The document discusses choosing and defining a research project topic or problem. It provides tips for choosing a topic such as consulting existing theses and research, using web searches, and talking to professors and professionals. When deciding on a topic, it should be realistic, specific, novel, have accessible information, and be within one's abilities and interests. Defining the problem clearly is important, and components of a good definition include identifying who has the problem, what the problem is, and why it is important to solve. The definition should also lay out the boundaries and objectives of studying the problem.
The document discusses choosing and defining a research project topic or problem. It provides tips for choosing a topic such as consulting existing theses and research, using web searches, and talking to professors and professionals. When deciding on a topic, it should be realistic, specific, novel, have accessible information, and be within one's abilities and interests. Defining the problem clearly is important, and components of a good definition include identifying who has the problem, what the problem is, and why it is important to solve. The definition should also lay out the boundaries and objectives of studying the problem.
• When embarking upon project as part of an undergraduate or a postgraduate study programme, it is important that particular attention is paid to the choice of subject or topic of the project. The choice of topic usually comes from your interest in and value of a particular subject. This interest and value will eventually be developed into a series of questions which you are keen to find answers to. Choosing the topic………… If you are finding difficulty in choosing a project topic, you can consider the following: • Consult the library catalogue and inquire about theses and dissertations, articles in academic journals, reports, books and the like. • Using web searching to find area of interest. • Talk about problems and possible topics with your colleagues and/or with your lecturers who are experts in the field. • Arrange an informal interview with professionals in the industry and discuss what you should emphasize and what are the possible practical outcomes. Criteria that need to be considered when deciding on your research/project topic. There are a number of criteria that need to be considered when deciding on your research topic. • A project topic should be realistic. You need to identify a problem (supported by published materials), investigate the causes and possible solution. Alternatively, the research subject might cover an office procedure or the appraisal of a particular system. Here you will be investigating what should be done and what is actually done. • Your topic should be specific and narrow. • Your topic should show individuality, i.e. your personal contribution to the study. What is new about your investigation? This can take the form of case studies, a series of interviews, postal questionnaires or analyzing archival data Criteria that need to be considered when deciding on your research/project topic. • Accessibility of information. Your topic should be in an area that you can have access to the necessary data for the successful completion of the project. • Personal ability. The subject and extent of the research should be within your intellectual and physical resource ability. • Personal interest. Last but not least, you should be interested in the subject of research. It is of no use if you do not like or enjoy the research subject. Selecting the Problem • The research problem undertaken for study must be carefully selected. The task is a difficult one, although it may not appear to be so. Nevertheless, every researcher must find out his own salvation for research problems cannot be borrowed. Finding an idea for your engineering project requires you to identify the needs of yourself, another person, or a group of people. The act of looking at the world around you to identify these needs is called need finding. To help you find an idea for your engineering project: • Create a list of all the things that annoy or bother the people around you. • Mind Map possible design problems, ideas, or areas of interest to you. Once you have found an idea for your engineering project, describe the problem by writing a problem statement. Your problem statement must answer three questions: • What is the problem or need? • Who has the problem or need? • Why is it important to solve? However, the following points may be observed by a researcher in selecting a research problem or a subject for research: • Subject which is overdone should not be normally chosen, for it will be a difficult task to throw any new light in such a case. • Controversial subject should not become the choice of an average researcher. • Too narrow or too vague problems should be avoided. • The subject selected for research should be familiar and feasible so that the related research material or sources of research are within one’s reach. Even then it is quite difficult to supply definitive ideas concerning how a researcher should obtain ideas for his research. For this purpose, a researcher should contact an expert or a professor in the University who is already engaged in research. He may as well read articles published in current literature available on the subject and may think how the techniques and ideas discussed therein might be applied to the solution of other problems. He may discuss with others what he has in mind concerning a problem. In this way he should make all possible efforts in selecting a problem. • The importance of the subject, the qualifications and the training of a researcher, the costs involved, the time factor are few other criteria that must also be considered