Abstract
This paper reports on a comparative analysis of research presented to the 1979 and 1993 MERGA
Conferences. Two main issues are considered: the nature of research methods and methodologies utilised by
researchers; the content focus of principal questions made the subject of research. In considering the first of
these, papers were stratified by research methodology (positivist, interpretivist, critical), data type
(quantitative, qualitative), and research method (experiment, survey; clinical interview, discourse analysis,
etc). Analysis of the data indicated that whilst the positivist paradigm predominated in both conferences, a
significant switch to qualitative methods and a diversification of methodologies was observed in 1993. In
addressing the second main issue, dominant research questions for each conference were identified it in terms of
subject/domain clusters. Methodology used in this task involved the construction of a subject matter matrix,
within which each submitted paper was allocated to a single cell. Papers were thus stratified by two variables
accounting for educational agency (student, teacher, classroom, researcher) and content (knowledge,
beliefs/attitudes, context). Major findings were an increased emphasis in 1993 on the student vis a vis
teacher, and a switch of emphasis from beliefs/attitudes to the study of contextual domains of education. The
paper concludes with a discussion of the limitations of the methodology used in this study, and an
identification and discussion of principal findings.