2. Refer to the research direction of the tutor. When choosing a direction, you can boldly consult your tutor to understand his research direction. Most tutors will focus on a certain field, and years of experience in their field can give you a lot of help. 3. After choosing the research direction, you can choose the topic. When choosing multiple-choice questions, we should pay attention to the small points, and strive to make people "see the topic is meaningful"-let people know what you want to discuss in this paper after seeing your topic.
The length of the paper is limited, the topic is too big, there are many problems to be discussed, and the amount of data to be collected has also increased sharply, and the results are often superficial. The smaller the topic of the paper, the easier it is to grasp and the more concentrated it is to collect the required information. The fuller the argument, the clearer the level, the more rigorous the argument, and the easier it is to write well.