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13.3: Developing Research Questions

  • Page ID
    223141
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    Students often imagine that they should begin the research process with a thesis statement in mind, as if it were a hypothesis for a scientific experiment. While you will need to develop a thesis eventually, it is best to start from a place of curiosity and begin by asking an open-ended question. Once you have this question, you can use it to identify potential keywords to use while searching for sources online, and the answer to the question will become your thesis statement.

    Let’s move through an example to see how you can move from a general topic idea to a focused research question. If you wonder, as in one of the example questions above, how women are treated when they give birth in prison, you would not begin with a statement like “Prisons mistreat new mothers.” Doing this would steer you, consciously or otherwise, toward only the research that supports your initial opinion. Beginning with a question like “How do prisons treat inmates who deliver babies while incarcerated?” would allow you to follow the evidence wherever it leads. Whether you find that prison administrators treat expecting mothers well or poorly, your thesis will naturally develop from whatever the evidence shows.

    To be truly helpful, research questions should meet the following criteria:

    • Complex: open-ended “how” or “why” questions will allow you to explore an issue more fully than simple questions you could answer with a “yes” or “no”
    • Clear: use straightforward terms and concepts
    • Focused: choose one aspect of your topic to research
    • Concise: the question should be specific enough to be addressed fully within the length of your paper

    (and if you are writing a persuasive paper)

    • Arguable: for a persuasive paper, your question should lead to a claim with which reasonable people could agree or disagree

    Example Research Questions for an Informative Essay

    1. Why is it so expensive to run electoral campaigns in the U.S.?
    2. How do K-12 schools in the U.S. define and measure “student success”?

    Example Research Questions for a Persuasive Essay

    1. How does teacher pay impact learning outcomes for K-12 students?
    2. How should campaign finance law be changed to help average Americans run for elected office?

    As you can see in the example questions above, slight tweaks to the structure of your research question can steer you toward an informative or persuasive focus, so it’s important to double check that your question is setting you up to write the kind of paper you’ve been asked to write.

    Once you have a good working research question, you can mine it for keywords to begin searching for sources online. We will focus more specifically on keywords and online searching, in Chapter 7.


    13.3: Developing Research Questions is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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