Conduct Short Research Projects
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6th Grade Writing › Conduct Short Research Projects
A student begins a short project with the question “What is climate change?” and answers it quickly; which refocus best deepens the inquiry?
What is the weather forecast for next week in our town?
What is the definition of climate change in one sentence?
How do greenhouse gases trap heat in Earth’s atmosphere, and what evidence shows this happening?
Who invented the thermometer, and when was it invented?
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The scenario shows a student who began with "What is climate change?" and answered it quickly - this signals need for refocusing because the original question was too simple/definitional, requiring the student to deepen inquiry with a more investigative how/why question. The correct answer B refocuses appropriately by asking "How do greenhouse gases trap heat in Earth's atmosphere, and what evidence shows this happening?" - this transforms a simple definition question into an investigative inquiry about mechanisms (how gases trap heat) and evidence (what shows this happening), requiring synthesis of multiple sources to explain process and support with evidence. The distractors fail to deepen inquiry: A "What is the definition in one sentence?" makes the question even more superficial; C "What is the weather forecast?" changes topic entirely and isn't about climate change; D "Who invented the thermometer?" is unrelated historical trivia that doesn't deepen understanding of climate change. Help students recognize when to refocus: if original question answered with quick definition or single fact, refocus to investigate HOW something works, WHY it happens, or WHAT EVIDENCE supports understanding. Practice transforming simple questions: "What is photosynthesis?" becomes "How do plants convert sunlight into food, and what happens at each step?" The goal is moving from fact-finding to investigation that requires synthesizing information from multiple sources.
A student is conducting a short “how things work” project using 3–4 sources to answer: “How do water filters remove dirt and germs?” Which research question is too narrow for this short inquiry?
How do home water filters compare with filters used in emergency relief?
How does a filter’s pore size affect what it can remove from water?
When was the first water filter invented?
How do activated carbon and membrane filters remove different kinds of contaminants?
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The main research question is "How do water filters remove dirt and germs?" and the task is identifying which alternative is too narrow. The correct answer identifies "When was the first water filter invented?" as too narrow because it's just a single fact (date) requiring no synthesis or multiple sources - student finds one date and is done, no investigation needed. Options A, B, and D all require synthesizing information from multiple sources about mechanisms, comparisons, or relationships - for example, option A requires understanding both activated carbon (chemical absorption) and membrane filters (physical barriers) from different sources. Help students distinguish focused investigative questions (how/why requiring synthesis) from narrow factual questions (when/where/yes-no requiring single lookup) - short research projects need questions that require combining information from several sources, not just finding one fact.
For a short historical investigation, a student plans to use 4 sources to answer: “Why did settlers choose Jamestown’s location?” Which source set best fits the project’s need for several credible sources?
A textbook chapter, a museum website, a short encyclopedia article, and a history video from a trusted channel.
Two sources that repeat the same sentences, so the student does not need more.
One detailed blog post and no other sources, because it has many paragraphs.
Ten social media posts with opinions but no evidence or author names.
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research question is "Why did settlers choose Jamestown's location?" and the task is identifying which source set best provides several credible sources. The correct answer identifies a textbook chapter, museum website, encyclopedia article, and history video as appropriate - these are credible sources (established publishers/institutions) providing different types of information that can be synthesized. Option A fails because one blog post, even if detailed, violates the requirement for SEVERAL sources - the standard explicitly requires drawing on multiple sources to gather different perspectives and information about geography, defense, trade access, and native relations. Help students identify credible source sets: look for variety in source types (book, website, video), established publishers/institutions, and different perspectives/information that can be combined - avoid relying on single source or multiple sources saying identical things.
For a short historical investigation that lasts 8 school days, a student will use several sources to answer: “What caused the Great Fire of London to spread so quickly?” Which research question is too broad for this short project?
How did wooden buildings and narrow streets affect the spread of the Great Fire of London?
What is the history of fires in cities around the world?
What caused the Great Fire of London to spread so quickly?
How did weather conditions influence the fire’s spread during the first two days?
