All Skills
Thinking Skills

Research Skills

How to investigate a question systematically — finding reliable information, evaluating what you find, synthesising across sources, and presenting what you have learned clearly and honestly. Research is not just an academic activity. It is the process of building knowledge about anything that matters to you, using whatever sources are available.

Key Ideas at This Level
1 When we have a question we do not know the answer to, we can investigate.
2 We can find information in many places — people, observation, books, and our own experience.
3 Good investigation means looking carefully and honestly, not just finding what we expected.
4 Sharing what we find helps others learn too.
5 Not everything we are told is true — we can check.
Teacher Background

Research skills at Early Years level are about building the disposition of inquiry — the habit of asking genuine questions and the confidence that those questions can be investigated. Young children are naturally curious and ask questions constantly. The task of early education is not to teach them to question but to preserve and channel the questioning impulse that most children already have, while giving them the simplest tools for pursuing answers. At this level, research is direct observation, careful looking, and talking to people who know. It does not require books or technology. In communities where formal literacy is limited or where technology is unavailable, direct observation and community knowledge are the primary research tools — and they are genuine and valuable ones. The question who would know about this? — pointing children towards people in their community who have relevant knowledge — is one of the most important research skills at this level. Community elders, farmers, healers, craftspeople, and parents all hold knowledge that cannot be found in books, and treating them as legitimate research sources is both practically important and culturally affirming. The habit of recording what you find — in drawing, in memory, in oral description — should be built alongside the habit of questioning. Research that produces no record produces less learning and less sharing than research that produces even a simple visual or verbal record. All activities below require no materials beyond immediate availability.

Skill-Building Activities
Activity 1 — I wonder: building the questioning habit
PurposeChildren develop the habit of noticing things they do not understand and turning those observations into questions — the most fundamental research skill.
How to run itIntroduce the phrase I wonder. Tell children: I wonder is the beginning of all learning. It means you have noticed something interesting and you want to understand it. Ask children to go outside — or to look carefully around the classroom — and find one thing that makes them say I wonder. Gather after five minutes. Children share their I wonders: I wonder why that tree has holes in it. I wonder what makes the water in the river run that way. I wonder why those ants are all going the same direction. I wonder what is inside that seed. Celebrate every wonder — no question is too small or too obvious. Now for each I wonder, ask: how could you find the answer? What would you do? Who could you ask? Who in your community would know about this? What could you look at more carefully? Help children match each question to a possible investigation strategy: the tree holes — you could look more closely, ask someone who knows about trees, watch the tree for a while. The ants — you could follow them and see where they go, ask an elder who knows about insects. Make a class list of I wonders and the investigation strategies for each. Over the next week, children try one investigation and report back. Ask: did you find an answer? Did your investigation produce more questions?
💡 Low-resource tipNo materials needed. The outdoor environment and the community are the research resources. The teacher's role is to validate questions and to point children towards people and places that can help them investigate — not to answer the questions directly.
Activity 2 — Looking carefully: observation as investigation
PurposeChildren practise systematic observation — the most fundamental research method — discovering that looking carefully and patiently reveals information that a quick glance misses.
How to run itTake children to observe something in the natural environment — a plant, an insect, a patch of soil, a piece of bark, a small pool of water. Ask them to look for two minutes without saying or writing anything. Then ask: what did you notice? Collect answers. Then ask: look again for two more minutes. Look at the edges, the underneath, the parts that move, the parts that do not move. What did you miss the first time? Collect more observations. Introduce the idea: the first time you look, you see the obvious things. The second time, you start to see the details. Expert observers — scientists, farmers, doctors, trackers — have trained themselves to look very carefully, many times, at the same thing. Now ask: what questions does this observation raise? What do you see that you cannot explain? What would you like to look at more closely? Connect to the I wonder activity: observation creates questions; questions drive investigation; investigation produces more careful observation. Now ask children to teach the observation technique to someone at home — a parent, a sibling — by taking them to look at something together.
💡 Low-resource tipRequires outdoor access to any natural environment. The specific subject of observation matters less than the practice of sustained, patient attention. Teachers who observe alongside children — who say I also notice that and I have not seen that before either — model the observation habit more powerfully than those who simply direct it.
Activity 3 — Who knows? Using community knowledge as a research resource
PurposeChildren identify people in their community who have specific knowledge and practise using them as research sources — building respect for community knowledge and the skill of purposeful inquiry.
How to run itIntroduce the idea: there are people in every community who know a great deal about specific things — about farming, about plants, about weather, about animals, about history, about building, about cooking, about healing. These people are research resources. Asking them questions is a form of research. Now make a class map of community knowledge. Ask: who in your family or community knows a great deal about something? Make a list: grandparent who knows about the history of the community; farmer who knows about which crops grow in which conditions; elder who knows about traditional medicine and plants; builder who knows about local construction techniques; woman who knows about traditional food preparation. Now assign each child to interview one knowledgeable person about one specific question connected to something they are learning or curious about. Give children three preparation steps: decide on two or three specific questions to ask; listen carefully and try to remember or record what they hear; prepare to share what they learned with the class. After the interviews, share findings. Ask: what did you learn that you could not have found in any book? What surprised you? How did it feel to ask an expert questions? Introduce the idea: this person is a primary source — someone with direct knowledge or experience. Primary sources are often the most reliable and most locally relevant research resources available.
💡 Low-resource tipNo materials needed beyond the community itself. The interview preparation is the most important part — children who go to interviews with specific questions get much more useful information than those who go with only general curiosity. Asking permission from the interviewee in advance should be part of the preparation.
Reflection Questions
  • Q1What is something you have always wondered about but never found out? How could you investigate it?
  • Q2Who in your family or community knows something that you would like to learn? What would you ask them?
  • Q3Have you ever looked very carefully at something and noticed something you had not seen before? What was it?
  • Q4If someone told you something that you were not sure was true, how would you check?
  • Q5What is something that happened in your community before you were born that you would like to know more about? Who could tell you?
Practice Tasks
Drawing task
Draw something you observed carefully this week. Show what you noticed. Write or say: I observed __________, I noticed __________, and a question this raised for me is __________.
Skills: Building the habit of observation-to-question — the core research cycle at its simplest
Model Answer

