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A Simple, Powerful Way to Facilitate Group and Self Question Formulation

A Simple, Powerful Way to Facilitate Group and Self Question Formulation. Andrew P. Minigan Director of Strategy, Education Program The Right Question Institute. Overview. Questions and Researching An Experience in the QFT for Research Emerging Findings on Our Research

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A Simple, Powerful Way to Facilitate Group and Self Question Formulation

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  1. A Simple, Powerful Way to Facilitate Group and Self Question Formulation Andrew P. Minigan Director of Strategy, Education Program The Right Question Institute

  2. Overview • Questions and Researching • An Experience in the QFT for Research • Emerging Findings on Our Research • Reflecting & Sharing • Q&A & Evaluation

  3. Questions & Researching

  4. “If you are a researcher you are trying to figure out what the question is as well as what the answer is.” “You want to find the question that is sufficiently easy that you might be able to answer it, and sufficiently hard that the answer is interesting.” – Edward Witten Physicist, Institute of Advanced Study

  5. “Today, the modern classicist begins to focus on an unanswered question or a group of related questions and spends time in libraries, museums, and archaeological sites in an attempt to find answers. This practice of inquiry—looking into and trying to answer a question—is the heart of research.” – Roger B. Ulrich Professor of Classical Studies, Dartmouth College

  6. A List of Things Stuart FiresteinLearned in Graduate School • Questions are more important than facts. • Answers or facts are temporary; data, hypotheses (models) are provisional. • Failure happens… a lot. • Patience is a requirement; there is no substitute for time. • Occasionally you get lucky—hopefully you recognize it. • Things don’t happen in the linear or narrative way that you read about in papers or textbooks. • The smooth “Arc of Discovery” is a myth; science stumbles along. • If there is free food, get there early.

  7. An Experience in the QFT for Research

  8. Identify Research Topic • Field of study • Topics covered in your program that have piqued your interest • Topics you might consider for research • Choose one topic

  9. Rules for Producing Questions • Ask as many questions as you can about your research topic • Do not stop to answer, analyze, or judge questions • Write down every question exactly as it comes to mind • Change any statements into questions 1. How might following these rules be different from how you usually produce questions?

  10. Produce Questions 2. Ask questions about the topic you chose • Follow the rules • Number the questions

  11. Work with Closed and Open-ended Questions Definitions • Closed-ended questions can be answered with a “yes,” “no,” or with a one-word answer. • Open-ended questions require more explanation and cannot be answered with a “yes,” “no,” or with one-word. 1. Label your closed-ended questions with a “C” and your open-ended questions with an “O.”

  12. Work with Closed and Open-ended Questions

  13. Work with Closed and Open-ended Questions

  14. Work with Closed and Open-ended Questions Take one closed-ended questionand change itinto an open-ended question. Take one open-ended question and change itinto a closed-ended question. Add your new questions to the bottom of your list of questions. Closed Open Closed Open

  15. Rework Your Questions 1. Do you have questions that you would like to rework? If so, rework your questions and add them to the bottom of your list.

  16. Prioritize 1. Choose three priority questions you are most interested in using to guide a research project. • Star your three priority questions. 2. Why did you choose these questions?

  17. Prioritize Share: Why did you choose these questions?

  18. Prioritize 3. How many questions did you ask? 4. Where are your priority questions in the sequence of your questions?

  19. Further Explore 1. Choose one priority question. 2. Produce questions about your priority question • Follow the rules • Number the questions ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

  20. Develop Your Research Questions and Research Agenda 3. Review your list of questions • Write down any new or reworked questions

  21. Develop Your Research Questions and Research Agenda 4. Identify: • Three questions you are glad you generated through the process 5. Identify: • Three questions that may help you advance your research 6. Why did you choose these six questions?

  22. Reflect

  23. The QFT For Research on One Slide Identify research topic Produce questions Work with questions Rework questions Prioritize and further explore Develop research questions and agenda Reflect

  24. Emerging Findings on Our Research

  25. Background on the Research Students from Brandeis University, University Massachusetts, Lowell, and Northeastern University participated in a voluntary, hour-long experience in the Question Formulation Technique (QFT) for research. A questionnaire was administered before and after the hour-long experience to investigate changes in students’ self-reported perceptions and beliefs on question formulation. Paired-sample two-tailed t-tests were conducted to compare doctoral students’ agreement that they have strategies to support their question formulation skills, beliefs on question formulation behavior, and confidence in question formulation before and after going through an hour-long QFT for research experience.

  26. Agreement on having strategies In considering what research questions… • to pursue, I have specific strategies that allow me to generate good questions.*** • to investigate, I have specific strategies that allow me to prioritize which questions are the best to pursue.*** ***p < .001

  27. In considering what research questions to pursue, I have specific strategies that allow me to generate good questions.

  28. Beliefs about question formulation behavior • Once I have a set of questions before me, I believe that it is worthwhile to take the time to revise and improve them.*** • I am able to efficiently formulate research questions.*** ***p < .001

  29. I am able to efficiently formulate research questions.

  30. Confidence in question formulation skills • I am confident in my ability to formulate quality research questions.*** • In developing research questions, I believe that my skills are at a high level.*** • It is easy to formulate quality research questions.*** ***p < .001

  31. I am confident in my ability to formulate quality research questions.

  32. What did you notice about the quality of your questions? “Improved the quality, testability, and impact.” “Improved the quality and the quantity [of my questions.]” “It made them more specific and allowed me to pick the best from among several similar questions.” “Reworking my questions made my questions better and more complex.” “Improved the quality of the question but more importantly led to new questions.”

  33. Other Results • 94.8% of doctoral students believe the QFT for research helped them generate quality research questions. (n = 77) • 96.1% of doctoral students reported that they plan to use this process in the future. (n = 77)

  34. Reflecting & Sharing

  35. Thank you. Now, some time for your questions.We are eager to connect with you and explore how we can support your work:Andrew.Minigan@rightquestion.orgKaty.Connolly@rightquestion.orgRegister to access free resources over at: www.rightquestion.org

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