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English 102: College Writing (Prof. Swanson): Brainstorm

Why Brainstorm?

Before you start searching, it's important that you take the time to write down your thesis, or research question, select keywords from it, and then brainstorm some alternate keywords for your search. Not all researchers, experts, and journalists are going to talk about your topic in the same way, so you want to have a variety of words and phrases on hand. This page includes some resources for helping you do this with your research topic.

Brainstorming Tools

It is important to have a topic that is both manageable and researchable. Using keywords (important words from your research question) will help you focus. Since you may not know the terms frequently used by researchers and other experts in the field you are researching, collecting a pool of words based on your initial keywords will be of great use. You can find these new words by brainstorming. The below tools can help you do that.

Access thesauri by searching Google, Bing, DuckDuckGo or another search engine, Here are two common methods. Each keyword you are starting with is [your keyword] in these examples:

  • [your keyword] synonym
  • [your keyword] thesaurus

If you are having a hard time brainstorming, you may want to try one of these useful graphic dictionaries that help find synonyms.

Instead of searching using a browser as explained above, you can also go directly to your thesaurus of choice. Here are a few examples:

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