A detailed drawing showing a specific observed thing — a plant, an insect, a process, a community activity — with specific features highlighted or labelled. The completion names what was observed specifically, something noticed that was not expected, and a genuine question that emerged from the observation.

Marking Notes

Ask: how long did you look? What made you look again? Did you see something you were not expecting? The unexpected observation is the most valuable — it shows genuine attention rather than confirmation of what was already known.

Interview report
Interview someone in your community about something they know a great deal about. Write or say: I asked __________ about __________, they told me __________, and something that surprised me was __________.
Skills: Practising purposeful interview and the recording and sharing of community knowledge — building respect for primary sources
Model Answer

I asked my grandmother about how the community used to get water before the borehole was installed. She told me that women and older girls walked four kilometres each morning to the river and carried water on their heads in clay pots — each trip took about two hours. She said that in the dry season the river ran low and the water was sometimes unclear, and people got sick more often in those months. Something that surprised me was that she said she actually misses those mornings sometimes, because all the women walked together and talked — it was a time for sharing news and for younger women to learn from older ones.

Marking Notes

Award marks for a specific person with specific knowledge, a specific topic, a genuine answer that contains specific information, and something that surprised the child — which shows they went in with some expectation that was challenged. The surprise element is the evidence of genuine learning.

Common Mistakes
Common misconception

Research means looking things up in books or on the internet.

What to teach instead

Research is any systematic investigation of a question — and the most appropriate methods depend on the question, the available resources, and the context. Direct observation, community interviews, physical experiments, archive research, and comparative study are all legitimate research methods. In communities without reliable internet or library access, oral history, community knowledge, and direct observation are the primary and often the most valuable research methods available. A child who carefully observes a natural process and records their observations is doing research. So is a child who interviews a community elder about historical events.

Common misconception

Research means finding information to support what you already believe.

What to teach instead

Research that seeks only information supporting a pre-existing belief is called confirmation bias, not investigation. Genuine research means being open to finding information that challenges what you expected — and treating such information as more valuable than information that confirms expectations. The surprising finding, the answer that contradicts the hypothesis, the source that disagrees with the others — these are often the most important research discoveries. Teaching children to look for what they did not expect, rather than what they expected, is one of the most important research habits.

Common misconception

Only experts can do real research.

What to teach instead

Research is a human capacity, not an expert credential. Young children can conduct genuine research — systematic observation, purposeful interviews, comparison of multiple sources — on questions that matter to them, using methods appropriate to their age and resources. The findings may be less comprehensive or technically sophisticated than expert research, but the process is the same: identify a question, investigate systematically, evaluate what you find, and share what you learned. Some of the most important research in history has been conducted by people without formal credentials who paid careful, sustained attention to something they cared about.

