Section 1.2 Research Questions
Once you’ve identified and explored your research topic, you’ll need to work on refining your research question. A strong research question will allow you to delve into a genuine problem or question to which an answer is not obvious. In other words, you want a question that is debatable and arguable. In creating your own argument to answer the research question, you will use evidence from your research to acknowledge and refute any counter-evidence that you encounter.
List 1.2.1. Characteristics of Strong Research Questions
typically ask “why?” or “how?” questions
have a clear focus
are feasible to answer with the resources and time available to you
are calibrated in scope to the required length of the writing assignment
are of interest or significance to others
List 1.2.2. Strategies for Finding a Research Question
Begin by asking as many open-ended “why?” or “how?” questions as you can think of. Your topic should be rich enough to generate at least three potential research questions. If you have difficulty generating more than one research question, it’s likely that you need to include another variable or otherwise broaden the scope of your inquiry. An excellent guide to getting from a topic to a question can be found in Chapter 3 of The Craft of Research , available as an ebook in Primo to members of the Puget Sound community.
Begin to evaluate your research questions. Which question interests you the most? Why?
Seek out feedback. Different kinds of people will provide different kinds of feedback. See
Sources of Feedback for more.
Be open to refining your research question. As you continue the research and writing processes, you may discover that your question is too broad or too narrow, or that there’s another, related research question that your evidence is suggesting.
Hold off on deciding what your thesis is until you’ve identified a viable research question and have begun to delve into your research sources. Committing to a thesis prematurely can hamper your research process by causing you only to seek evidence that supports your argument.
List 1.2.3. Sources of Feedback
Peers
will give you a ready sense of whether or not your question is clear and interesting.
Writing Advisors
will ask you lots of clarifying questions and help you develop the best possible formulation of your research question.
Librarians
will help you explore potential resources for tackling your research question and also will give you honest advice about the feasibility of your focus and project.
Professors
are subject experts and are excellent resources for helping you identify where your question fits in the ongoing scholarly conversation.