"Mere fact transferral is not a research"

 The statement "Mere fact transferral is not a research" highlights a critical distinction between information sharing and knowledge creation. Let's break it down:

 What Does It Mean?

Simply transferring or reporting facts — such as copying from books, articles, or websites — does not qualify as research. Research involves much more than just collecting and presenting known data.

 Definition of Research:

Research is a systematic and scientific investigation aimed at discovering, interpreting, and revising facts, developing new theories, and applying knowledge to solve problems.

 What Research Involves (Beyond Fact Transferral):

Aspect

Description

Problem Identification

Recognizing a gap in existing knowledge or a real-world issue

Formulation of Hypotheses/Questions

Proposing testable statements or exploratory questions

Review of Literature

Understanding what is already known and unknown

Original Data Collection

Through experiments, surveys, observations, etc.

Analysis and Interpretation

Making sense of data using logic, statistics, or theory

Conclusion and Contribution

Drawing meaningful conclusions that extend knowledge or practice

 What Mere Fact Transferral Looks Like:

Activity

Why It’s Not Research

Copy-pasting definitions from books

No originality or analysis

Listing statistics without interpretation

Data without meaning or context

Summarizing an article without critique

No new insights or questions posed

 Example Comparison:

Not Research:

“A report on COVID-19 listing symptoms, prevention, and treatment copied from WHO and news websites.”

 Research:

“A study analyzing the impact of misinformation about COVID-19 on rural vaccine acceptance in India.”

 Conclusion:

Research is an act of intellectual inquiry, not just information repetition.
It involves critical thinking, questioning, methodical exploration, and new insights.
Without these, it's just information transfer — not research.

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