in selecting a problem. • The selection of a problem must be preceded by a preliminary study. This may not be necessary when the problem requires the conduct of a research closely similar to one that has already been done. But when the field of inquiry is relatively new and does not have available a set of well-developed techniques, a brief feasibility study must always be undertaken. Final selection of a problem • In other words, before the final selection of a problem is done, a researcher must ask himself the following questions: • Whether he/she is well equipped in terms of his background to carry out the research? • Whether the study falls within the budget he/she can afford? • Whether the necessary cooperation can be obtained from those who must participate in research as subjects? Problem Statement • A problem statement is a clear concise description of the issue(s) that need(s) to be addressed by a problem solving team. It is used to center and focus the team at the beginning, keep the team on track during the effort, and is used to validate that the effort delivered an outcome that solves the problem statement (
• In research process, the first and foremost step happens to be that of
selecting and properly defining a research problem.* A researcher must find the problem and formulate it so that it becomes susceptible to research. Like a medical doctor, a researcher must examine all the symptoms (presented to him or observed by him) concerning a problem before he can diagnose correctly. To define a problem correctly, a researcher must know: what a problem is? Components of a research problem • There must be an individual or a group which has some difficulty or the problem. • There must be some objective(s) to be attained at. If one wants nothing, one cannot have a problem. • There must be alternative means (or the courses of action) for obtaining the objective(s) one wishes to attain. This means that there must be at least two means available to a researcher for if he has no choice of means, he cannot have a problem. • There must remain some doubt in the mind of a researcher with regard to the selection of alternatives. This means that research must answer the question concerning the relative efficiency of the possible alternatives. • There must be some environment(s) to which the difficulty pertains. • Thus, a research problem is one which requires a researcher to find out the best solution for the given problem, i.e., to find out by which course of action the objective can be attained optimally in the context of a given environment. There are several factors which may result in making the problem complicated. Necessity of Defining the Problem • Quite often we all hear that a problem clearly stated is a problem half solved. This statement signifies the need for defining a research problem. The problem to be investigated must be defined unambiguously for that will help to discriminate relevant data from the irrelevant ones. A proper definition of research problem will enable the researcher to be on the track whereas an ill-defined problem may create hurdles. • Questions like: What data are to be collected? What characteristics of data are relevant and need to be studied? What relations are to be explored. What techniques are to be used for the purpose? and similar other questions crop up in the mind of the researcher who can well plan his strategy and find answers to all such questions only when the research problem has been well defined. Thus, defining a research problem properly is a prerequisite for any study and is a step of the highest importance. In fact, formulation of a problem is often more essential than its solution. It is only on careful detailing the research problem that we can work out the research design and can smoothly carry on all the consequential steps involved while doing research. Technique Involved In Defining A Problem • Let us start with the question: What does one mean when he/she wants to define a research problem? The answer may be that one wants to state the problem along with the bounds within which it is to be studied. In other words, defining a problem involves the task of laying down boundaries within which a researcher shall study the problem with a pre-determined objective in view. • How to define a research problem is undoubtedly an extraordinary task. However, it is a task that must be tackled intelligently to avoid the perplexity encountered in a research operation. The usual approach is that the researcher should himself pose a question (or in case someone else wants the researcher to carry on research, the concerned individual, organisation or an authority should pose the question to the researcher) and set-up techniques and procedures for throwing light on the question concerned for formulating or defining the research problem. But such an approach generally does not produce definitive results because the question phrased in such a fashion is usually in broad general terms and as such may not be in a form suitable for testing. • Defining a research problem properly and clearly is a crucial part of a research study and must in no case be accomplished hurriedly. However, in practice this a frequently overlooked which causes a lot of problems later on. Hence, the research problem should be defined in a systematic manner, giving due weightage to all relating points. The technique for the purpose involves the undertaking of the following steps generally one after the other: (i) statement of the problem in a general way; (ii) understanding the nature of the problem; (iii) surveying the available literature (iv) developing the ideas through discussions; and (v) rephrasing the research problem into a working proposition.
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