50b. Posing questions worth exploring

50bPose questions worth exploring.

Working within the guidelines of your assignment, come up with a few preliminary questions that seem worth researching—questions that you are interested in exploring, that you feel would engage your audience, and about which there is substantial debate. You’ll find the research process more rewarding and meaningful if you choose questions that you care about.

Here, for example, are some preliminary questions jotted down by students enrolled in a variety of college courses.

As you think about possible questions, choose those that are focused (not too broad), challenging (not just factual), and grounded (not too speculative) as possible entry points in a conversation.

Choosing a focused question

If your initial question is too broad, given the length of the paper you plan to write, look for ways to restrict your focus (see also “Subject” in 1a). Here, for example, is how two students refined their initial questions.

too broad focused
What are the benefits of stricter auto emissions standards? How will stricter auto emissions standards create new auto industry jobs and make US carmakers more competitive in the world market?
What causes depression? How has the widespread use of antidepressant drugs affected teenage suicide rates?

Choosing a challenging question

Your research paper will be more interesting to both you and your audience if you base it on an intellectually challenging line of inquiry. Avoid factual questions that fail to provoke thought or engage readers in a debate; such questions lead to reports or lists of facts, not to researched arguments.

too factual challenging
Is autism on the rise? Why is autism so difficult to treat?
Where is wind energy being used? What makes wind farms economically viable?

You will need to address a factual question in the course of answering a more challenging one. For example, if you were writing about promising treatments for autism, you would no doubt answer the question “What is autism?” at some point in your paper and even analyze competing definitions of autism to help support your arguments about the challenges of treating the condition. It would be unproductive, however, to use the factual question as the focus for the entire paper.

Choosing a grounded question

Make sure that your research question is grounded, not too speculative. Although speculative questions—such as those that address morality or beliefs—are worth asking in a research paper, they are unsuitable central questions. For most college courses, the central argument of a research paper should be grounded in facts and should not be based entirely on beliefs.

too speculative grounded
Is it wrong to share pornographic personal photos by cell phone? What role should the US government play in regulating mobile content?
Do medical scientists have the right to experiment on animals? How have technical breakthroughs made medical experiments on animals increasingly unnecessary?

Finding an entry point in a research conversation

As you pose preliminary research questions, you may wonder where and how to step into a research conversation. You may need to ask Who are the major writers or thinkers in the debate? What are the major arguments? What are the background and the scope of the problem? As you orient yourself, the following statements may help you find points of entry in a research conversation.

On one side of the debate is position X, on the other side is Y, but there is a middle position, Z.

The conventional view about the problem or issue needs to be challenged because . . .

Key details in this debate that have been overlooked are . . .

Researchers have drawn conclusion X from the evidence, but one could also draw conclusion Y.

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  • Researched writing > Exercise: Research: 50–1
  • Researched writing > As you write: Asking a research question