A research question guides your research approaches and methodologies. Therefore, framing a good research question is the first step towards a good research.
Haji - as you have already alluded to - a good research question is one that underpins, informs and guides the study process and design/method. Actually, framing a question/statement/hypotheses is not the first step in the process - it is the research 'idea/problem' that starts it. It may be that the initial research idea/problem turns out to be the eventual question - but this is not always the case. The research problem comes before the literature review. The literature review then informs if the research problem is a knowledge-gap to be pursued of not. So, for instance, in a research thesis the research question/s come in the methodology/methods chapter after the literature review for this reason. By the time that the research question/statement/hypothesis has been finally formulated - the exact methodology and design should be known and adhered to. The question is continually referred back to to ensure that the process remains true to the question and, finally, the recommendations and conclusion identify to what extent the question has been answered - or not.
Haji - as you have already alluded to - a good research question is one that underpins, informs and guides the study process and design/method. Actually, framing a question/statement/hypotheses is not the first step in the process - it is the research 'idea/problem' that starts it. It may be that the initial research idea/problem turns out to be the eventual question - but this is not always the case. The research problem comes before the literature review. The literature review then informs if the research problem is a knowledge-gap to be pursued of not. So, for instance, in a research thesis the research question/s come in the methodology/methods chapter after the literature review for this reason. By the time that the research question/statement/hypothesis has been finally formulated - the exact methodology and design should be known and adhered to. The question is continually referred back to to ensure that the process remains true to the question and, finally, the recommendations and conclusion identify to what extent the question has been answered - or not.
I agree Dean Whitehead . A good research question should correspond to the knowledge gap, which you want to study. Also, to my understanding, a good research question should be clear, concise and accurate. Moreover, a good research question should provide indications of your selection of research methods and techniques.
A research question is based on proper review of literature and the obtained research gap. It should present the method or process or design of the study and focus on any specific information, searching for proper guidance and recommendations from experts.
A research question describes the question to be answered in research based on the problem statement. To facilitate discussion, research questions are open-ended and not yes/no questions. Narrowing questions by topic perspectives may be helpful in narrowing focus.
A research question is an open-ended question that describes the problem statement and what the paper will answer. It drives the study based on the identified problem statement with a possible solution that that paper answers. Open-ended questions are not yes/no in nature, but rather facilitate discussion, future research, and so forth. A large majority of the process involves planning and synthesis of related literature to narrow focus of study.
Certainly, finding and observing the right problem is the first step towards any research activities. This provides a solid nd theoretical construct for selecting your variables for studying it in various dimension.