What will continue to happen if we don’t fix or explore or research this problem?

Article review

The readings and resources all discuss the nature of research topics and research problems. We generally craft a research study to address a known need.

But, how we discover that need can be difficult. Below are a suggestion of questions to answer as you craft a problem statement to guide your research.

Answering these questions requires extensive reading and exploration research in your area exploration to understand the context and reading primary, peer-reviewed research to see what has already been done and what has yet to be done.

Research problems should be relevant, current, and feasible.

Topic Area: What is the general problem within your topic?
Connection to Context: How do we know it’s a problem? (Should be local knowledge and knowledge from research)

Significance: How have researchers explored this problem from various perspectives?

Focus: What do researchers tell us is still unknown about this problem (this is your specific focus)?
Specific Problem: Therefore, the problem to be explored is

Significance: What will continue to happen if we don’t fix or explore or research this problem?