*Research and Writing: Integrated Skills & Strategies*
- Information Literacy
- Information Formats
- Popular, Trade, and Scholarly Sources
- Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Sources
- Deconstructing an Assignment
- Picking a Topic
- Brainstorming and Prewriting
- Research Question and Thesis
- Choosing Keywords
- Creating Search Statements
- Evaluating Sources
- Literature Reviews
- Source Integration
- Annotated Bibliographies
- Finding Information Gaps
- Citation Styles
- APA, 7th edition
- MLA, 8th edition
- Chicago Manual of Style, 18th edition
- Copyright and Fair Use
- "Am I done?"
On This Page
Developing a Research Question
Components of a Thesis Statement
Thesis Revision Examples
Revise your thesis statement, still struggling.
Conversing with someone else about your research and writing process can be incredibly helpful. Contact staff at McKillop Library or the Writing Center using the links below.
- Ask-a-Librarian
- Meet with a Writing Consultant
After you have chosen a topic and done some brainstorming, it is time to develop your research question. Although you will not include your research question in your paper, this is nonetheless a critical step because your thesis statement, one of the most important pieces of your research project, will answer your research question. Your research question will also help you determine what is important to include in your project and when you have finished it.
As you create your research question, remember issues that you identified in your brainstorming, concept mapping, and/or prewriting. What specific aspect of your topic appealed to you? What unique question do you want to seek answers to?
One of the most important things to keep in mind as you are creating your research question is that your question should be open-ended : the question should not be able to be answered with a simple "yes" or "no." You want to create a question that requires exploration and analysis: one that will require you to use a variety of credible sources to answer. See the chart below for examples of open and close-ended questions.
There are many types of research questions, so spend some time brainstorming how you want to approach your topic. You want your question to be innovative: something that will grab your readers' attention and make them think about your topic in a new way. For example, let's say you want to examine the practice of tattooing in the United States for your research project. Below are three types of research questions that provided examples for this research topic.
- Example: How does getting a tattoo impact American millennials as they enter the work force?
- Example: How does the perception of tattooed individuals in the twenty-first century compare to perceptions in the early-twentieth century?
- Example: How have social changes impacted the prevalence of tattoos in America?
Components of a Thesis
The most important part of any writing assignment is the thesis statement. A thesis statement states the author’s purpose for writing or the point to be proven. The topic sentences of each succeeding body paragraph all connect the thesis statement.
- When the essay is designed to inform the reader , the thesis explains the author’s purpose for writing and serves as the controlling idea or topic throughout the essay.
- When the essay is designed to convince the reader , the thesis states the topic that will be explored and serves as the argument or central claim throughout the essay.
Thesis statements guide the content, organization, and evidence that together build an effective paper. A thesis does not exist in isolation and should be threaded through the entirety of a paper. The creation of a powerful and cohesive thesis requires multiple revisions. To begin, your thesis may address the topic broadly; but through revision, the thesis should ultimately convey a critical, specific, and arguable perspective on the topic. The examples below model possible revisions to a broad, ineffective thesis.
Ineffective thesis to be revised: Tattooing is very prevalent in the United States.
Effective thesis revisions:
Say why : Many people decide to become tattooed because it allows them a permanent form of physical expression that positively promotes self-awareness and ownership of experiences.
Say why the reader should care : As the prevalence to tattooing increases with the millennial generation, the trend will negatively impact the perception of young professionals in the American business world and the United States' success within a global market.
Say how : Body art acceptance in American society has grown significantly in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, achieved through the unraveling of stigmatization and ostracizing of a once believed deviant behavior.
Make specific comparisons : While the practice of body modification once held many negative associations, the profession of tattooist has grown out of its underground beginnings to be considered a respectable position in the contemporary arts community.
Make an evaluation : The prevalence of tattooing as a key element of youth culture in the United States demonstrates the lack of maturity and personal responsibility amongst millennials.
Consider the consequences : As the generations X, Y, and millennials enter advanced ages of life, there will be a significant regret about their choices in body modification and a rapid increase in tattoo removal.
Apply previous or other knowledge : The acceptance of body modification, like many other social practices and beliefs that are recognized in contemporary society, was furthered by the driving social reforms and movements of the mid-20th century, including women's rights, the civil rights movements, and political protest.
