Greetings.
I'm currently doing my research investigation for physics and I need to fix up my research question: but don't know how.
We're focusing on linear motion and the claim I chose was:
Seatbelts and airbags have the capability of preventing most motor vehicle fatalities.
My research question (based on the evidence collected) is now this: To what extent are airbags advantageous in cars, in the prevention of fatalities and motor vehicle collisions?
I really need help on making this more specific so it fits with my research and hits te criteria.
Also, for research investigations, do we need tables and graphs, or can we just have on or the other?
- jinx_58
Hey Jinx_58
Firstly, I would change "and motor vehicle collisions" to "during motor vehicle collisions" because saying "and" makes it sound like airbags are going to stop car crashes, which isn't the case.
I'd say you've done a good job at making it specific. You've narrowed it down from all motor vehicles to cars, you've narrowed it down from seatbelts
and airbags to just airbags.
Whether or not a research question hits the "specific" and "relevant" criteria is also dependent upon your rationale. So, make sure everything you say in your rationale links to the research question. I would potentially add in something to your research question about the exact feature of airbags that makes them effective. In past posts, I think you were looking at the force threshold required to trigger the inflation of the air bag. That is good and specific. You could potentially look how much force airbags absorb and compare that to the amount of force required to cause serious harm to a person or something.
re: do I need tables and graphs
No, if you can find both then you can certainly use them but there is nothing explicitly stating that you need both.