Asked by k
Julian has drafted the following research questions on the topic of a popular theme park:
What inspired the creator to start the theme park?
Which factors made the theme park so successful when it opened in the 1980s?
How did the theme park’s success impact people’s concept of destination vacations?
He is considering adding this question: How did the theme park become popular so quickly?
Should Julian add this question to his list of research questions?
No, because it is only vaguely linked to the topic of his essay.
Yes, because it focuses on only one element of his research topic.
Yes, because it is open-ended and will yield new information.
No, because it repeats the main idea of another research question.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
No, because it repeats the main idea of another research question.
The proposed question ("How did the theme park become popular so quickly?") essentially asks the same thing as question 2 ("Which factors made the theme park so successful when it opened in the 1980s?"). It's redundant, so Julian should not add it.
The proposed question ("How did the theme park become popular so quickly?") essentially asks the same thing as question 2 ("Which factors made the theme park so successful when it opened in the 1980s?"). It's redundant, so Julian should not add it.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.