Achievement
Aggression
Attachment
Autonomy
Bullying
Carrer selection
Community
Compassion
Contexts
Creativity
Culture
Dating
Death
Depression
Discrimination
Education
Emotions
Ethnic identity
Exercise
Family
Friendship
Gender roles
Genes
Goals
Happiness
Healthy eating
Helping behavior
Intelligence
Language
Learning differences
Loneliness
Love
Meaning
Memory
Morality
Music
Nature
Norms
Nutrition
Parenting
Parenting roles
Personality
Perspective-taking
Play
Pregnancy
Puberty
Reading
Relationships
Religion
Resilience
Self-confidence
Sexuality
Sibling rivalries
Social media
Social skills
Stress
Talents
Testing
Willpower
Values
Video games
Volunteering
Introduction (300-600 words): Introduce your topic and explain why you are studying it, define all key terms, state your research question, and explain how your project will help address it. If you have any hypotheses of what youll find, explain those here.
Method (500-800 words): Describe your study, including the participants (e.g., number of participants, age, gender, etc.), materials (e.g., interview questions, observation protocol), and procedure (what did you do?).
Results (500-800 words): Describe all of your findings in detail. Clearly explain where each finding came from. Avoid interpreting findings here; simply convey what you found. Integrate raw data (e.g., quotations) if appropriate.
Discussion (300-600 words): Discuss your findings: Where they what you expected? What do they mean? How to they address your research question? What are the implications for other topics, contexts, etc.? If you were to do more research on this topic, what would you do next?