Key Ideas at This Level
1 Formulating a research question — the difference between a topic and a question
2 Types of sources and how to evaluate them
3 Primary and secondary sources — and why the distinction matters
4 Note-taking and information management
5 Synthesising information from multiple sources
6 Presenting research findings honestly and clearly
Teacher Background

Research skills at primary level introduce students to the formal research process — from question formulation through source evaluation, note-taking, and synthesis, to presentation. The single most important skill to establish at this level is the distinction between a topic and a research question. A topic (climate change, the history of our community, nutrition) is a subject area. A research question (how has rainfall in this region changed over the last twenty years according to community memory? what traditional foods in our community provide the most nutritional value? how was the community founded and who were its first settlers?) is a specific, answerable question that investigation can address. This distinction is crucial because most students at this level write about topics rather than investigating questions — they gather information on a subject without being directed by a specific question, which produces unfocused summaries rather than genuine research.

Source evaluation

The questions to ask about any source — who produced it and why, when was it produced, what is the evidence behind it, does it agree with other sources — are the same at primary level as at secondary. What differs is the complexity of the sources and the sophistication with which evaluation is applied.

Note-taking and information management

One of the most practically important but least explicitly taught research skills is note-taking — selecting what is relevant to your question rather than copying everything, recording where information came from (source attribution), and organising notes in ways that support synthesis rather than just collection. Students who copy sources verbatim are not doing research — they are transcribing. Research requires the selection, paraphrase, and attribution of information that is relevant to a specific question.

Synthesis

The final and most cognitively demanding stage of research is synthesis — the integration of information from multiple sources into a coherent response to the research question. Synthesis is not summary of sources in sequence but the construction of an answer from the combined weight of evidence, with honest acknowledgement of where sources agree, where they conflict, and where the evidence is insufficient.

