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Learn how to develop a strong research question, identify your area of concentration, explore different outcomes of interest, and delve into relevant theories and literature for your study. Discover the importance of your topic and how to formulate a compelling question. Engage with examples and guidelines to shape a meaningful research inquiry.
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Tackling the Research Question USP Senior Sequence fall 2011
Your A.O.C. • First Step—Find your area of concentration • How many have decided on the AOC?
Let’s Start with the Pieces • Effect or Outcome of Interest • Main Focus of Study • When and Where are you Looking? • How are you using the Literature? • Why Should People Care about this Topic? • What’s Your Hunch? • What are some other Theories? • What information will you gather and how will you use it? • Thinking of all of the above, what is your question??
Effect or Outcome of Interest • Figure out your effect or outcome of interest • If your AOC is Transportation, are you interested in: • More efficient transportation? • Encouraging the use of bikes? • If your AOC is Public Health, Safety and Welfare, are you interested in • Better access to organic food?
The Main Focus of Study • So, what or who will you be looking at, in particular?
The Main Focus of Study • So, what or who will you be looking at, in particular?
Do I Need a Question Mark? • Best to begin with a true question…with a question mark… • Why? Because then you will be more aware of the knowledge gap your project seeks to fill • But…as your research progresses, you can formulate your question without a question mark, for example…
Examples of Other Kinds of Questions • “This study examines how healthcare workers adapt their behavior to facilitate communication and make medical encounters less threatening to Hmong immigrants.” • “This study seeks to determine how housing markets of ‘bedroom communities’ continue to grow with investors inflating housing prices which ultimately undermine the very principle of bedroom communities.”