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Good Practice in Monitoring and Recording Research Progress

Extended Investigation
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Good Practice in Monitoring and Recording Research Progress

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

Good Practice in Monitoring and Recording Progress in Research

A substantial research project like the Extended Investigation spans months and involves many overlapping tasks. Monitoring your progress systematically is not just administratively useful — it is a research skill in itself, and the Extended Investigation Journal is an assessed artifact of that skill.

Why Progress Monitoring Matters

  1. Keeps the project on track: Regular check-ins against your plan reveal slippage before it becomes critical
  2. Creates a research audit trail: Demonstrates your process to assessors — not just what you found, but how you worked
  3. Supports reflective thinking: Reviewing your progress forces metacognition about what is working and what isn’t
  4. Helps you adapt: When reality diverges from the plan, documented monitoring helps you make informed adjustments

KEY TAKEAWAY: The Journal is not a diary — it is a research log. It should document decisions, problems, insights, source evaluations and methodological reflections. Assessors use it to evaluate the quality of your research process, not just your final output.

The Extended Investigation Journal: What to Record

Your Journal should capture:

Category Examples of What to Record
Research activities Searches conducted, sources read, data collected
Decisions made Why a source was included or excluded; why a method was changed
Insights and ideas Connections noticed between sources; emerging themes; new questions raised
Problems encountered Source unavailability, participant no-shows, unclear data
Methodological reflections Was the method working as expected? What adjustments were made?
Argument development How your understanding of the research question evolved
Ethical decisions How ethical issues were handled as they arose
Progress against plan Are you on track? What needs adjustment?

Recording Practices

Frequency

Record consistently — ideally after every significant research session. Brief, regular entries are more valuable than infrequent comprehensive ones. Aim for at least 2–3 substantial entries per week during active research phases.

Specificity

Vague entries (“did some reading”) are not useful. Specific entries are:
- “Read Smith (2020) — strong evidence for X, but sample limited to university students, reducing relevance to VCE context”
- “Searched ERIC using terms ‘academic performance AND exercise’ — found 12 relevant articles, selected 4 for full reading based on date and study population”

Dating

Every entry should be dated. This creates a chronological record of how the investigation developed — assessors can verify the timeline of your work.

Progress Check Methods

Against Your Research Plan

At regular intervals (weekly or fortnightly), compare actual progress with planned milestones:
- Milestone review: Am I on track for the next major milestone?
- Task audit: Which tasks are complete, in progress, or not yet started?
- Gap analysis: Where am I behind, and what are the consequences?

Self-Assessment Questions

Use these prompts for Journal reflections:
- Is my research question still the most appropriate framing?
- Do I have adequate evidence to answer it?
- Are any of my sources proving insufficient or unavailable?
- Am I managing my time effectively?
- What would I do differently if starting again?

STUDY HINT: Schedule a 10-minute Journal reflection at the end of every research session — not just when you have something interesting to report. The absence of progress or the persistence of a problem is itself worth recording.

Monitoring Data Collection Specifically

During primary data collection:
- Track response rates (survey) or interview completions against your target
- Note any deviations from planned procedure and why they occurred
- Record raw data immediately after collection — never reconstruct from memory
- Flag early signs of data quality issues (e.g., many incomplete responses)

When Progress Falls Behind

When monitoring reveals you are behind:
1. Assess the impact: Does this affect the scope or quality of your conclusions?
2. Adjust the plan: Update your timeline realistically
3. Communicate early: Consult your teacher before the situation becomes critical
4. Scope reduction: Better to narrow the question than to rush the investigation
5. Document the adjustment: Record in your Journal what changed and why

APPLICATION: Create a “weekly stand-up” format for your Journal: (1) What did I accomplish this week? (2) What am I working on next? (3) What blockers or problems am I facing? This simple structure, borrowed from project management practice, keeps entries useful and consistent.

COMMON MISTAKE: Writing the Journal retrospectively near submission time. A Journal written in hindsight loses its documentary value — it becomes a reconstruction rather than a record. Assessors are trained to recognise retrospective Journals, and they do not score as well as genuine process records.

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