Key Vocabulary
Research question
A specific, focused question that investigation can address — as distinct from a topic, which is a broad subject area. A good research question is clear, answerable, and genuinely interesting.
Primary source
A source with direct, firsthand knowledge of the subject — an eyewitness account, original document, interview with someone who has direct experience, observational data collected yourself. Primary sources are generally more reliable for specific factual claims than secondary ones.
Secondary source
A source that reports, summarises, or analyses primary sources — a textbook chapter, a newspaper article about an event, a book about historical events. Secondary sources are useful for overview and context but must be checked against primary sources for specific claims.
Source evaluation
The process of assessing the reliability, relevance, and limitations of a source of information — asking who produced it, when, why, with what evidence, and with what potential biases.
Note-taking
The selective recording of information relevant to a research question — in your own words, with source attribution. Good note-taking selects and paraphrases rather than copying verbatim.
Synthesis
The integration of information from multiple sources into a coherent response to a research question — going beyond summarising individual sources to construct an answer from their combined weight of evidence.
Citation
A reference to the source of information used in research — identifying where the information came from so that readers can check it and so that credit is given to the original source.
Plagiarism
Presenting someone else's ideas, words, or findings as your own — without attribution. Plagiarism is both an intellectual dishonesty and a failure to do research, since it substitutes copying for genuine investigation.
Skill-Building Activities
Activity 1 — From topic to question: the most important step in research
PurposeStudents learn to formulate specific, answerable research questions from broad topic areas — transforming unfocused subject interest into directed investigation.
How to run itPresent four topic areas and ask students to generate research questions for each. Topic 1: farming in our community. Possible questions: what crops were grown here fifty years ago that are not grown today, and why did they disappear? Which traditional farming techniques in our community are most effective at preventing soil erosion? How has the time of planting changed over the past generation according to older farmers? Topic 2: water. Questions: where does the water in our school's borehole come from, and how was the source found? How does water quality in our area change between the rainy and dry seasons? Topic 3: health. Questions: what are the three most common reasons children in our community miss school due to illness, and what prevention measures exist? How do people in our community decide whether to go to the clinic or to a traditional healer first? Now evaluate each question against four criteria: Is it specific enough to investigate? Is it answerable — is there information available that could address it? Is it genuinely interesting to the person asking it? Is it appropriate to the time and resources available? Ask students to transform their own initial topic interest into a specific research question using the same criteria. Debrief: what makes a question too broad? Too narrow? What makes it genuinely interesting rather than just factual?
💡 Low-resource tipNo materials needed. The most valuable version of this activity uses topics from the students' own curriculum and community — locally relevant questions produce more engaged research than imported ones. Questions that can be investigated with locally available sources (community members, direct observation, local documents) are more useful than questions that require internet access or libraries.
Activity 2 — Evaluating sources: not all information is equal
PurposeStudents practise systematic source evaluation — applying consistent criteria to assess the reliability, relevance, and limitations of different information sources.
How to run itIntroduce a four-question source evaluation framework. Question 1 — Who produced this and why? What are their qualifications and what interest do they have in the topic? Question 2 — When was this produced? Is the information current enough for the question being asked? Question 3 — What evidence supports the claims? Are sources cited? Can the evidence be checked? Question 4 — Do other sources agree or disagree? If it is the only source making this claim, why might that be? Now apply this framework to four different sources on the same topic — adapted to local context. Source 1: an account from a community elder who witnessed events directly. Source 2: a textbook chapter written by an academic researcher. Source 3: a pamphlet produced by a company selling a product relevant to the topic. Source 4: an account shared on a community phone network from an unidentified person. For each source, apply all four questions. Ask: which source is most reliable for this specific question? Are any of the sources completely useless — or do even the weaker sources provide something? Introduce the idea that sources with obvious interests (the company pamphlet) are not automatically useless — they may contain accurate information, but their interest must be understood and the information verified elsewhere. Debrief: is source evaluation about finding a perfect source — or about understanding the limitations of every source you use?
💡 Low-resource tipWorks entirely through discussion. Adapt the four source types to locally familiar formats — textbooks, radio broadcasts, community announcements, commercial materials, government health messaging, community elder accounts. The most powerful version uses sources the students have actually encountered on a topic they are genuinely investigating.
Activity 3 — A mini-research project: from question to findings
PurposeStudents conduct a complete small-scale research project — practising all stages of the research process with a genuine, locally relevant question.
How to run itEach student or pair chooses a genuine research question relevant to their community or curriculum — one that can be investigated in one week using available sources. Possible questions: how has the landscape around the school changed in the last twenty years? what do community members believe causes the most common illness in the community, and does this match the medical explanation? what traditional skills in our community are at risk of being lost, and who still practises them? Students follow four stages. Stage 1 — Planning: what sources will you use? Who will you talk to? What will you observe? What documents or materials are available? Stage 2 — Investigation: collect information from at least two different types of source. Take notes in your own words with attribution. Stage 3 — Synthesis: what is your answer to the research question based on what you found? Where did sources agree? Where did they disagree? What are you still uncertain about? Stage 4 — Presentation: share your findings with the class in five minutes. State your question, your sources, your main findings, and one thing you are still not sure about. Debrief as a class: what made the investigation harder than expected? What did you find that surprised you? Did your question need to be revised once you started investigating?
💡 Low-resource tipThe entire project can be conducted without technology or library access. Community members, direct observation, and any available documents are sufficient resources. The four-stage structure ensures all students follow the complete research process rather than jumping straight to writing. The presentation stage builds research communication skills alongside the investigation skills.
Reflection Questions
  • Q1What is a question about your community or your world that you genuinely want to know the answer to and have never investigated? What would it take to investigate it?
  • Q2Have you ever found that different sources said different things about the same topic? How did you decide what to believe?
  • Q3What kinds of knowledge exist in your community that are not written down anywhere? How could this knowledge be preserved?
  • Q4Is there a difference between knowing facts and understanding something? What makes the difference?
  • Q5When you find information that contradicts what you expected, what do you do? What should you do?
  • Q6What is the difference between research and copying? Why does the distinction matter?
Practice Tasks
Task 1 — A short research report
Conduct a small research investigation on a question about your community, school, or local environment. Write: (a) your research question; (b) the sources you used and a brief evaluation of each; (c) your main findings — what you discovered; (d) one thing different sources disagreed about; (e) one thing you are still uncertain about. Include citations for each piece of information. Write 4 to 6 sentences plus your citations.
Skills: Practising the complete research process in a short, manageable form — building all stages from question to referenced findings
Model Answer

