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Ebook: Developing Research Questions: A Guide For Social Scientists

Author: Patrick White

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27.01.2024
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Undertaking a research project is a crucial, but often overwhelming aspect of any social sciences degree, and selecting a research question can be one of the toughest parts of the process. What makes an appropriate topic for research? How do you transform an idea into a 'researchable' question? And, once you've got a question, where do you go from there?

Developing Research Questions steers readers through the complex process of starting a research project. The book explains how to break down initial ideas from broad topics into appropriate research questions, and gives detailed guidance on how to refine questions as the research project develops. Each chapter is packed with handy hints, tips and examples that show how to avoid common mistakes and pitfalls in the research process. Linking hypotheses and questions with research design and methods at every step, this text takes readers from the start through to the final stage of answering their questions and drawing conclusions.

This is a no-fuss, practical guide to forming your own research question. It is an indispensable resource for social scientists carrying out research projects at all levels.


Cover

Developing Research Questions: A Guide for Social Scientists

Copyright

© Patrick White 2009

ISBN-13 978—1—4039—9815—6

ISBN-10 1—4039—9815—9

H62 W453 2009 300.72—dc22

Dedicated For BG

Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

WHY SHOULD YOU READ A BOOK ON RESEARCH QUESTIONS?

WHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?

HOW SHOULD I USE THIS BOOK?

THE STRUCTURE OF THE BOOK

1 Where do research ideas come from?

CURIOSITY AND SURPRISE: THE BASIS OF INQUIRY

THE ROLE OF THE LITERATURE: KNOWING THE FIELD

Starting with the literature or starting with a question

Where to start reading and when to stop reading

Not re-inventing the wheel: what counts as a 'gap' and how big does it need to be?

Originality

Influence

THE ROLE OF THEORY

What is theory?

Theory testing and theory generation

'PRACTICAL' STIMULI FOR RESEARCH QUESTIONS

The policy context and social problems

'Applied' research

SUMMARY

FURTHER READING

2 What makes a research question?

RESEARCH TOPICS, AIMS AND OBJECTIVES

OBJECTIVE

RESEARCH QUESTIONS

THE FORM OF QUESTIONS AND THEIR CONTENT

Problems of form

Questions and other statements

'Many questions' and 'false dichotomies'

Tautological questions

Problems of subject

Metaphysical questions

Normative questions

Data collection questions

QUESTION TYPES

Descriptive and explanatory questions

W-Questions: four descriptive and two explanatory question types

Purpose-led typologies

'Empowerment'

Comparison

HYPOTHESES

What are hypotheses?

HYPOTHESIS

RESEARCH QUESTION

Where do hypotheses come from?

Hypotheses and research design

SUMMARY

FURTHER READING

3 What makes a question 'researchable'?

THE 'RESEARCHABILITY' OF QUESTIONS

A question of scope

Prioritizing

Creating hierarchies: main and subsidiary questions

MAIN RESEARCH QUESTION

SUBSIDIARY RESEARCH QUESTIONS

MAIN RESEARCH QUESTION

ANCILLARY SUB-QUESTIONS

How many research questions?

A QUESTION OF LANGUAGE

Brevity

Clarity

Precision

Population of interest

Geographical location or coverage

Historical context

Comparisons

Summary

A QUESTION OF RESOURCES

Funding and financial considerations

Travel and subsistence

Equipment

Hidden costs

Dissemination

Training

Time and human resources

Research questions and resources

SUMMARY

FURTHER READING

4 Questions, methods and indicators

QUESTIONS AS THE STARTING POINTOF RESEARCH

Questions first, methods later

Research 'traditions

Methodsied research and 'methodolatry'

THE IMPORTANCE OF RESEARCH DESIGN

What is research design?

OPERATIONALIZING CONCEPTS

An example of a social scientific concept: social class

Unoperational concepts

SUMMARY

FURTHER READING

5 Answering research questions: claims, evidence and warrant

THE STRUCTURE OF ARGUMENTS

CLAIMS

Qualifying claims

DATA AND EVIDENCE

Differentiating between evidence, claims and warrant

WARRANT

ALTERNATIVE HYPOTHESES

SUMMARY

FURTHER READING

Afterword

Bibliography

Index

Back Cover
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