Your research paper will engage 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.
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 whole paper.
Focused research questions
Grounded research questions
Entry points to research
Revising a thesis that is merely a question