How to formulate a research question? The FINER method changed everything

Eva

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Mar 10, 2026
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I spent weeks stuck on my research question. Too broad. Too narrow. Too boring. Impossible. Then my advisor introduced me to the FINER criteria . Game changer. 🏆

F - Feasible
Can you actually do this?
  • Do you have access to data/participants?
  • Do you have the skills/time/resources?
  • Is the scope realistic for your timeline?
Bad: "How has climate change affected every country on earth?" (No. Just... no.)
Better: "How has drought frequency affected crop yields in Central California since 2000?" (Specific. Doable.) ✅

I - Interesting
To you? To others? Will anyone care about the answer?
  • If you're not interested, you won't finish
  • If no one else is interested, why do the research?
N - Novel
Does it add something new?
  • New population? New context? New method? New angle?
  • It doesn't have to be earth-shattering. Just not already answered.
E - Ethical
Can you study this without harming anyone?
  • Vulnerable populations? Informed consent? Privacy?
  • If there are ethical red flags, rethink your approach.
R - Relevant
Does it matter?
  • Relevant to the field? To practice? To policy? To real people?
  • Why should anyone spend time reading your findings?
My process using FINER:

Step 1: Broad topic.
"Social media and mental health." 🧠

Step 2: Apply FINER.
  • Feasible? Too broad. Narrow it.
  • Interesting? Yes, but everyone studies this. What's new?
  • Novel? Not really. Millions of studies.
  • Ethical? Yes, with care.
  • Relevant? Yes, but needs specificity.
Step 3: Refine.
"How does TikTok use affect anxiety among teenage girls?"
  • Better. Still broad. Which aspect of TikTok? What kind of anxiety? 🤔
Step 4: Refine again.
*"How does exposure to "perfect life" content on TikTok correlate with social comparison and body dissatisfaction among U.S. female adolescents aged 14-18?"*
  • Specific. Doable. Novel angle. Ethical. Relevant. FINER approved. ✅
What I learned:
A good research question isn't found. It's built. Draft after draft. Question after question. It's painful but necessary.

Now my proposal has direction. FINER saved me. Anyone else use this framework?
 
The "novel" criterion is tricky because students think it means "never studied before." It doesn't.

Novelty can be:
  • New population (studied in adults, now in teens)
  • New context (studied in US, now in Brazil)
  • New method (studied with surveys, now with interviews)
  • New angle (studied effects, now looking at mechanisms)
  • New combination (never looked at these two variables together)
Your TikTok example is novel because it's specific: "perfect life" content + social comparison + body dissatisfaction + U.S. female teens aged 14-18. That combination hasn't been studied exactly.
 
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