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research question is "What caused the Great Fire of London to spread so quickly?" and the task is identifying which alternative question is too broad for this short project. The correct answer identifies "What is the history of fires in cities around the world?" as too broad because it covers all cities, all time periods, and all fires - requiring extensive sources and time far beyond an 8-day project. Options A, B, and C all maintain focus on the Great Fire of London with specific aspects (wooden buildings/narrow streets, general causes, weather conditions) that can be thoroughly researched with 3-5 sources in 8 days, while option D expands to worldwide scope requiring hundreds of sources and months of research. Help students test question focus by asking: Can this be answered well with 3-5 sources in 1-2 weeks? "Great Fire of London causes" = yes (specific event, specific aspect); "History of fires worldwide" = no (all places, all times, too vast).
A student is conducting a short geographic/cultural investigation over two weeks using 5 sources about: “Why are stilt houses common in some flood-prone regions?” Which choice best shows the project is short rather than extended?
The student avoids taking notes and relies on memory to finish faster.
The student plans to read 12–15 sources and write a long paper covering housing worldwide.
The student studies every type of natural disaster before starting the housing question.
The student uses 5 sources, keeps the question focused, and shares findings in a brief presentation.
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research question is "Why are stilt houses common in some flood-prone regions?" This is appropriate for short research project because it's focused and answerable with 3-5 sources in limited time. The correct answer shows the project is short by using 5 sources (appropriate number for short project), keeping the question focused (specific housing type, specific regions), and sharing findings in brief presentation (matches short project scope). Option A fails because planning to read 12-15 sources and write a long paper covering housing worldwide indicates an extended project requiring weeks/months, not a short 2-week project with focused question about stilt houses in flood-prone regions. Teach students to recognize short vs. extended projects: short = 3-5 sources, days to 2 weeks, focused question, brief product; extended = 10+ sources, weeks to months, broad topic, lengthy product.
A student is conducting a short science inquiry using several sources (3–5) to investigate: “What factors affect how fast ice melts?” After searching, the student finds very few credible sources about the exact experiment they planned. What should the student do next?
Refocus the inquiry to a related question with more information, such as melting rate and temperature or surface color.
Use only one random website since it is faster than finding credible sources.
Keep the same question and stop gathering sources after the first search result.
Quit the project because short research never allows changing the question.
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research situation is a student investigating "What factors affect how fast ice melts?" but finding very few credible sources about their exact planned experiment. The student should refocus because they can't find enough sources for their specific approach. The correct answer suggests refocusing to a related question with more available information, such as investigating melting rate with temperature or surface color - this maintains the core inquiry about factors affecting melting while adjusting to available sources. Option B incorrectly claims short research never allows changing questions, when the standard explicitly includes "refocusing inquiry when appropriate" - lack of sources is a key reason to refocus. Teach students that refocusing is part of the research process: when sources are scarce, too technical, or don't address the question well, adjust the question while keeping the same general topic and maintaining investigative depth.
A student is conducting a short research project using 3–5 sources to investigate: “What causes some volcanoes to erupt explosively?” Two sources disagree about whether gas or magma thickness matters more. What is the best reason to refocus the inquiry?
Refocus because the student should switch to an unrelated topic like hurricanes.
Refocus because disagreements mean the student should pick one source and ignore the rest.
Refocus because the student should investigate why sources disagree and analyze evidence about gas and magma thickness.
Refocus because short research projects must avoid questions that require any analysis.
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research situation involves investigating "What causes some volcanoes to erupt explosively?" with sources disagreeing about whether gas or magma thickness matters more. The student should refocus to investigate why sources disagree and analyze evidence. The correct answer recognizes that disagreement between sources presents an opportunity to deepen inquiry by investigating why sources disagree and analyzing evidence about both gas content and magma thickness - this transforms simple fact-gathering into critical analysis and synthesis. Option A incorrectly suggests picking one source and ignoring others when sources disagree, missing that synthesizing conflicting information by analyzing evidence and explaining different factors is exactly what the standard requires. Teach students that source disagreement is valuable: it reveals complexity in the topic, requires deeper analysis of evidence, and leads to more sophisticated synthesis explaining how multiple factors (both gas and magma thickness) might contribute rather than seeking single "right" answer.
