Skip to Main Content

HY 442: Research Seminar in European History: Empire and Migration in the British World: Developing Topics

This guide was created to support Dr. Strong's HY 442 course in Spring 2025.

Research Questions

A research question is the focus of your research project. It is the thesis of your paper or the point of your presentation. You will likely need to do some preliminary research before committing to a research question. These are some ways to describe a strong research question:

  • Research questions cannot be answered with "yes" or "no".
  • Research questions can be researched.
  • Research questions have an appropriate scope for the size of the research project.

Sometimes, research questions need to change slightly after you have done some research. If you were not able to find any useful resources for the example research question, then you could try changing the scope.

Still stuck? Please check Monash University's Developing Research Questions guide.

The Mind Map

A mind map is a visual way of building a topic into a research question.

A topic is the basic idea that interests you. This is the idea that sparks your research. A topic could be "barbeque," "The Cold War," "flightless birds," or "the common cold." If you are having trouble choosing a topic, review the class syllabus or canvas modules. Find a topic covered in class that you can see yourself spending time with.

A research question is the focus of your research project. It is the thesis of your paper or the point of your presentation.

Work with us through the mind map steps to build your own research question.

To create a mind map, you will need to be able to write or type text, and the text must also be rearrangeable.

  1. Start with an idea like "Kitchen Design". Place your idea in the center.
  2. Photo of a desk with a card reading "Kitchen Design" in the middle.
  3. Surround your central idea with related concepts. I wrote all the kinds of kitchens I could think of. I could have also chosen to list appliances or design themes instead.
  4. Photo of a desk with cards listing kitchen types around a central card reading "Kitchen Design"
  5. Out of the kitchen-types, I was most drawn to "Hospital Kitchens". I then added concepts around "Hospital Kitchens". These concepts can be moved to also combined with other ideas.
  6. Photo of cards arranged in a mind map design
  7. I also thought more about "Home Kitchens". I combined, "Kitchen Safety", "Consumer Preferences", and "Advertisements."
  8. Photo of cards arranged in a mind map design
  9. My final version of my mind map example is very small. Don't worry if you have many more ideas and need more time rearranging your cards and planning.

I have identified two different starting research questions by combining my concepts:

  1. How could hospital managers design hospital kitchens to be safer for employees?
  2. How do kitchen appliance manufacturers advertise the safety of their products to consumers?

Structured Questions

You can create a research question, and explore a research topic, by answering structured questions related to an initial interesting topic. These questions help you choose a scope for your research question and will help you if you need to adjust your research question in the future. 

Questions are: 

  • Who? What populations or groups are involved in this concept? Are these people, plants, or animals? Who is affected by this phenomena? 
  • Where? Where does this event happen? Is there a specific physical environment? Do you want to limit your research to a state or a type of institution?
  • When? When does this event happen? Do you want to study a specific time frame? Do you have a decade you want to focus on? Is there a season or a time of day?
  • Why? Why does this event happen? What is an inciting factor? What effect or result do you want to focus on? Why does this topic matter to the population you are studying?
  • How? How does your topic happen? What factor do you want to focus on? How does your topic affect the world?