Research question: what traditional food preservation techniques are still used in our community, and have any been lost in the last generation? Sources used: (1) Interview with an elderly woman who grew up in the community and is known for traditional cooking — reliable as a primary source with direct knowledge and no obvious interest in distorting the information; (2) Interview with a younger woman who runs a small food stall — useful for understanding what is still practised commercially; (3) My own observation of household food preparation in three neighbouring families over one week. Main findings: three main traditional techniques are still widely used — sun-drying of vegetables and fish, fermentation of grain for a local porridge, and salting of meat. Two techniques mentioned by the elder — smoking of meat over a specific wood and making of a preserved fruit paste — are no longer practised by anyone she knows of, because the specific wood has become scarce and because the fruit is now sold rather than preserved. The younger woman confirmed the current techniques but had not heard of the two lost ones. Disagreement: the elder believed the fruit paste technique was still practised in a neighbouring village; the younger woman thought it had died out everywhere. I was unable to verify this. Remaining uncertainty: whether the two lost techniques are documented anywhere and whether anyone could still teach them if community members wanted to revive them.

Marking Notes

Award marks for: a specific and genuinely answerable research question; sources that are different types; a brief but honest evaluation of each source's reliability; findings that address the question specifically rather than giving general information; a genuine disagreement between sources rather than inventing one; and a remaining uncertainty that is honest. Strong answers will show that the research process produced unexpected findings — that investigation changed what the student thought about the topic.

Task 2 — Source evaluation
Choose two different sources that address the same topic — one you consider more reliable and one less reliable. Apply the four-question evaluation framework to each. Write your evaluation and conclude: for what specific purposes is each source useful? Write 4 to 6 sentences per source.
Skills: Practising systematic source evaluation — building the habit of asking who, when, what evidence, and do others agree? about every information source
Common Mistakes
Common misconception

Research means finding as much information as possible on a topic.

What to teach instead

Research means finding the information most relevant to a specific question — which requires selecting, not accumulating. A researcher who gathers ten sources that all say the same thing has done less useful work than one who gathers four sources that address different aspects of the question or that present conflicting views. The ability to identify what is relevant and what is not — to select from available information rather than accumulate all of it — is one of the most important and most difficult research skills.

Common misconception

If a source is published or official, it is reliable.

What to teach instead

Publication and official status do not guarantee reliability. Published sources contain errors; official sources may represent institutional interests rather than complete truth; academic sources can be flawed in their methodology or later found to be wrong. The relevant questions about a source are not whether it was published but whether it is supported by evidence, whether the author has relevant expertise and no distorting interests, and whether other reliable sources agree. Source evaluation applies to all sources, regardless of their status or presentation.

Common misconception

Using your own words instead of copying is just a rule schools enforce — it does not matter in real research.

What to teach instead

Paraphrasing and summarising in your own words is not just a school rule but the evidence that you have understood and processed the information rather than merely transcribed it. Research that consists of copying is not research — it is transcription. The ability to represent an idea accurately in your own words demonstrates understanding; the inability to do so typically reveals that the idea has not been genuinely understood. Additionally, representing sources accurately in your own words forces you to notice when you do not fully understand something — which directs further investigation.

Common misconception

Community knowledge and oral tradition are not valid research sources.

What to teach instead

Community knowledge — transmitted orally across generations — represents accumulated observation, experiment, and experience that is often highly reliable for specific local questions. Agricultural knowledge about which crops grow in which conditions, ecological knowledge about local species and their behaviours, historical knowledge about community events, and medical knowledge about local plant remedies are all forms of evidence that oral tradition preserves. This knowledge must be evaluated like any other source — considering who holds it, how it was produced, and whether it is consistent with other evidence — but it is not less valid than written sources by default. For many locally specific questions, community knowledge is the most reliable and most relevant source available.

Key Ideas at This Level
1 Research design — matching method to question
2 Qualitative and quantitative methods — different tools for different questions
3 Research ethics — responsibilities to participants and to truth
4 Indigenous and community-based research — decolonising knowledge production
5 Synthesising and critically engaging literature — not just summarising sources
6 Academic integrity — plagiarism, citation, and the ethics of knowledge sharing
Teacher Background

Research skills at secondary level engage students with the methodological, ethical, and epistemological dimensions of research — how knowledge is systematically produced, the different methods available for different types of questions, the ethical responsibilities that research creates, and the political dimensions of who produces knowledge and whose knowledge counts.

