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Introduction to Sociology - Bradford Campus

This guide is designed to help support students doing research relating to Sociology.

Focus Your Topic

You'll probably need to focus your topic, or narrow it down. Most students start out with topics that are way too broad for their assignments. If your topic is too broad, your research will be much more difficult, and you'll waste a lot of time looking for information that you won't use.

For example, if you try searching for information on global warming, you will quickly be overwhelmed. Global warming is a large subject, covering a variety of disciplines, topics and issues. How can you narrow this topic?

Brainstorm again.

Jot down all the ideas and questions you might already have about the topic. Think about the who, what, when, where, and especially the why and how for your topic.

if you have a broad topic, you need to find a way to narro it and make it more focused

  • What do you know about global warming? What don't you know?
  • Is there a geographical area you want to focus on?
  • Are there individuals or organizations involved in this issue?
  • What are some areas impacted by global warming?
    • Environmental
    • Political
    • Economic
    • Human element.

It may help to set up a table or chart moving from the general topic to narrower topics:

Brainstorming A Topic

Topic Narrower Topic Even Narrower
Global Warming » Environment » rising sea levels
» destruction of rain forests
» air pollution
  » Political » Kyoto Protocol
» roles of government
  » Human Element » impact on world health
» reducing use of fossil fuel
  » Economic » agriculture
» role of corporations
  » Geographical » developing countries
    » Antarctic region

If the chart is too formal for you, you might like making a mind map or concept map. A whiteboard or a big piece of paper are all you need to make a mind map. Here's the same information as above, but in a mind map: 

Mindmap for global warming

The secret to mind mapping is to free yourself from rules. Don't worry about grammar, spelling, or formatting. Just jot down ideas until you can't think of anymore, then go back and make connections between the ideas. If an idea appeals to you, make it the center idea on a new piece of paper and brainstorm more details.

Try mind mapping with Bubbl.us! Click on the "start now" button to begin. You only need to register if you wish to save and access your mind map later.

Topic to Question

Dig into your topic to find the question!

Once you've narrowed your topic to something workable, you need to restate it as a question.  A question requires an answer, and research is all about the search for answers. 

Here's an example:

Broad Topic: global warming

Focused Topic: global warming and world health

Possible Research Questions:
How will changes in the world climate increase health risks for people worldwide?
What should the U.S. government do to prepare for an increase in climate-related diseases? 
What is the role of the World Health Organization in response to increasing diseases because of climate change? 

As a general rule of thumb, if a quick Google search can answer a research question, then it's likely too simple to be answered and analyzed in a college-level paper.

However, once you have a research question, break it into even smaller questions in order to make your research more manageable. For example:

How will changes in the world climate increase health risks for people worldwide?

  • What climate changes are expected?
  • What diseases are most sensitive to climate change?
  • What areas of the world are most at risk?
  • What statistics are there to prove that health risks are increasing?
  • ... and so forth

You can see that research is basically a quest to find answers to the questions you are asking!