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The Purpose and Role of Research

Extended Investigation
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The Purpose and Role of Research

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

The Purpose and Role of Research

Understanding why research exists and what functions it serves helps you frame your own Extended Investigation purposefully. It also allows you to situate your work within the broader scholarly conversation in your chosen field.

What Is Research?

Research is a systematic process of inquiry aimed at discovering, interpreting or revising knowledge. It is distinguished from casual observation or opinion by its:
- Structured methodology
- Commitment to evidence
- Transparency about process
- Openness to revision based on findings

Core Purposes of Research

Research serves several overlapping purposes:

Purpose Description Example
Descriptive Documents what exists or what is happening Surveying how VCE students spend their study time
Exploratory Investigates a topic where little is known Preliminary study of a newly identified social trend
Explanatory Seeks to explain why something happens (causation) Testing whether sleep deprivation causes reduced memory retention
Evaluative Assesses the effectiveness or value of something Examining whether a tutoring program improves outcomes
Predictive Uses existing knowledge to forecast future states Modelling climate impacts based on emission scenarios

KEY TAKEAWAY: Your Extended Investigation has a specific purpose — identifying it helps you choose appropriate methods. Descriptive and exploratory research suits qualitative methods; explanatory research often needs quantitative data. Name the purpose of your investigation in your rationale.

The Role of Research in Society

Research fulfils critical functions beyond academic curiosity:

  • Building knowledge: Advances the collective understanding of the world
  • Solving problems: Evidence-based research drives improvements in medicine, education, policy and technology
  • Challenging assumptions: Research can overturn established beliefs by presenting new evidence
  • Informing decision-making: Governments, businesses and communities rely on research to make evidence-based decisions
  • Driving innovation: Applied research creates new products, processes and approaches

Original vs Applied Research

  • Pure (basic) research seeks knowledge for its own sake without immediate practical application. Example: theoretical physics.
  • Applied research uses existing knowledge to solve specific practical problems. Example: developing a more effective vaccine.

Most Extended Investigation projects sit somewhere between these — they answer a specific question, but the methodology draws on established academic knowledge.

Research in Relation to the Existing Literature

No research exists in a vacuum. Your investigation must:
1. Situate itself within existing knowledge — what do we already know?
2. Identify a gap or question — what remains unclear, contested or unexplored?
3. Add to the conversation — how does your work extend, challenge or complement existing findings?

This is why a literature review is not just an academic formality. It is the process by which you justify the existence and significance of your research question.

EXAM TIP: If asked “Why is research important?” or “What is the purpose of the literature review?”, give a specific, functional answer — not a generic statement like “to learn more.” Explain how the research or literature review serves the investigation’s goals.

The Extended Investigation as Research

Your Extended Investigation is a genuine research project. This means:
- You are contributing original inquiry, not just summarising others’ work
- Your process must be transparent and replicable (where applicable)
- Your conclusions must be proportionate to your evidence
- You must engage with the scholarly literature, not just popular sources

APPLICATION: When writing your rationale, explicitly state the purpose of your research (e.g., “This investigation is primarily explanatory, seeking to identify whether X causes Y”) and explain how it connects to existing literature. This demonstrates research literacy and is directly assessed.

COMMON MISTAKE: Treating the Extended Investigation as a glorified essay or summary task. It is an original inquiry. Your conclusions should be your reasoned response to the evidence you gathered — not simply a restatement of what others have found.

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