How to Narrow or Broaden Your Topic

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UCLA College Library: How To Narrow or Broaden Your Topic

How to Narrow or Broaden Your Topic

Be prepared to be flexible with your topic idea!

If it is too broad or vague you will find too much information and will need to narrow the focus.

If it is too specific or specialized or new, it will be difficult finding enough information to write your paper this quarter. In that case, you will need to broaden your idea.

How to narrow your topic

How to broaden your topic

How to Narrow Your Topic

Example: I'm thinking of doing a paper on "fashion." This topic could develop in many different ways.

Hint: Ask Yourself Questions About Your Topic:

What do you know about it? What don't you know?

What aspects of your topic interest you: historical, sociological, psychological, etc.?

What time period do you want to cover?

On what geographic region do you want to focus?

What kind of information do you need?

❍ a brief summary or a lengthy explanation?

❍ periodical articles, books, essays, encyclopedia articles?

❍ statistics?

Sample Topic Narrowing Chart:

General Topic: fashion

Time span: 1920s

Place: US; urban; big cities (not rural)

Person or group: youth; college age

Event or Aspects: sexual attitudes; behavior; sociological http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/college/help/topic/index.htm (1 of 3)2/12/2008 12:41:03 PM

UCLA College Library: How To Narrow or Broaden Your Topic

Narrowed Research Question:

What did American youth fashion of the 1920s say about sexual mores?

You try it! Go to Research Topic Focusing Worksheet

How to Broaden Your Topic

Example: I'm thinking of doing a paper on "whether genetically altered soybeans are safe for

consumers."

This topic as stated is seeking to answer a question for which there may be no answer yet -- more scientific and long-term research may need to be done. How can this be turned into a more manageable topic?

Hint 1: Look for parallels and opportunities for broader associations:

Could you examine other bioengineered foods, in addition to soybeans?

Could you think broadly about safety concerns and issues -- what might these be?

Who are the key players in this controversy? Consumer activists? The FDA? Scientists?

What other issues are involved in this topic? Such as, how should be foods be labeled?

Hint 2: Brainstorm! (and ask a reference librarian!)

Sample Topic Broadening Chart:

Specific Topic:

Alternate focus:

Are genetically altered soybeans are safe for consumers?

bioengineered or genetically altered foods

Alternate Place: general: US, Europe

Brainstorm Focus on: Person or Group: consumer advocates vs FDA and scientists

Brainstorm Focus on: Event or Aspect: labeling foods; regulations

Broadened Research Question:

What are the main issues/concerns of consumer activists in the labeling controversy over bioengineered foods?

http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/college/help/topic/index.htm (2 of 3)2/12/2008 12:41:03 PM

UCLA College Library: How To Narrow or Broaden Your Topic

You try it! Go to Research Topic Focusing Worksheet

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Comments to: College Library Web Administrator

Last updated: April 11, 2006 http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/college/help/topic/index.htm (3 of 3)2/12/2008 12:41:03 PM

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