Research design

The most fundamental methodological question is which method best addresses the research question. Qualitative methods (interviews, observation, case studies, textual analysis) are appropriate for questions about meaning, experience, and process — what is it like to be a smallholder farmer facing climate change? how do community members understand the causes of illness? how has local governance changed over a generation? Quantitative methods (surveys, experiments, statistical analysis) are appropriate for questions about distribution, frequency, and causal relationships — how many households in this district have access to clean water? does this intervention improve agricultural yield? Both methodological traditions have genuine strengths and genuine limitations, and many research questions benefit from mixed methods — combining quantitative and qualitative approaches to produce both breadth and depth of understanding.

Research ethics

Research involving human participants creates ethical responsibilities that are both practically and philosophically significant. Informed consent — participants must understand what they are agreeing to participate in and must agree freely. Confidentiality — participants must know how their information will be used and be protected from harm. Beneficence — research should benefit participants and communities, not only researchers. Justice — the burdens and benefits of research should be distributed fairly, which is an issue in contexts where communities from low-income countries are frequently researched by outside researchers who bring no benefit back to those communities.

Indigenous and community-based research

The critique of extractive research — in which outside researchers take community knowledge and community time without returning benefit or involving community members as genuine partners — is one of the most important debates in contemporary research methodology. Community-based participatory research, indigenous research methodologies, and decolonial research frameworks represent attempts to address this by making community members genuine research partners rather than objects of study.

