Year 11 – Health and Movement Science

Phase 2: Developing the Research Question and Methodology

Phase 2 is where your group builds the knowledge needed to plan the investigation properly. In this phase, you:

  • complete background research
  • clarify key terms and concepts
  • identify relevant processes or theoretical ideas
  • compare existing studies
  • work out what those studies mean for your own investigation
  • develop a hypothesis, if your investigation needs one
  • compile Phases 1 and 2 into a proposal if required.

This phase matters because it helps make sure your investigation is based on evidence, not assumptions.

Now that your group has a research question, you need to learn more about the topic.

  • find information that relates directly to your research question
  • use a credible range of sources
  • keep notes in your own words
  • record full source details as you go
  • organise your notes so they are easy to use later.
  • journal articles
  • research reports
  • government or organisational websites
  • textbooks
  • review articles.
  • key ideas
  • major findings
  • patterns across sources
  • information that directly helps answer your question
  • details that may help shape your investigation.

Do not just collect information. You need to judge whether the research is actually useful.

  • Is the source current?
  • Is the source credible?
  • Is it relevant to your exact topic?
  • Does the context match your own investigation?
  • Is it stronger than other sources you have found?

A strong source is not just one that sounds academic. It also needs to fit your investigation.

Phase 2 requires your group to clarify the definitions in your investigation. NESA specifically identifies definitions as part of Phase 2.

  • identify the important words in your research question
  • define those terms using credible sources
  • make sure everyone in the group is using the same meaning
  • decide whether any terms need an operational definition for your study.

An operational definition explains exactly what something means in your investigation and how your group will measure it.

This is important because words like stress can be understood in different ways. Your group must make it clear what counts as stress in your investigation.

If your topic includes stress, your group needs to decide how stress will be measured, such as through a:

  • questionnaire: participants answer written questions about their stress.
  • rating scale: participants rate their stress on a scale, such as 1 to 5.
  • interview response: participants describe their stress in their own words.
  • another method: stress is measured using another tool, such as a diary or log.

NESA also identifies processes as part of Phase 2. Your group needs to work out what understandings are important for your investigation.

  • identify the main processes, models, or theoretical ideas linked to your topic
  • choose the ideas that are most relevant
  • make sure your group can explain how they connect to the research question.

Depending on the topic, your investigation may connect to:

  • the stress response
  • social support
  • the biopsychosocial model
  • motor learning theory
  • stages of skill development
  • social determinants of health
  • health promotion frameworks.

You do not need to explain every theory related to the topic. Focus on the ones that actually help explain your investigation.

One of the most important parts of Phase 2 is looking at whether other studies have already investigated similar questions. NESA asks students to consider:

  • have any other studies been conducted that align with the research question?
  • how are they similar or different?
  • how do these studies inform potential findings of your own research?
  • find at least a few studies or reports that are relevant
  • compare their:
    • focus
    • method
    • findings
    • limitations
  • look for patterns, differences, and gaps.
  • Do several studies report similar results?
  • Are the findings mixed?
  • Do the methods differ?
  • Are there limits in the evidence?
  • Is there a gap your investigation could help fill?

This is where your group moves from just understanding the topic to planning the study more carefully.

Use the background research to decide:

  • why your investigation is worth doing
  • what earlier studies suggest
  • what methods may work best
  • what problems you may need to avoid
  • what your own study should focus on.
  • Is there a gap in the research?
  • Are earlier results mixed?
  • Were earlier studies done in a different context?
  • What methods seemed useful?
  • What limitations should your group learn from?

NESA identifies propose hypothesis as the second main component of Phase 2. It defines a hypothesis as a precise statement that predicts the outcome of the research question based on background research.

  • decide whether your investigation needs a hypothesis
  • write a prediction that is linked directly to the research question
  • make sure it is based on background research
  • write it objectively.

A hypothesis is most useful when your investigation is:

  • testing a relationship between variables
  • comparing groups
  • measuring an expected outcome.

A strong hypothesis should:

  • be specific
  • connect directly to the research question
  • identify the important variables
  • predict an expected relationship or outcome.
  • guesses with no research behind them
  • vague wording
  • loaded wording that tries to prove your group is right
  • forcing a hypothesis into an investigation that is more exploratory or qualitative.

Not every investigation needs a formal hypothesis. If your study is more exploratory or qualitative, it may be better to state the focus or aim of the investigation instead.

At the end of Phase 2, NESA states that Phases 1 and 2 can be compiled to form the proposal component.

Your proposal will usually include:

  • your research question
  • brief background context
  • important definitions
  • relevant theory or processes
  • comparison of key studies
  • your rationale
  • your hypothesis, if you have one
  • a brief outline of the intended method
  • a reference list.

The proposal explains:

  • what your group plans to investigate
  • why the investigation matters
  • how your group intends to carry it out.

It acts as a planning document before the next phase begins.

The final step in Phase 2 is the checkpoint. NESA identifies this as the point where Phases 1 and 2 can be compiled to form the proposal component.

By the end of Phase 2, your group should have:

  • a refined research question
  • stronger background knowledge
  • clear definitions
  • an understanding of relevant processes or theory
  • a comparison of relevant studies
  • a hypothesis, if needed
  • a draft or completed proposal.
  • review the proposal together
  • make sure all sections align with the question
  • check that the writing is clear and consistent
  • make adjustments based on teacher feedback.

By the end of Phase 2, your group should have:

  • a clear understanding of the topic
  • strong background research
  • clear definitions
  • relevant processes or theoretical ideas
  • comparison of existing studies
  • a clear sense of what this research means for your own investigation
  • a hypothesis, if appropriate
  • a stronger proposal ready for the next stage.