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Techniques and Tools of Research Project Management

Extended Investigation
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Techniques and Tools of Research Project Management

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

Techniques and Tools of Research Project Management

An Extended Investigation is not just an intellectual challenge — it is a project management challenge. You must plan, monitor and complete a substantial piece of work over many months, balancing it with other VCE subjects. Researchers who lack project management skills produce weaker work simply because they run out of time, lose track of tasks, or fail to identify problems before they become catastrophic.

Why Project Management Matters in Research

Research involves uncertainty — you will encounter unexpected results, unavailable sources, participant cancellations and new insights that require you to revise your direction. Good project management gives you the structure to respond to these challenges without losing sight of the end goal.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Your research plan is not a rigid script — it is a framework for decision-making. The goal is not to follow it perfectly, but to use it to notice when things are going off-track and to adjust proactively.

Core Project Management Concepts

Milestones

A milestone is a significant checkpoint or deliverable — a point at which you can assess whether the project is on track.

Examples for Extended Investigation:
- Research question finalised
- Literature review completed
- Data collection completed
- First draft of report submitted to teacher for feedback
- Report submitted

Milestones should have specific, realistic dates attached.

Timelines and Gantt Charts

A Gantt chart maps tasks against time, showing:
- When each task begins and ends
- Which tasks depend on completion of other tasks (dependencies)
- What overlaps are possible (e.g., literature review can continue while data is being collected)

Even a simple table (task | start date | end date | status) is sufficient for planning purposes.

Task Breakdown

Break large tasks (e.g., “write literature review”) into manageable sub-tasks:
1. Finalise search terms
2. Search three databases
3. Select and annotate 10 sources
4. Organise by theme
5. Draft section by section

This prevents procrastination and makes progress visible.

Planning Tools

Tool Use
Gantt chart Visualise timeline and dependencies
Task list / To-do app Day-to-day task tracking (Notion, Trello, physical list)
Calendar Block time for specific research tasks
Progress log Daily/weekly notes on what was done, what problems arose
Risk register Identify potential problems and contingency plans

STUDY HINT: Treat research time like a class period — block it in your calendar and protect it. Research has shown that “I’ll do it whenever I have time” almost never results in adequate time being allocated to complex projects.

The Research Plan

Your written research plan (required for Unit 3) should include:
- Research question: Clearly stated
- Methods: How will you gather data? What are the instruments?
- Timeline: Major milestones with dates
- Resources required: Access to databases, materials, participant groups
- Ethical considerations: How will you address consent, confidentiality, etc.
- Contingency planning: What if a data source is unavailable? What if participant numbers are low?

EXAM TIP: If asked to evaluate a research plan, look for: (1) Is the timeline realistic? (2) Are dependencies identified? (3) Are ethical issues addressed? (4) Is there contingency planning? (5) Is the scope feasible for the time frame?

Monitoring and Adjusting the Plan

A research plan is only useful if you regularly compare your actual progress against it:
- Weekly review: What was achieved this week vs planned?
- Milestone check: Are you on track for the next milestone?
- Problem log: What obstacles arose, and how were they addressed?

When progress falls behind:
- Narrow the scope of the question rather than rushing the work
- Consult your teacher early — later is always worse
- Revise the timeline realistically rather than hoping to “catch up”

Time Management Strategies

  • Backward planning: Start from the submission deadline and work backward to identify when each phase must begin
  • Parkinson’s Law: Work expands to fill available time. Set artificial earlier deadlines for drafts
  • Single-tasking during research time: Minimise distractions when working on the investigation
  • Buffer time: Build in at least 2 weeks before submission for unexpected delays and polishing

COMMON MISTAKE: Underestimating how long writing takes. Many students allow adequate time for research but too little for drafting, revising and polishing. The writing phase typically takes as long as the research phase — plan accordingly.

APPLICATION: Create a backwards Gantt chart on Day 1 of your investigation. Work from the submission deadline backwards to identify when the literature review, data collection, analysis and first draft must each be complete. Share it with your teacher and revise it monthly.

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