Good questions tell you a lot about a study:
Does client-centered therapy produce more satisfaction in clients than traditional therapy?
(Experimental or causal comparative, quantitative)
What goes on in an after-school programs during the average week?
(Ethnographic research; qualitative)
Does behavior modification reduce aggression in autistic children?
(Single-subject experimental research; quantitative)
Do teachers behave differently toward students of different genders?
(Causal-comparative research; quantitative; quantitative or mixed methods)
Bad Questions:
- Should questions.
- Best questions.
- Vague questions.
> A research question is the question around which you center your research. It should be:
- clear: it provides enough specifics that one’s audience can easily understand its purpose without needing additional explanation.
- focused: it is narrow enough that it can be answered thoroughly in the space the writing task allows.
- concise: it is expressed in the fewest possible words.
- complex: it is not answerable with a simple “yes” or “no,” but rather requires synthesis and analysis of ideas and sources prior to composition of an answer.
- arguable: its potential answers are open to debate rather than accepted facts.
Source: George Mason Writing Center https://writingcenter.gmu.edu/guides/how-to-write-a-research-question