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Ethical Considerations Relevant to the Research Question and Methods

Extended Investigation
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Ethical Considerations Relevant to the Research Question and Methods

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

Ethical Considerations Relevant to the Selected Research Question and Methods

Ethics in research is not a single checklist completed at the start of a project — it is an ongoing commitment that applies throughout the research process, from question selection to final reporting. Different research questions and methods raise different ethical issues, and you must identify and address those specific to your own investigation.

Ethics as an Ongoing Consideration

While initial ethical planning happens in your rationale and research plan, new ethical issues can arise:
- During data collection (e.g., a participant reveals distressing information)
- During analysis (e.g., you notice an individual can be identified from aggregated data)
- During reporting (e.g., findings might stigmatise a community)

Document how you respond to ethical issues in your Journal throughout the project.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Ethical research is not just about protecting participants — it also involves honest reporting, transparent acknowledgement of limitations, and responsible use of findings. Ethics extends to how you write and present your conclusions.

Mapping Ethics to Your Research Question

Different questions raise different ethical concerns:

Research Area Typical Ethical Issues
Health and wellbeing Distress during data collection; stigma in findings; privacy of medical information
Social behaviour Observation without full consent; privacy; generalisation that stereotypes groups
Online activity Data collected without explicit consent; digital privacy
Education Power dynamics (teacher/student); sensitive performance data
Historical/documentary Privacy of living individuals mentioned in records
Environmental Accuracy of claims affecting communities; advocacy vs objectivity

Ethics in Relation to Specific Methods

Surveys

  • Ensure genuine informed consent before the first question
  • Do not include questions that are unnecessarily intrusive
  • Provide opt-out options for sensitive questions
  • Protect data storage — do not use identifiable information

Interviews

  • Consent must be given before recording begins
  • Participants must know what the recording will be used for
  • Stop if a participant becomes distressed; refer to support if needed
  • Transcripts and recordings must be stored securely

Observations

  • Covert observation (watching without consent) raises serious ethical issues — generally not appropriate for student research
  • Participant observation requires consent
  • Be aware of the observer effect and report it as a limitation

Documentary and Secondary Sources

  • Check terms of use for databases and datasets
  • Do not misrepresent the findings of published research
  • Acknowledge when you cannot access the full original source

EXAM TIP: When given a research scenario with an ethical problem, identify (1) which ethical principle is being violated, (2) what specific harm could result, and (3) what the researcher should have done instead. Three-part answers demonstrate depth.

Confidentiality and Anonymisation in Analysis

Even if you gathered data ethically, the analysis and reporting phase can create new risks:
- Small populations: In a small school community, even “anonymous” data can identify individuals if specific demographic combinations are reported
- Sensitive findings: If your findings are negative (e.g., identifying a community as having high rates of a problem), consider how reporting them might harm members of that community
- Aggregation: Report data in aggregated form wherever possible; avoid presenting individual-level data

Researcher Responsibility to Participants

Once a participant has contributed to your research, you have obligations:
- Do not misrepresent their views in your report
- Do not use their contribution for purposes beyond what was consented to
- If you quote them, use only what they intended for public attribution (or use anonymised quotes)
- If they withdraw consent after contributing, remove their data

Ethical Reporting

Ethics extends to how you present findings:
- Do not overstate: Claim only what your evidence supports
- Do not selectively report: Do not omit findings that contradict your hypothesis
- Acknowledge limitations: An honest account of what your research cannot tell us is more ethical and more scholarly than false certainty
- Avoid stigmatising language: Describe populations with respect, avoiding language that pathologises or demeans

COMMON MISTAKE: Treating ethics purely as a participant-protection issue and ignoring reporting ethics. A student who gathered data ethically but then selectively reported only favourable results has still acted unethically — in the academic sense of misrepresenting findings.

REMEMBER: Your Extended Investigation Journal should include reflections on ethical decisions made throughout the project — not just in the planning phase. This ongoing documentation demonstrates responsible research practice and is directly valued in assessment.

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