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Common methods of selecting topics for dissertations
There are five common ways to choose a topic: social practice, literature, self-interest, hot topics and unpopular fields.

1. Seek from familiar social practice: social practice is the eternal source of scientific research. College students have certain social practice experience. As long as they pay attention to the things around them, they may find new topics at any time. -if an individual wants to achieve results in research and succeed in theory, he must have an ideal breadth of knowledge and depth of understanding problems. As long as we often think deeply about the problems in a certain field, dare to question and keep exploring, it is possible to write a good paper with profound insights.

2. Looking from the literature: inheriting and developing predecessors' achievements on the basis of reading and studying a lot of materials, enriching our own scientific knowledge and thinking positively can not only inspire us, find problems and find the topics we need. You can also find and choose the unresolved frontier topics on the basis of in-depth understanding of the data.

3. Learn from the courses you are interested in: Many colleges and universities require students to choose thesis topics according to their professional requirements under the guidance of teachers when arranging graduation thesis. The vast majority of students are familiar with the course knowledge they have learned, and have a deeper understanding of historical evolution, research status, subject problems and those problems that need to be solved. Practice makes perfect. Use your head, find problems and ask questions in your study. In this kind of paper, we should pay attention to avoid the stacking of materials and the introductory statements without new ideas.

4. Choose topics from hot topics or focus issues that people are generally concerned about: the research and solution of such issues has great practical significance and often has good social or economic benefits. This kind of paper should avoid the vague discussion of listing phenomena, pay attention to rational analysis, explore the deep-seated reasons of the problems and draw forward-looking conclusions from them.

5. Choosing a topic from an unpopular or virgin land: In scientific research, because of the development of objective things and the limitations of people's understanding of them, or because of the imbalance of research power for some reason, an unpopular or blank field has emerged, which needs researchers to explore and cultivate very much. In these blank areas and weak links, "boldly assume and carefully verify", with whimsical speculation and tenacious pioneering spirit life.