Give it a try! Use the worksheet attached to experiment with different versions of your own thesis. Remember, you can always revisit the wording. We will re-examine the thesis at the end of the process through reverse outlining.
- Revising Thesis Statements Worksheet
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Research Basics
- Research question vs. Thesis Statement
- Evaluating sources
- Academic/Scholarly/Authoritative Sources
- Popular Sources
- Reference Sources
- Primary vs. Secondary Sources
- Keyword Searching and Boolean Operators
- Databases vs. the Internet
- Citing sources
The Research Question
A research question is:
Questions are words and phrases that express a desire to find out some data or information. Research questions are interrogative statements that aim to find out points regarding a specific topic or subject. Jankowicz (2005 :38-45) offers some useful ideas on research questions as concerning ‘what are you really trying to do?’ and ‘what is it that is most useful to do?’ In turn, Fisher (2010 : 34-9) suggests useful tactics and techniques including, for example, using post-its to map out ideas on a desk or wall.
As is the case with the title , aims and objectives , the research questions should be shaped to deal with something that is of interest to you. You will be spending a considerable amount of time engaged with the project so it would be better if it is something that will stimulate you. ( Credo Reference )
- Research Questions Generator This document made by UConn Library provides a breakdown of how to create a research question.
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The Thesis Statement
A thesis statement "concisely identifies the topic and main point of a piece of writing. Many writers like to formulate a working thesis statement early in the writing process. Your working thesis statement should ideally have two parts: the first part defines the specific focus to be covered in the paper, and the second part makes a strong point about the topic" ( Hunt, 2015 ).
When you begin a research paper that requires a thesis statement, you may write a few options for thesis statements and choose a working thesis statement after. Check out this handout on thesis statements from UNC-Chapel Hill's Writing Center .
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IMAGES
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COMMENTS
The first question asks for a ready-made solution, and is not focused or researchable. The second question is a clearer comparative question, but note that it may not be practically feasible. For a smaller research project or thesis, it could be narrowed down further to focus on the effectiveness of drunk driving laws in just one or two countries.
A good research question is essential to guide your research paper, dissertation, or thesis. All research questions should be: Focused on a single problem or issue. Researchable using primary and/or secondary sources. Feasible to answer within the timeframe and practical constraints. Specific enough to answer thoroughly.
Research questions must be aligned with other aspects of the thesis, dissertation, or project study proposal, such as the problem statement, research design, and analysis strategy. To summarize: Idea >Reviewing literature > Identifying the gap in theory or practice >Problem and Purpose Statements >Research question
Formulating a Research Question. Every research project starts with a question. Your question will allow you to select, evaluate and interpret your sources systematically. The question you start with isn't set in stone, but will almost certainly be revisited and revised as you read. Every discipline allows for certain kinds of questions to be ...
Research questions should not be answerable with a simple "yes" or "no" or by easily-found facts. They should, instead, require both research and analysis on the part of the writer. They often begin with "How" or "Why.". Begin your research. After you've come up with a question, think about the possible paths your research ...
1 It should be clear and concise: A research paper thesis statement should use plain language and explain the topic briefly, without going into too much detail. 2 It's a single sentence: A thesis statement is generally only one sentence, which helps keep the topic simple and makes it easier to understand. 3 It should establish the scope of ...
The most important part of any writing assignment is the thesis statement. A thesis statement states the author's purpose for writing or the point to be proven. The topic sentences of each succeeding body paragraph all connect the thesis statement.. When the essay is designed to inform the reader, the thesis explains the author's purpose for writing and serves as the controlling idea or ...
Put in the simplest terms: A thesis statement is a broad, theoretical assertion about underlying causation, something that (as a rule) can only be demonstrated through inference.; A research question is an empirically verifiable claim that (if it pans out) will serve to infer the validity of the thesis statement.; To give the simple physics example, Isaac Newton developed a thesis that the ...
Tip 3: Test Your Thesis Statement and Research Question. Test the feasibility of your thesis statement and research question by conducting a preliminary literature review and gathering initial data. This can help you identify potential challenges and refine your approach. Tip 4: Use Analytical Frameworks.
Research questions are interrogative statements that aim to find out points regarding a specific topic or subject. Jankowicz (2005:38-45) offers some useful ideas on research questions as concerning 'what are you