1. Simply put, research setting is the physical, social, or experimental context within which research is conducted. In a research paper, describing this setting accurately is crucial since the results and their interpretation may depend heavily on it.
2. They are sometimes called factor naming questions. They isolate, categorize, describe, or name factors or situations. ("what is happening here?") Their goal is to determine the relationship among factors that have been identified. These are usually questions for a non- experimental type of research.
3. Research questions are developed by using sources that include curiosity, professors, textbooks, journals, databases, and the Internet.
4. Research implications are basically the conclusions that you draw from your results and explain how the findings may be important for policy, practice, or theory.
pa brainliest, thank you.