How Do I Get Started With Chapter One?

by | May 21, 2026

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๐ŸŽฏ The Short Answer: Start with your research purpose and research question(s) – then check your university handbook for required sections, and tackle remaining sections in the order you feel most confident writing them.

Chapter one is often the most overwhelming chapter to start. You’re facing a blank page, unsure where to begin, and it feels like everything needs to be perfect from the start. The truth is, chapter one doesn’t need to be written in the order it appears in your final document. In fact, starting at the beginning is often the worst approach.

๐ŸŽฏ Start With Purpose and RQs

Here’s the key insight: don’t start at the top of chapter one.

Start in the middle with what we call the “meat” of your chapter – your research purpose and research question. These two elements are the foundation of everything else you’ll write in chapter 1, so getting them locked in first makes everything else flow more smoothly. Ask yourself:

  1. Why am I doing this research
  2. What specific question am I trying to answer?

When you can clearly articulate what you’re studying and why you’re studying it, the rest of chapter one becomes much easier to write because you’re essentially explaining the pieces and parts of those two core elements.

Everything else in chapter one supports these two central ideas. By starting here, you’ve got a north star that guides all your other writing decisions. You know exactly what you’re building toward, which makes the rest of the chapter feel less chaotic.

๐Ÿ“– Consult Your University Handbook Next

Once you’ve got your research purpose and question nailed down, your next move is to check your university’s dissertation/thesis handbook or brief. Every university has slightly different requirements for what goes in chapter one. This issue comes up very often in our private coaching sessions, and we’ve seen countless students have their chapter sent back simply because they didn’t follow their university’s specific requirements. Don’t let that be you – it’s a frustrating and preventable delay.

Once you’ve reviewed the handbook, create an outline of chapter one with all the required sections and headings. You already know that your research purpose and question will sit somewhere in the middle of this outline. Now you can see the full picture of what needs to go above and below those core elements.

๐Ÿ’ช Write Sections You Feel Confident About

Once you’ve got your outline, do a gut check. Which sections feel easiest to write? Which ones do you feel most confident about? Those are the sections you write next – not in the order they appear in your outline, but in the order that builds your momentum. A dissertation is seldom written linearly, and chapter one especially isn’t a linear writing process.

When you tackle sections you feel confident about, you build energy and confidence that carries you through the harder sections. You’re a surfer riding the wave – once you catch it, you just keep going. Whatever feels accessible, start there. You’ll circle back around in the editing and proofreading stage to ensure everything fits together, so don’t get tangled in the weeds right now.

โšก Build Momentum, Not Perfection

The real goal here isn’t to write chapter one perfectly on your first attempt. It’s to build momentum and get words on the page. When you’re feeling overwhelmed, perfectionism is your enemy. Start with your research purpose and question, check your handbook, then choose sections that will give you quick wins. Each section you complete builds confidence for the next one, and before you know it, you’ve got a complete chapter 1 that you can then refine and polish.

Remember: you’re not locked into any particular order. If you get stuck on a section, skip it and move to the next one. The flexibility to write in an order that works for you is one of your biggest advantages. Use it.

๐Ÿ“Œ Key Takeaways

  • Start chapter one with your research purpose and question, not the introduction.
  • Check your university handbook for required sections and specific formatting rules.
  • Write the remaining sections in the order you feel most confident, not the order they appear.
  • Build momentum with quick wins before tackling harder sections.
  • Chapter one isn’t written linearly – use that flexibility to your advantage.

P.S. Join our next Live Q&A Session to get your questions answered, for free!

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