One of the major parts of developing any research paper is defining the research paper question.
In an experiment-based project, this question naturally leads onto a hypothesis.
For a more review-based paper, such as an essay, it will lead to a thesis statement.
When trying to define the research paper purpose, you should brainstorm a few ideas, which will help you to develop a research question that is relevant, interesting and novel. Some ideas are:
Obviously, for a short-term research project, you do not have to answer yes to all of these questions or be as rigorous.
For a dissertation or thesis, these are just some of the possible questions, and for research scientists submitting a proposal, affirmative answers to all these questions are the bare minimum for receiving a research grant.
A general research question will usually be based around 'why' or 'how' a certain phenomenon is happening.
An example of a good general research statement could be:
'What is causing deforestation in the Amazon rainforest?'
This statement is based around a review of the literature, which shows that the Amazon rainforest surface area is shrinking rapidly. You can use this fact as a starting point and a basic assumption upon which to build your research project.
Whilst many researchers have postulated reasons for this, there is no clear consensus about what factor, or combination of factors, is contributing to the environmental and ecological damage. Now you need to narrow down the broad question, ideally moving towards a hypothesis or thesis question.
For example, looking at the above general question, you could arrive at:
'Is intensive agriculture the major cause of deforestation in the Amazon?'
'Is the logging industry the major cause of deforestation in the Amazon?'
'Is global warming the major cause of deforestation in the Amazon?'
Once you have a good research paper question, you can then begin to generate a testable hypothesis or research question, and construct your paper around this.
At the end of the research, you will be able to refer your results and discussion back to the research paper question, adding a little more information to the store of human knowledge.
Martyn Shuttleworth (Oct 18, 2009). Research Paper Question. Retrieved Sep 17, 2024 from Explorable.com: https://explorable.com/research-paper-question
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