Anthony
New member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2026
- Messages
- 21
I feel like Goldilocks with research questions. This one is too broad. This one is too narrow. This one is just right... but I can never find it on the first try! After a disastrous first draft where my question was so broad I could have written a book, my professor gave me a framework that saved my life.
She called it the "Who, What, Where, When, and So What?" test.
Start with a broad interest. Let's say: social media and mental health. That's a book, not a paper. Too broad.
Now, apply the filters:
She called it the "Who, What, Where, When, and So What?" test.
Start with a broad interest. Let's say: social media and mental health. That's a book, not a paper. Too broad.
Now, apply the filters:
- Who? (Population) → Let's narrow it to "teenage girls."
- What? (Specific aspect) → Let's narrow it to "body image issues."
- Where? (Geographic context) → Let's narrow it to "in the United States."
- When? (Time period) → Let's narrow it to "since the rise of Instagram (2010-present)."
- So What? (The conflict/angle) → Are we looking at cause and effect? A comparison? A gap? Let's add: "A comparative analysis of Instagram's impact on body image issues among teenage girls in the US versus the UK since 2010." Now you have a comparative angle. Or: "The role of Instagram's algorithm in exacerbating body image issues among teenage girls." Now you have a specific mechanism to investigate.