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8.2: Getting Started on Your Research Sections

  • Page ID
    140988
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    Key Takeaway

    Research is a process of strategic exploration, one that begins with learning how to ask the right question.

    Learning Objectives

    By the end of this module, you should be able to:

    • Understand the difference between a search topic and a research question
    • Identify the features of a reference article that can aid in further research

    Navigation: How to move around this tutorial

    This module should take roughly 15 minutes to complete.

    Use the arrows at the bottom of each page to move forward and backward through the modules. Or, use the Contents menu in the top left hand corner to go to a particular section.


    It’s useful to think about this early stage of your research project as a process of exploration, one that will help you develop a research question that is going to be searchable. If a topic is completely new to you, you will likely want to find some background information in order to understand the context of your topic and how it relates to a larger picture. This exploratory process will also help you with any specialized terms associated with your topic that you might use in developing a search strategy. And sometimes, this initial exploration will also lead you to realize that your question might not be searchable, or that you are going to have to modify it a little. That’s ok. A little work up front will save you time later.

    Even if you already have some familiarity with a topic, some additional background work can help to bring a fresh perspective to your understanding of it.

    Source Information:

    Doing Research A Student’s Guide to Finding and Using the Best Sources (Brinkerhoff, Celia)


    8.2: Getting Started on Your Research Sections is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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