TAFTCOLLEGE
The best approach is to choose a topic that you are interested in. If you are interested in your topic, you are more likely to invest more time, effort, and creativity into your research and writing. Think of questions that either you or your patients have had during clinic. A topic is not the same as a research question. It is the big picture, for example, Pediatric Dentistry is the overarching topic that includes braces for children. Watch this brief tutorial from North Carolina State University Libraries to see how choosing a topic is research.
Conduct Preliminary Research: Before you write your question, do preliminary research of relevant academic sources to make sure there is enough literature available on your topic to develop an answerable research question. You need a minimum of 4 credible sources, with at least 2 from scholarly journals articles. The other two sources can be from books, magazines, podcasts, etc.
Do a search in the library catalog for books or articles on a topic before you start writing your research question. If you do not find a lot of information at this point, move on to another topic of interest.
For example, you are interested in how nutrition and diet impact the health of children. Do a search in the library's catalog for the terms dental health children.
This keyword search results in 108,001 sources, including books, journal articles, magazine articles, and newspaper articles. This means that there are several resources on this topic. Next, open some of these sources to determine if they will work for your project.
In order to narrow down and focus the topic, consider a specific issue or debate within the broader topic. There are several ways to go about narrowing down a topic:
Explain a topic by answering the following questions. Use this information to help you organize your paper. Did you have difficulty answering some questions? Do some areas of your topic need further development, or do you need to change your focus?
Below is an example of narrowing the topic about minimum wage. Think of your topic and fill in the boxes accordingly.
Using Bruxism as the topic, WHO would be children, WHAT would be long-term damage, WHERE would be the United States, HOW would be an intervention plan. You could also use WHEN to identify when is the best time to treat a patient with bruxism.
image credit: Narrow a Topic Loyola Marymount University William H. Hannon Library