By Dalat TESOL
Helping novice researchers build clarity, rigor, and purpose in their research journey
đ Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
When you visit Google Scholar, youâll see its quiet motto:
âStand on the shoulders of giants.â
This phraseâoriginally attributed to Isaac Newtonâreminds us that all research is built on prior knowledge. Whether youâre investigating AI in writing instruction or exploring teacher beliefs in EFL classrooms, your work adds a small, meaningful brick to the wall of collective knowledge.
But what makes a piece of work âresearchâ in the first place? And what separates high-quality research from everyday opinion or classroom innovation?
Letâs break it down.
đ What Is Research?
Research is a systematic, evidence-based process of answering questions through the collection and analysis of data. It is not just reporting what you already knowâit is discovering what is not yet fully known.
In applied linguistics, research often addresses language learning, teaching, use, and policyâthrough empirical evidence, theoretical grounding, and critical reflection.
đ§ Four Essential Characteristics of Good Research
Letâs explore the key features of high-quality research, especially for those beginning their academic journey.
1. đŻ Research Addresses Gaps and Is Justified
Good research starts with a clear purpose: to solve a problem, address a gap, or build on existing work. You don’t do research just because a topic is âinteresting.â You do it because something is missing, under-explored, or not well understood in the current literature.
Google Scholar becomes your entry point to locate those âgaps.â By reading recent articles in your area, you start to see whatâs been done and what hasnât.
â A good research question is:
- Grounded in literature (youâve read whatâs come before)
- Specific and feasible
- Justified by pointing out a gap, a contradiction, or a new need
Example:
âWhile many studies have explored writing self-efficacy in English learners, few have investigated how students develop this confidence in AI-assisted environments.â
2. đ§Ș Research Uses Valid and Reliable Tools
Once you know what to study, the next question is how.
Strong research uses tools (instruments) and procedures that are valid (they measure what theyâre supposed to) and reliable (they produce stable, consistent results).
Examples of instruments:
- A well-constructed questionnaire
- A classroom observation protocol
- A discourse coding scheme
- An interview guide
If your tool is borrowed from previous research, explain why itâs appropriate. If you created your own, justify it and test it for reliability (e.g., Cronbachâs alpha, interrater reliability).
Example:
âThe interview questions were adapted from Ulla & Teng (2024) and piloted with three graduate students. Feedback led to clearer wording and improved flow.â
3. đŹ Research Is Rigorous, Transparent, and Replicable
This is what separates research from anecdote or classroom experimentation.
Your study must follow a systematic designâwith clear procedures, transparent reporting, and logical reasoning. A fellow researcher reading your work should be able to:
- Understand exactly how you collected and analyzed your data
- Judge whether your interpretations are supported
- Potentially replicate your study with a similar population
Transparency means:
- Reporting your data collection steps (sampling, consent, instruments)
- Explaining your coding or scoring
- Disclosing limitations honestly
Example:
âInterviews were transcribed and coded thematically following Braun and Clarkeâs (2006) six-step method. Coding decisions were documented in a shared spreadsheet to enhance consistency.â
4. âïž Research Must Be Ethical
Ethics is not optionalâit is fundamental.
You must protect your participantsâ rights and handle data responsibly. This means:
- Getting informed consent
- Keeping data anonymous or confidential
- Avoiding harm (psychological, academic, reputational)
- Being honest in reporting results (no data manipulation)
Even in non-invasive studies like text analysis or corpus studies, ethical reflection is still importantâespecially if student writing or classroom work is involved.
Example:
âParticipants were informed that their AI-generated essays would be anonymized and used for research purposes only. All names were removed before analysis.â
đ Final Thoughts: Research as Contribution, Not Perfection
New researchers often feel intimidated, thinking research must be perfect, complex, or groundbreaking. In reality, good research is not about perfectionâitâs about contribution.
Your study might be small. But if itâs:
- Grounded in existing knowledge,
- Carefully and ethically designed,
- And reported clearly and honestlyâ
Then it matters.
Like the giants before us, youâre adding one more step in the collective climb toward better understanding language, learning, and teaching.