Key Vocabulary
Research design
The overall plan for a research project — specifying the question, the method, the sources, the procedure for collecting and analysing information, and the criteria for evaluating the findings.
Qualitative research
Research that investigates meaning, experience, and process — typically through interviews, observation, or textual analysis, producing rich descriptive data rather than numerical results.
Quantitative research
Research that investigates distribution, frequency, and relationships between variables — typically through surveys, experiments, or statistical analysis of numerical data.
Informed consent
Agreement to participate in research based on adequate understanding of the research purpose, procedures, risks, and how information will be used — given freely without coercion.
Bias
A systematic distortion in research findings — produced by flaws in design, data collection, or analysis that causes results to consistently deviate from the truth in a particular direction.
Triangulation
The use of multiple methods, sources, or perspectives to investigate the same question — increasing confidence in findings when different approaches produce consistent results.
Peer review
The process by which research is evaluated by other experts in the field before publication — intended to identify errors, methodological weaknesses, and unjustified conclusions.
Extractive research
Research conducted in a community that takes knowledge and time from community members without returning benefit, involving community members as genuine partners, or building local research capacity.
Academic integrity
The commitment to honesty in academic work — including proper citation, accurate representation of sources, and the avoidance of plagiarism and fabrication.
Literature review
A systematic summary and critical evaluation of existing research on a topic — identifying what is known, what is contested, and what gaps remain. A literature review demonstrates understanding of existing knowledge, not just accumulation of sources.
Skill-Building Activities
Activity 1 — Matching method to question: qualitative versus quantitative
PurposeStudents understand the distinction between qualitative and quantitative research methods and learn to identify which is appropriate for different types of research question.
How to run itIntroduce the distinction through an example. Question A: what percentage of households in our district have access to clean water within five hundred metres? This is a quantitative question — it asks about frequency and distribution, and the answer is a number produced by systematic counting or surveying. Question B: how do families in our district manage water collection, and what decisions do they make about when and how much water to collect? This is a qualitative question — it asks about experience, meaning, and process, and the answer is a rich description of practice and decision-making. Now give students a set of research questions and ask them to classify each as primarily qualitative, primarily quantitative, or both. Questions: how has deforestation in this region changed in the last twenty years? what do farmers in this community believe causes poor crop yields? how effective is a specific teaching method at improving reading scores? what does it feel like to be a first-generation student in secondary school? how many students in this school have experienced bullying in the last year? Discuss: for each question, what is lost by using the wrong method? (A survey about the experience of being a first-generation student would miss the complexity and meaning; a set of interviews about deforestation rates would not produce the precision needed.) Introduce mixed methods: for some questions, both approaches contribute — surveys establish scale, interviews explain meaning. When might you use both? Debrief: is one method better than the other — or are they complementary tools for different questions?
💡 Low-resource tipWorks entirely through discussion. No materials needed. Use genuinely local research questions — ones relevant to the students' community or curriculum. The most valuable version of this activity uses questions that students are actually planning to investigate, so the method selection is immediately practical.
Activity 2 — Research ethics: responsibilities to participants and communities
PurposeStudents examine the ethical responsibilities that research creates — understanding that research is not a neutral extraction of information but an interaction with people that creates obligations.
How to run itIntroduce three foundational research ethics principles. Informed consent: participants must understand what they are agreeing to and agree freely — without deception, pressure, or exploiting a power imbalance. Confidentiality: participants must know how their information will be used and be protected from identifiable harm. Benefit: research should benefit participants and their communities, not only those who conduct or use the research. Now present three case studies that each raise one of these issues. Case 1 — Consent: a research team wants to survey schoolchildren about family income and food security without informing parents, on the grounds that parental notification might lead to refusal that would compromise the sample. Is this acceptable? Case 2 — Confidentiality: a researcher interviews community members about their experiences of local officials, using recorded interviews. They plan to quote participants by name in a report that will be shared with those same officials. Is this acceptable? Case 3 — Benefit: an international research team spends six months in a community studying the impact of a new disease, produces academic publications, and leaves without sharing findings with community health workers or providing any other benefit to the community. Is this acceptable? For each case, ask: what ethical principle is at stake? What harm could result? What should the researcher do instead? Now ask: have you ever been part of research — surveys, assessments, community data collection — where these principles were not followed? What happened?
💡 Low-resource tipWorks entirely through discussion. The case studies should be adapted to research contexts that are locally familiar — international health research, government surveys, NGO data collection are all common in many low-income communities. Students in communities that have been frequently researched by outside parties often have direct experience to contribute.
Activity 3 — Who produces knowledge? The politics of research
PurposeStudents examine the political dimensions of knowledge production — understanding whose research counts, whose questions get asked, and whose communities bear the burden of being researched without benefiting from it.
How to run itBegin with the observation: the vast majority of academic research is produced in a small number of wealthy countries, published in English, and answerable to research questions that are relevant to those countries' contexts and priorities. Communities in low-income countries are frequently the subjects of research — their diseases are studied, their poverty is documented, their agriculture is analysed — but rarely the producers of research, and rarely the primary beneficiaries of what is learned. Present the concept of extractive research: research that takes knowledge from communities without returning benefit, involving community members as genuine partners, or building local capacity. Ask: is this a problem? What does it mean for the communities involved? What does it mean for the quality of the research itself? Now introduce alternatives: community-based participatory research (CBPR), where community members are genuine research partners rather than subjects; indigenous research methodologies, which use indigenous epistemological frameworks and protocols; and research that is explicitly designed to benefit communities directly. Ask: what would research on your community look like if it were conducted by community members for community benefit? What questions would be asked? What methods would be used? Who would benefit from the findings? Connect to the broader question of whose knowledge is valued: in your education, whose ways of knowing and whose bodies of knowledge are treated as legitimate and whose are marginalised?
💡 Low-resource tipWorks entirely through discussion. Students in communities that have experience with international research — health studies, development research, anthropological work — will have direct experience to contribute. This activity connects directly to the Critical Literacy and Intercultural Competence topics and to the thinker profiles of Freire, Fanon, Diop, and bell hooks.
Reflection Questions
  • Q1Most academic knowledge is produced in wealthy countries and published in English. What does this mean for whose questions get asked and whose communities benefit from research?
  • Q2Research ethics requires informed consent — but in practice, consent is often formally obtained in ways that do not ensure genuine understanding. What would meaningful informed consent actually look like?
  • Q3Qualitative research produces rich, contextual understanding; quantitative research produces precision and generalisability. Can you think of a question that would require both — and what would combining them look like?
  • Q4Peer review is supposed to ensure the quality of published research — but it has well-documented limitations, including reviewer bias and the difficulty of detecting methodological errors. How much should we trust peer-reviewed research?
  • Q5Indigenous research methodologies use different epistemological frameworks from Western academic research. Is this a different kind of knowledge — or simply different research methods producing the same kind of knowledge?
  • Q6What is the difference between a literature review that summarises sources and one that critically engages with them? What makes critical engagement more valuable?
Practice Tasks
Task 1 — A research proposal
Write a research proposal for a genuine investigation into a question relevant to your community, school, or local environment. Include: (a) the research question and why it matters; (b) the method you would use and why it is appropriate; (c) the sources or participants you would need; (d) the ethical considerations and how you would address them; (e) how your community would benefit from the findings. Write 300 to 400 words.
Skills: Applying the complete research skills framework to a real proposed investigation — integrating question formulation, method selection, ethics, and community benefit
Task 2 — Essay: knowledge and power
Choose ONE of the following questions and write a 400 to 600 word essay. (a) The production of academic knowledge is concentrated in wealthy countries and serves their interests. What are the consequences of this for communities in low-income countries — and what would more equitable knowledge production look like? (b) Research ethics requires informed consent and community benefit — but in practice these requirements are often poorly implemented. Whose responsibility is it to enforce research ethics, and what mechanisms would be most effective? (c) Indigenous and community knowledge systems are alternative epistemologies, not deficits. What would it mean for education and research to genuinely recognise this?
Skills: Constructing a reasoned argument about the politics of knowledge production — engaging with research methodology, ethics, and epistemology
Common Mistakes
Common misconception

