User:Evarenon/sandbox/Approaches to Knowledge/Seminar Group 4

Sandbox for seminar group 4


Superconcept essays drafts edit

Your super-drafts!

Wikibooks Chapters Drafts edit

Your drafts!

Superconcept applied to a discipline – Essay training edit

Possible Essays and Research questions

Issues in Interdisciplinarity edit

Disciplinary Categories

Evidence

Truth

Imperialism

Toolbox edit

How to read an academic article? edit

The Huffington Post, How to read and understand a scientific paper

Rodriguez, Infographic: How to read a scientific paper

How to formulate a research question? edit

A guide, by Kristin Poling, for the Department of History at Harvard, 2008/2009

Common Problems in Question Posing edit

1. The Deceptively Simple Question

A question that demands a simple answer to a complex question.

Ex: When did women achieve equality?

2. The Fictional Question

Ex: If Hitler had been accepted to art school, would World War II have happened?

3. The Stacked Question, or, The Embedded Assumption

Ex: Why did the Carter presidency fail?

4. The Semantic Question

A question that hinges on the definition of terms. Ex: Are all radical revolutions violent?

5. The Impossible-to-Answer Question

Ex: Was World War I inevitable?

6. The Opinion or Ethical Question

Ex: Was Truman wrong to authorize the use of the atomic bomb?

7. The Anachronistic Question

Ex: How good was ancient Athens’ record on civil rights?

The biggest problem a researcher could have is an absent question.

Is this a good research question? A Self-Test edit

  1. Does my question allow form any possible answers? Is it flexible and open-ended?
  2. Is it testable? Do I know what kind of evidence would allow an answer?
  3. Can I break big “why” questions into empirically resolvable pieces?
  4. Is the question clear and precise? Do I use vocabulary that is vague or needs definition?
  5. Have I made the premises explicit?
  6. Is it of a scale suitable to the length of the assignment?
  7. Can I explain why the answer matters?

Good research questions are edit

According to Sue Hemmings (The Open University) and Anne Hollows (Sheffield Hallam University), good research questions are:

  • Relevant:Arising from issues raised in literature and/or practice, the question will be of academic and intellectual interest.
  • Manageable:You must be able to access your sources of data (be they documents or people), and to give a full and nuanced answer to your question.
  • Substantial and original:The question should showcase your imaginative abilities, however far it may be couched in existing literature.
  • Fit for assessment:Remember, you must satisfy the learning outcomes of your course. Your question must be open to assessment, as well as interesting.
  • Clear and simple:A clear and simple research question will become more complex as your research progresses. Start with an uncluttered question then unpeel the layers in your reading and writing.
  • Interesting:Make your question interesting, but try to avoid questions which are convenient or flashy.