Day 1: Understand the research questionRead the Topic 1.2 section of your topic guide. Write three versions of your research question, each progressively more specific. Apply the open-ended, specific, and multi-perspective tests to each version. Keep the strongest one.
Day 2: Practice source evaluationTake three sources from your current bibliography and write a two-to-three sentence evaluation of each covering credibility, relevance, and bias. Compare your evaluations to the rubric language in your topic guide to check alignment.
Day 3: Map your contextWrite a one-paragraph context statement for your research question that explains the problem's origins, who it affects, and why it is complex. This paragraph should appear near the beginning of your IWA and IRR.
Day 4: Audit your source base for perspective diversityList all your current sources and label each with the perspective it represents (e.g., environmental scientist, policy maker, affected community member, industry). Identify any perspective that is missing and find at least one source to fill that gap.
Day 5: Review key terms and use the topic guideWork through the 23 key terms available for this Big Idea. Focus especially on inquiry, research question, context, bias, and credibility. Use the topic guide to check your definitions against the course framework before your next draft.