Peer-reviewed research is always reliable.

What to teach instead

Peer review is a quality control mechanism with significant limitations. It does not reliably detect fraud, selective reporting, or methodological errors that are not visible in the manuscript. Publication bias — the tendency for journals to publish positive results rather than null results — distorts the published literature. The replication crisis has shown that a substantial proportion of published psychological and biomedical findings cannot be replicated. Peer review is better than no review but is not a guarantee of reliability. Critical reading of primary research — not just trusting the peer-review label — remains necessary.

Common misconception

Research is objective — if you follow the method correctly, personal bias cannot affect the findings.

What to teach instead

Research involves human judgement at every stage — in question formulation, source selection, data collection, analysis, and interpretation — and each stage is a potential site of bias. The research question itself reflects the researcher's assumptions about what is worth knowing. The choice of method reflects assumptions about what counts as valid evidence. Analysis involves interpretation. The claim that research is objective typically means that explicit steps have been taken to reduce bias — but not that bias has been eliminated. Awareness of potential sources of bias and deliberate efforts to counter them are part of good research methodology.

Common misconception

More sources always make research stronger.

What to teach instead

The quality and relevance of sources matters more than the quantity. Twenty sources that all say the same thing add less to a research project than four sources that address different aspects of the question or that present conflicting views. The most sophisticated research engages critically with a small number of highly relevant, high-quality sources rather than accumulating a large number of superficially consulted ones. Citation counts that bear no relationship to genuine engagement with the cited material are a form of academic dishonesty, not a mark of thorough research.

Common misconception

Research findings speak for themselves — interpretation is not needed.

What to teach instead

Research findings never speak for themselves. Raw data, interview transcripts, or observations become research findings only through interpretation — the process of deciding what the evidence means and what it implies. All interpretation involves judgement and is therefore a potential site of error and bias. Explicitly stating your interpretive framework, acknowledging alternative interpretations, and distinguishing between what the data shows and what you infer from it are not signs of weakness in research — they are signs of intellectual honesty and methodological rigour.

Further Practice & Resources

Key texts and resources: Wayne Booth, Gregory Colomb, and Joseph Williams's The Craft of Research (2016, University of Chicago Press) is the most comprehensive and practically useful guide to research process for students and beginning researchers — covering question formulation, source evaluation, argument construction, and writing across the full process. For qualitative methods: Matthew Miles and Michael Huberman's Qualitative Data Analysis (1994, Sage) is the foundational practical guide; for a more accessible introduction, Johnny Saldaña's The Coding Manual for Qualitative Researchers (2013, Sage) is directly applicable to student research. For research ethics: the Belmont Report (1979) is freely available and remains the foundational document on human subjects research ethics in the biomedical tradition. For indigenous research methodologies: Linda Tuhiwai Smith's Decolonizing Methodologies (1999, Zed Books) is the foundational and most cited text — it is challenging but essential for any serious engagement with the politics of knowledge production in postcolonial contexts. For community-based participatory research: Barbara Israel's Methods in Community-Based Participatory Research for Health (2005, Jossey-Bass) provides the most practical treatment. For the replication crisis: the Open Science Collaboration's 2015 paper Estimating the Reproducibility of Psychological Science (available free in Science) is the most cited documentation of the problem; Uri Simonsohn's work on p-hacking and the file drawer problem is available through his website. For academic integrity: the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) publishes freely available guidelines on research ethics and integrity for researchers and institutions. For African contexts: the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WISER) and the African Studies Centre at Leiden both provide resources specifically addressing research ethics and knowledge production in African contexts.