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often not documented, and language is not technical. Because they are commercial products packaged for |
wide sales, they often use color and have numerous ads. |
When you are faced with a research assignment, it is important for you to be able to create successful search |
strategies. You need to find sources for specific purposes and audiences and be able to critically evaluate these |
sources. When doing research, you also have to incorporate the information you find for specific purposes, |
acknowledge the sources, and provide citations. To make this easier to understand, think of scholarly writing |
as a simple story told with a particular set of conventions (rules). What are these conventions? They are: a |
research question, a hypothesis, a methodology, a review of the literature, an interpretation of your work, and |
an analysis of the significance of what you’ve found. |
Research Question |
First of all, you need a topic. This is often the most difficult part of the whole process. So begin by thinking of |
something that is really interesting to you. Let’s take music for an example. You need to ask some questions |
about music to start the process. Some examples of questions are: |
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What does music mean? |
What is the function of music? |
What is the value of music? |
What is the significance of music? |
How is music made? |
What causes music to happen? |
The easiest way to come up with questions regarding whatever topic you choose is to start with basic |
questioning words: who, what, why, when, where, how, might, could, can, should, will, must, did, and so forth. |
You can ask better questions, and this will help you narrow down your hypothesis. For instance, why does |
music change over time? Who will play this music? How did this music come about? Why should we listen to |
this music? |
ACTIVITY |
Pick a topic and try to describe it: |
400 |
A • Conducting and Presenting Research |
1. Name your topic: I am studying __________ |
2. Suggest a question: Because I want to find out who/how/why/whether/when/what _______________ |
3. State a rationale for the question: In order to understand who/what/where/how/why/ |
whether___________ |
Going through this exercise every time you are tasked with writing a research paper will help you clarify |
what you want to accomplish and why. |
Hypothesis |
Scholars use information to answer one or more questions inspired by a topic of interest. Usually, a scholarly |
question identifies a problem and a solution. Such questions are usually written in the form of a hypothesis, |
which is a statement about the relationship between two things that identifies both a problem and an answer |
or solution. An example of a hypothesis would be: Different genres of music have an effect on the mood of the |
people listening to them. The questions asked to get to this hypothesis might be: Does music have an effect on |
mood? Do people listen to music to make them feel better? What kind of music is used as a way to energize |
the listener? Is there one type of music that is better than others for calming someone down? |
Your hypothesis must reflect what is known about a research topic in such a way that your research project will |
add new knowledge and insight to what is already known. In order to arrive at a hypothesis that achieves this |
goal, you must learn as much as possible about your topic so you can narrow down your hypotheses to what |
you don’t know. Then your research project will produce new knowledge. Your hypothesis is about what you |
don’t know. However, you might find that you can’t prove your hypothesis. You might find evidence that |
contradicts it, and you will have to reflect on why your hypothesis might have been wrong. |
ACTIVITY |
Find two newspaper articles to analyze. Read through them and answer the following: |
1. What questions are being answered in the articles? |
2. What questions do you think need to be answered? |
3. What was the hypothesis that the writer of these articles was working from? |
It is important to be able to find the hypothesis that a writer has constructed to tell you a story. You have to |
make sure you understand what they are trying to “prove” and what questions they asked in order to do so. |
Methodology |
Education is about discovery. This means that you need to learn how to question, evaluate, and determine the |
worth, credibility, and relevance of what you, as a student, find. Thus, when doing research, you need that |
hypothesis to begin the rest of your research. |
The next step is to come up with key words or concepts that describe your topic. Start by preparing an outline |
for yourself. List the key words (for instance, on the topic of music, some key words might be music, |
instruments, genres, musicians, and so on). Then create a list of narrower terms, which are more specific |
things that you want to know about your topic, such as time frames, geography, population, and age groups. |
Finally, you can list broader terms that are the larger subjects that include your key words. For music these |
could be cultural expression, jazz, hip-hop, singers, and so forth. Your methodology will be a compilation of the |
sources you decide to review. It is an orderly approach to problem solving and gathering useful data, using |
such sources and strategies as interviews, public documents, surveys, experiments, the Internet, and many |
Access for free at openstax.org |
A • Conducting and Presenting Research |
401 |
more. |
The kind of methodology you decide to use depends on the type of research you will be conducting. You could |
do exploratory research, which basically answers the question “Does something exist?” This “something” could |
be an event, a thing, or an idea, such as a concert or music designed for relaxation. Or perhaps you want to do |
descriptive research, which is the kind of study that defines something by describing its characteristics, |
behaviors, or actions. For instance, you could describe a genre of music, how it was created, and what |
instruments are usually used to compose this type of music. A third type of research you may want to do is |
called prediction research, which involves identifying relationships that make it possible for us to speculate |
about one thing by knowing about something else. Music has taken many turns over time, and you might |
want to suggest that the next phase of music might all be electronically produced. And finally, you could |
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