Feasibility is not the enemy of ambition; it is the structure that allows ambition to take shape. When you consider feasibility and scope early in your research design, you create the conditions for clarity, sustainability, and meaningful impact. This module helps you ground your project in what is possible, purposeful, and proportionate to your context.
You begin by returning to your constraints with compassion. The first movement invites you to acknowledge the realities of your time, skills, access, and institutional environment not as limitations, but as design parameters. You learn to see constraints as part of the creative process, shaping the contours of a project that can genuinely thrive. Compassion becomes the starting point for grounded planning.
From here, the spiral widens into focus. You explore the core of your idea: the question that matters most, the phenomenon you want to understand, the contribution you hope to make. You learn to separate the essential from the peripheral, identifying the elements that must remain and the ones that can be released. Focus becomes a practice of intentional narrowing.
The next movements guide you into a practical assessment. You consider the logistical, methodological, and ethical dimensions of your project: access to participants or data, the complexity of your methods, the time required for analysis, and the approvals or resources you will need. You learn to evaluate feasibility not as a binary but as a spectrum that shifts as your understanding deepens. Assessment becomes a tool for clarity.
As the spiral continues, you explore proportionality. You reflect on the scale of your project relative to your degree level, timeline, and wellbeing. You learn how to right‑size your research so it remains rigorous without becoming overwhelming, and meaningful without becoming unmanageable. Proportionality becomes a form of care for both you and your work.
The final movements invite you into sustainable impact. You consider how a well‑scoped project can create deeper, more coherent contributions than an overly ambitious one. You learn to articulate the significance of your focused approach, showing how clarity and feasibility strengthen the value of your research. Impact becomes the horizon that guides your decisions.
By the end, feasibility and scope feel less like constraints and more like companions shaping a project that is grounded, sustainable, and capable of making a meaningful contribution. A modular approach that prepares you for the practical, action‑oriented work of Part 2.
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