A student is conducting a short current-events research project for class using several sources (3–5) about: “What are the benefits and challenges of electric school buses?” Why is using several sources important?
Several sources make the project take months, which is required for good research.
Several sources are only needed when the question has a single correct fact.
Several sources are unnecessary if the student already has an opinion.
Several sources help the student compare information and synthesize findings instead of relying on one viewpoint.
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research question is "What are the benefits and challenges of electric school buses?" This is appropriate for short research project because it's focused and answerable with 3-5 sources in limited time. The student should not refocus because the original question is appropriately focused. The correct answer explains that several sources help compare information and synthesize findings instead of relying on one viewpoint - for example, one source might emphasize environmental benefits, another cost challenges, a third maintenance issues, allowing the student to create a balanced analysis. Option B incorrectly claims several sources make projects take months, confusing short projects (3-5 sources, days to weeks) with extended projects (many sources, weeks to months). Help students understand why multiple sources matter: different sources provide different perspectives (manufacturer vs. school district vs. environmental group), different types of information (costs, emissions, maintenance), and allow verification of claims - synthesizing these creates a complete, balanced answer rather than one-sided view.
A student is conducting a short science inquiry over one week using 4 credible sources to investigate: “How do mangrove roots help the tree survive in salty water?” Which step should the student do after gathering notes from all sources?
Write the final report without analyzing which details best answer the question.
Refocus to a new topic like deserts because mangroves are too specific.
Stop researching because one strong source is enough for a short project.
Synthesize the information by combining patterns from the sources into one clear explanation.
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The research question is "How do mangrove roots help the tree survive in salty water?" This is appropriate for short research project because it's focused and answerable with 3-5 sources in limited time. The student should not refocus because the original question is appropriately focused. The correct answer identifies that after gathering notes from all sources, the student should synthesize by combining patterns into one clear explanation. For example, synthesizing means looking across all 4 sources to identify common explanations about root adaptations, salt filtering mechanisms, and water absorption strategies, then combining these into a coherent answer about how mangrove roots enable survival. Option B fails because it suggests one source is enough, ignoring the standard's requirement to draw on SEVERAL sources - multiple sources provide different information about root structure, salt excretion, and water uptake that must be combined. Help students understand synthesis by having them create a chart with columns for each source and rows for key concepts (root structure, salt filtering, water absorption), then write a paragraph combining what multiple sources agree on and noting where they provide complementary details.
For a short “how things work” project, a student gathers 4 sources on solar panels; what should the student do next to analyze information?
Start the final slideshow before taking notes from the sources
Replace credible sources with random posts to get more opinions
Stop after reading only the first paragraph of each source
Check which sources agree or disagree about how electricity is produced, and note key evidence
Explanation
This question tests CCSS.W.6.7 (conducting short research projects to answer question, drawing on several sources and refocusing inquiry when appropriate). Short research projects have FOCUSED QUESTIONS (specific topic and aspect, not broad), use SEVERAL SOURCES (typically 3-5 for 6th grade - provides different information and perspectives, allows synthesis), take LIMITED TIME (days to 1-2 weeks, not months), and have MANAGEABLE SCOPE (can thoroughly address question in available time with available sources). The scenario shows a student who has gathered 4 sources on solar panels for a "how things work" project and needs to analyze information - this requires comparing what sources say, identifying agreements/disagreements, and noting evidence to prepare for synthesis. The correct answer B "Check which sources agree or disagree about how electricity is produced, and note key evidence" describes appropriate analysis: comparing sources to see where they align or differ on the process, and recording evidence that supports explanations - this prepares for synthesis by identifying patterns and key information across sources. The distractors show poor research practices: A "Start the final slideshow before taking notes" puts presentation before analysis and note-taking; C "Replace credible sources with random posts" abandons quality sources for unreliable ones; D "Stop after reading only first paragraph" prevents thorough understanding of each source. Teach students systematic analysis: create comparison chart showing what each source says about key aspects (how panels capture light, convert to electricity, store energy), mark where sources agree/disagree, note specific evidence or examples each provides. This analysis phase between gathering sources and writing is crucial for synthesis - students can't combine information effectively without first understanding what each source contributes and how they relate.