educational studies, scholars often
distinguish between three nested levels of context: the micro level (individual interactions,
identities, and local settings), the meso level (institutional practices, policies, and organisational
cultures), and the macro level (national and global forces such as neoliberalism, colonialism, and
climate change). The purpose of this essay is to explain how these contextual levels influence
educational research, shaping everything from research agendas to methodological choices and
knowledge dissemination.
The essay will be structured as follows: first, it defines research context and elaborates on the
micro, meso, and macro framework. Second, it discusses how each contextual level influences
research practice. Third, it explores how research, in turn, creates new contexts. Finally, it
examines broader forces such as neoliberalism, neocolonialism, capitalism, globalisation, and the
Anthropocene, before concluding with the researcher’s ethical responsibility.
2.1 Understanding Research Contexts
Educational research context can be defined as the dynamic set of circumstances, relationships,
power structures, and cultural norms that surround and inform the research enterprise (Cohen,
Manion, & Morrison, 2018). Context is not merely a backdrop; it actively participates in
constructing what counts as knowledge. The micro context refers to the immediate, everyday
settings of education: the classroom, the learner-teacher relationship, individual identities
(including gender, ethnicity, language, and lived experience), and local community values. The
meso context encompasses intermediate-level structures such as schools, universities, academic
departments, institutional policies, funding bodies, and professional networks. The macro context
comprises broad societal forces: national governments, international organisations (e.g., OECD,
UNESCO), global economic systems (capitalism, neoliberalism), colonial histories, and planetary
challenges like the Anthropocene. Why does context matter? Because ignoring context leads to
decontextualised, often misleading conclusions. A pedagogical intervention successful in a
well-resourced urban Australian school cannot be assumed to work in a rural South African
classroom without attending to contextual differences (Crossley, 2009). Context, therefore, is not
an obstacle to generalisation but a necessary lens for meaningful interpretation.
Introduction
Educational research is not a neutral pursuit of universal truths. Rather, it is a deeply situated
activity, influenced by the social, political, economic, and environmental conditions within which it
is conceived, conducted, and consumed. To understand why certain research questions are asked,
why particular methods are privileged, and how findings are interpreted, one must first understand
the context of research. Context refers to the intersecting set of relationships, structures, and
ideologies that surround and permeate the research process. In educational studies, scholars often
distinguish between three nested levels of context: the micro level (individual interactions,
identities, and local settings), the meso level (institutional practices, policies, and organisational
cultures), and the macro level (national and global forces such as neoliberalism, colonialism, and
climate change). The purpose of this essay is to explain how these contextual levels influence
educational research, shaping everything from research agendas to methodological choices and
knowledge dissemination.
The essay will be structured as follows: first, it defines research context and elaborates on the
micro, meso, and macro framework. Second, it discusses how each contextual level influences
research practice. Third, it explores how research, in turn, creates new contexts. Finally, it
examines broader forces such as neoliberalism, neocolonialism, capitalism, globalisation, and the
Anthropocene, before concluding with the researcher’s ethical responsibility.
2.1 Understanding Research Contexts
Educational research context can be defined as the dynamic set of circumstances, relationships,
power structures, and cultural norms that surround and inform the research enterprise (Cohen,
Manion, & Morrison, 2018). Context is not merely a backdrop; it actively participates in
constructing what counts as knowledge. The micro context refers to the immediate, everyday
settings of education: the classroom, the learner-teacher relationship, individual identities
(including gender, ethnicity, language, and lived experience), and local community values. The
meso context encompasses intermediate-level structures such as schools, universities, academic
departments, institutional policies, funding bodies, and professional networks. The macro context
comprises broad societal forces: national governments, international organisations (e.g., OECD,
UNESCO), global economic systems (capitalism, neoliberalism), colonial histories, and planetary
challenges like the Anthropocene. Why does context matter? Because ignoring context leads to
decontextualised, often misleading conclusions. A pedagogical intervention successful in a
well-resourced urban Australian school cannot be assumed to work in a rural South African
classroom without attending to contextual differences (Crossley, 2009). Context, therefore, is not
an obstacle to generalisation but a necessary lens for meaningful interpretation.