Identify and Develop a Topic
It is difficult to define a topic with much specificity before
starting your research. But until you define your topic, you won't
know where to begin your search for information and you won't know
what to look for. With a well-defined topic, you can focus your
search strategies to find lots of relevant information without also
finding a lot of useless stuff.
Selecting a topic to research is not a one-step task. Identifying
and developing your topic is an ongoing process that does not end
until you have finished your research project. Start with an idea you
are interested in. Find and read some background information to get a
better understanding of the topic, then search for more specific
information. Refine (broaden, narrow, refocus, or change) your topic,
and try another search.
Find a topic
If you weren't assigned a specific topic and can't think of
one:
- talk with your class instructor (who is, after all, the reason
you are doing this project in the first place)
- find something interesting in the course reading
assignments
- look at the entries and index of a subject encyclopedia
- ask a librarian to help you figure out a topic
Narrow your topic
The initial idea for a research topic is often too broad. If your
first searches for resources are so general that you find more
information than you can click a mouse at or deal with in a
reasonable amount of time (i.e. before the research project is due),
focus on one of the following:
- a specific period of time
- a specific geographic location
- specific individuals or groups
- a specific aspect of the subject
- the viewpoint of a specific discipline
Make it a
question
It is often helpful to state your topic in the form of a question.
Treat the research project as an attempt to find a specific answer
for a specific question.
List main concepts
Pull out ideas and key terms that describe your topic. You can get
a better idea of these by looking up your topic in an encyclopedia or
other appropriate reference work. This will give you a better
understanding of your topic, which will help you figure out what
sources you will need and where you will need to look to find
them.
Analyze your
topic
Where should you look for information? From what subject or
discipline perspective are you looking at this topic? Do you need
scholarly or popular sources? Will you need books, articles, sound
recordings, primary sources, etc.?
Select appropriate tools
Which tools do you need to find the type of information you want,
(e.g. the library catalog for books, subject specific indexes for
journal articles, etc.)
Initial results
After you do an initial search, you can tell some things just from
the number and type of sources you find. If you get a million or so
hits, you probably need to narrow your topic. If you get only a few,
broaden it. If the hits seem to be irrelevant to your topic, search
using different terms. Do another search and see if you get what
seems to be an appropriate amount of appropriate sources. Keep
refining your search until you are satisfied with your results. Then
go read them.
Revise
After reading through some of the sources you find, you will get a
better understanding of the topic you are researching. With this
better understanding, you can revise your initial topic and its
corresponding question for which you are so diligently seeking an
answer. Go back and try another search using your revisions. Repeat
as necessary until you have done enough research to know what to ask
and how to answer it.