2. Explore Your Topic
Browse these databases to learn general information about a variety of issues and topics related to your assignment. Check out a few topics that interest you and explore the information about them as you decide on a topic for further research.
Analyze Your Topic

Who
Think about who might be involved and care about this topic. This could be specific people, but it could also be groups of people - consider different groups based on age, race, ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status (wealth), who may be affected (good or bad) by your topic.
What
Consider what factors are involved in your topic. Read some background information or a summary to learn more about your topic, and then make a list of relevant factors.
The background reading can also provide you with keywords, specialized vocabulary, and definitions, which will be useful for future searches.
When
What time period is involved? Is this a current or historical issue? Be sure you know what dates and times are involved in your topic because that will affect how you present them. Your topic may have specific dates associated with it or it may be more general.
Where
Sometimes places or geography are important to your topic. Are you considering issues in the United States or another country? The situation can be quite different in some countries than it is here. If this is an issue happening in another country, why is it important to debate here?
Why
This is a really important one. Why do people care about this topic? Why is it important or controversial? What's at stake? or Why did it happen / is it happening?