Research Questions
Variables & Data
Methods & Feasibility
Sustainability Science
Research Pitfalls
100

This type of question is answered with data, not opinions.

What is a testable question?

100

The variable you change on purpose. 

What is the independent variable?

100

This describes whether a project can realistically be completed with time and resources.

What is feasibility?

100

The three pillars of sustainability.

What are environmental, social, and economic?

100

Giving vague feedback like “looks good” is bad because it lacks this.

What is specificity?

200

A research question should clearly identify this cause-and-effect structure.

What are independent and dependent variables?

200

The variable you measure as a result.

What is the dependent variable?

200

Name one factor that affects feasibility.

What is time, equipment, access, safety, or sample size?

200

PM2.5 measures this type of pollution.

What is fine particulate matter?

200

Too many variables in a project usually causes this problem.

What is confusion or weak conclusions?

300

True or False: “Does pollution affect plants?” is a strong research question.

What is false?

300

Name one example of quantitative data.

What is numerical data (temperature, PM2.5, pH, counts, etc.)?

300

Why pilot testing is useful.

What is to identify problems before full data collection?

300

Why sustainability research often focuses on long-term impacts.

What is because environmental and social effects accumulate over time?

300

Why small sample sizes can be risky.

What is they reduce reliability or accuracy?

400

This is the biggest problem with overly broad research questions.

What is they are difficult or impossible to test realistically?

400

Why controlling variables is important in experiments.

What is to ensure changes are caused by the independent variable?

400

What is the biggest risk of unclear methods?

What is unreliable or unusable data?

400

An example of environmental justice.

What is when certain communities experience more pollution or risk?

400

Changing your method halfway through data collection causes this issue.

What is inconsistent data?

500

Make this a better research question:
“How does climate change affect people?”

Example answer: What is “How does average summer temperature affect electricity usage in NYC apartments?”

500

Jen measures air quality at 3 locations for 2 weeks. This describes the project’s ____.

What is data collection method or sampling plan?

500

A backup plan in research is called a _____.

What is a contingency plan?

500

Name one sustainability topic suitable for student research.

What is air quality, water quality, energy use, waste, food systems, or climate?

500

The most common reason student research projects fail.

What is unrealistic design or poor planning?

M
e
n
u