Research

From Reader to Researcher: Critical Thinking for Graduate Study

The undergraduate asks what the study found; the graduate asks whether to believe it — and everything that separates a reader from a researcher lives inside that second question.

A master's passage through the critical mind of the researcher — from the disciplined skepticism that questions accepted answers and the honest weighing of what we call knowledge, through the critical reading of a literature and the finding of a gap that matters, the choosing of a lens and the building of an argument that stands, to the calibrated trust of evidence, the crossing of disciplinary borders, the conscience that holds when no one is checking, and the machine at the desk that may assist the hands but never replace the thinking — closing, as a graduate research course must, in a practicum where the habits become your own.

Course Overview

RES 421 is the University's first master's-level research course — an eight-lesson course in critical thinking and intellectual independence for students beginning graduate research. It moves through four modules: from the questioning mind and the nature of scholarly knowing, through critical reading, the true research gap, frameworks, and the building of arguments that stand, to the weighing of sources, thinking across disciplinary borders, and the researcher's wider conscience — closing with the responsible use of AI and a capstone practicum in which you appraise contradictory studies, defend a gap and a lens of your own, and argue a position at graduate standard. Where the undergraduate asked what a study found, the graduate asks whether to believe it — and by the end of this course, that question has become a habit.

8
Lessons
Comprehensive modules
21
Quizzes
Test your knowledge
10
Assignments
Practical work
6
Credits
Academic credits
Course Identifier
RES 421
Department
Research
Effort Required
5–7 hours per week
Length
8 lessons across 4 modules
Prerequisites
A bachelor's degree with a completed first research project or thesis (RES 388 or equivalent recommended)

Explore Course Lessons

Preview the course structure

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Your Academic Journey
Course
1 Course
Master
8 Courses
PhD
Research

Faculty & Resources

Recommended Books & Publications

All publications below are included with your course purchase at no additional cost.

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