Asking Research Questions and Establishing The Significance of One'S Research
Asking Research Questions and Establishing The Significance of One'S Research
Asking Research Questions and Establishing The Significance of One'S Research
*CLEAR: it provides enough specifics that one’s audience can easily understand its
purpose without needing additional explanation.
*FOCUSED: it is narrow enough that it can be answered thoroughly in the space the willing
task allows.
*COMPLEX: it is not answerable with a simple “yes” or “no”, but rather requires
synthesis and analysis of ideas and sources prior to composition of an
answer.
*ARGUABLE: its potential answers are open to debate rather than accepted facts.
WHY IS RESEARCH QUESTION ESSENTIAL
TO THE RESEARCH PROCESS?
* UNCLEAR: How should social networking sites address the harm they
cause?
* CLEAR: What action should social networking sites like MySpace and
Facebook take to protect user’s personal information and privacy?
* The unclear version of this question doesn’t specify which social
networking sites or suggests what kind of harm the sites might be causing.
It also assumes that this “harm” is proven and|or accepted.
* The clearer version specifies sites (MySpace and Facebook), the type
of potential harm (privacy issues), and who may be experiencing that harm
(users). A strong research question should never leave room for ambiguilty
or interpretation.
The next helpful step is to barrange the
specific topic with questions to come up with the
essay’s Main Research Question. Although it is
helpful to begin with questions that ask WHO,
WHAT, WHEN,or WHERE, there should be used as
background Research Questions. For example, the
answers to the questions listed here can be readily
locked up.
*What does the “TINGI-TINGI SYSTEM”
mean? What is the nature of TINGI?
* Who exactly practices this?
* When did this practice begin?
*Where is this practiced? In what
context\s?
Questions that ask HOW and WHY are more
likely to invite a deeper research and lead to
more interesting answers.
* Why is TINGI-TINGI SYSTEM a prevalent
practice in the Philippines?
* How did it develop? How was it practiced
in the past? How is it practiced in today?
Finally, the student should pose a
tougher question, the “SO WHAT?”
question: Now that I know all of
this, so what? What makes my
research socially or culturally
significant?
* Brainstorming Research Question:
What cultural and social values, as well as
realities, led to the practice of buying and selling by
TINGI? What impact does it have on buyers and
sellers? What larger implications does this have about
life in the Philippines and its socio-economic system,
specially today?
* Main Research Question:
Why is the continued use of the TINGI-TINGI
SYSTEM in twenty-first century Philippines
significant?
The “SO WHAT?” question is the main
research question. Another way to arrive
at this question is to begin by naming the
topic, adding a reason for studying the
topic, and adding significance to the
reason for studying the topic, as in the
example here.
*Research Question: Why is the continued use of the TINGI-TINGI SYSTEM in twenty-first century Philippines significant?
*State your topic:
I am studying TINGI culture in the Philippines.
*Add a reason for studying it:
I am studying TINGI culture in the Philippines because I want
to find out what it reflects about the values of Filipinos.
* Add significance to this study:
I am studying TINGI culture in the Philippines because I want to
find out what reflects about the values of Filipinos in order to help
my reader understand why there are larger implications of the
practice in the twenty-first century.
* Research Question:
Why is the continued use of the
TINGI-TINGI SYSTEM in twenty-
first century Philippines
significant?
STEPS TO DEVELOPING A RESEARCH
QUESTION:
1. Choose an interesting general topic. Most
professional researchers focus on topics they are genuinely interested
in studying. Writers should choose a broad topic about which they
genuinely would like to know more. An example of a general topic
might be “Slavery in the American South” or ‘Films of the 1930’s”