A. Develop an overview
B. Explore Relationships
Adapted from Pappas, M.L., & Tepe, A.E. (1997). Pathways to knowledge: Follett's Information Skills Model (3rd ed.). McHenry, IL: Follett Software. Available: https://ils.unc.edu/daniel/242/Pathways_1.pdf
Research à Create à Revise
(repeat)
Each time you go through this process you will further refine your topic until you have narrowed the scope to meet the need of your project, your audience, and your purpose. As part of your research, use both divergent and convergent thinking to open up new avenues of research possibilities and focus your topic into areas that you want to more deeply pursue.
Brainstorming is an example of divergent thinking. Use brainstorming to think creatively about your topic. Develop keywords, synonyms, subject headings, and related concepts that you can search in library databases to help you find the words to create questions about your topic that you can refine into a manageable thesis statement.
As you brainstorm you will develop questions. Answering those questions is a way to make choices about where you want to further research. That is an example of convergent thinking.
As you go through this process, keep in mind the 5 W's to allow yourself to develop boundaries on your topic: Who? What? When? Where? Why?
•Who are you talking about
•What are they doing/being impacted by/reacting to?
•What point in time are we looking at? Is it a range?
•Where in the world are we looking? How many places?
•Why is this question important? What drives you to do this research?
Once you've asked those questions, evaluate the answers you've found and repeat this process until you have developed a research question that is focused on the audience, purpose, and topic that you want to answer.
Image Credits:
Convergent Thinking vs. Divergent Thinking from Kat Boogaard on wrike.com
Divergent Thinking and Convergent Thinking from The definitions of convergent and divergent thinking
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