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LITERATURE REVIEW. What is a “Literature Review”? A literature review is an overview of research on a given topic and answers to related research questions.

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Presentation on theme: "LITERATURE REVIEW. What is a “Literature Review”? A literature review is an overview of research on a given topic and answers to related research questions."— Presentation transcript:

1 LITERATURE REVIEW

2 What is a “Literature Review”? A literature review is an overview of research on a given topic and answers to related research questions. Literature review is an important part of research and should be treated as such. A well-written literature review:  Organizes literature  Evaluates literature  Identifies patterns and trends in literature  Synthesizes literature

3 ‘the literature’ means the works you consulted/ referred to in order to understand and investigate your research problem. A literature review involves providing a rationale for your selection of literature related to the subject studied.

4 The literature review familiarizes the reader with the subject and the scope of the research topic. It helps the reader to define key concepts. It establishes the body of knowledge which will be able to contribute towards the research.

5 Writing the Literature Review o Firstly decide what you need to read from a broad spectrum of literature available. o Refer to books, periodicals, journals, and websites which will be relevant to your study. o Determine what exactly are your objectives.

6 Writing the Literature Review o You have to decide on what approach or methodology would you adopt. o You should provide a rather current complete overview of your related topic. o You are to show that you have read extensively and formed a body of knowledge on the subject of field of study.

7 Purpose of writing a literature Review Purpose of writing a literature Review Your review should: be in a form of critical decision show awareness of differing arguments, describe theories, approaches and methodologies. be a synthesis and analysis of the relevant published work, linked at all times to your objective and rationale of your study.

8 Purpose of writing a literature Review Purpose of writing a literature Review We write literature review because: it reviews knowledge of previous studies on the subject of research identifies a conceptual framework for one’s own research it provides directions for future research it provides resources previously unknown to the reader it identifies gaps in past studies

9 Purpose of writing a literature Review Purpose of writing a literature Review We write literature review because: it relates your findings to previous knowledge and suggest further research in a literature review the writer has to justify his choice of research question the researcher has to provide the necessary background information needed to understand the study to show the readers that the writer is familiar with the significant and up to date research which is relevant to the research topic.

10 A good literature review is:  critical of what has been written.  it identifies areas of controversy.  raises questions and identifies areas which need further research.

11 Process of Writing a Literature Review The IR4W:  Identify  Record  Relevance  Retrieve  Review  Write

12 Stage 1 – Identify Compile a list of references. Use a kind of index system either a hard copy or a software referencing system. Work through key catalogues, databases, indexes, bibliographies and websites for relevant resources Check the references and in the articles you have read Locate and use research reviews, most journals have a section on review of articles, it is essential you see what other people think about these articles as they be from a previous research Process of Writing a Literature Review

13 Stage 2 - Record Make a record of any literature that relates to your topic. You should have citation details and where it is located. You should also write a few sentences that help you remember what the article is about. Process of Writing a Literature Review

14 Stage 3 – Relevance Prioritize the literature, after having read the abstract, rank them if it should be high, medium or low priority. On the website scan through the literature for relevance before you decide to download or print it out Process of Writing a Literature Review

15 Stage 3 – Relevance You need to focus on the literature and sources you have identified and ranked as most important, the most recent development from the periodicals. Distinguish between textbooks, research articles from journals and books. They contain different kinds of information that will be more or less relevant to your research. Process of Writing a Literature Review

16 Stage 4 - Retrieve Make hard copies of the most important literature. Print relevant journal articles from databases and photocopy articles from journals Process of Writing a Literature Review

17 Stage 5 – Review Use the reading log which allows you to record different kinds of information: the bibliographic details, a description, and relationship to other readings. Also record where the literature is located so that you can easily refer to the quotes or ideas paraphrased when you are editing. As you are taking notes, ensure that you are clear about what you are quoting and paraphrasing. You cannot risk unintentionally plagiarizing ideas. Process of Writing a Literature Review

18 Stage 6 - Write Start with an introductory paragraph, discuss the literature on the subject in a logical and coherent way. Conclude with a paragraph that is relevant to the literature of the research. Process of Writing a Literature Review

19 Decide the subheadings for your literature review. Always refer to your objectives and research questions when you want to decide on the subheadings. Make sure subheadings are relevant and able to describe your research objectives Discuss on where you are going to get the reading materials from. Delegate tasks. Now, get into your groups…

20 Stage 1 – Identify Compile a list of references relevant to your study. (10 articles) Use a kind of index system either a hard copy or a software referencing system. Work through key catalogues, databases, indexes, bibliographies and websites for relevant resources Assignment for next class… Stage 2 - Record Make a record of any literature that relates to your topic. You should have citation details and where it is located. You should also write a few sentences that help you remember what the article is about. Submit this “record” on your wikispace before the next meeting.

21 2.4 Five Phases of Writing a Literature Review Phase 1 – Specify the scope of your review i)Ensure you have a precise topic you must be precise about having a topic. It should not be too broad or unspecific. Look at the following topic which is too broad Example: ‘Life and Times of Sigmund Freud” The title below seems to be limited, but still considered too broad Example: “Psychological Theories of Sigmund Freud However, a more manageable and appropriate topic would be ‘Freud’s Theory of Personality Applied to Mental Health” If your research question is too broad or defined vaguely or abstractly, you may end up reading and compiling to much information for your literature review. However if your research question is specified too narrowly or defined concisely, you may miss out more general information

22 ii)Scope of the Literature Review you have to determine the precise scope of the literature review, Questions which need to be answered are as follows -What will I cover in my review? -How comprehensive will it be? -How current are my materials -What type of materials/documents will be needed?

23 Phase 2: Locating and Accessing Information You can obtain all the necessary materials for your literature obtain all the necessary materials for your literature review by searching relevant bibliographies, print indexes and online databases i)Using Existing Literature Reviews Many journals on different subject areas publish review articles. In these journals you may find commentaries on research articles. You may find these reviews relevant to your literature review.

24 Phase 3 Recording the Information You can develop a systematic way of recording information through: note cards with citations: Photostatted articles with points highlighted or underlined with notes in the margins: traditional taking down notes or in laptops

25 i)Tips on Recording Information A quick skimming and scanning through the introduction and the conclusion of an article, would give you an idea of the article and general points. a)Start with the most recent studies and work backwards. Refer to the list of references on a recent article; -b)Read, first the report or article’s abstract,this will give you some clues about the article c)When taking down notes, remember to write out the complete bibliographic citation for each work. It is essential you note down the page numbers as these will be necessary later for footnotes and bibliography. For internet citations note the URL d)Write all direct quotations precisely when taking down notes. You should use quotations marks, so it can recognize as a directly quoted text and not a paraphrase. If you fail to put a direct text in quotation marks or to credit the authors, it amounts to plagiarism.

26 Phase 4 Evaluating the Information After having read all the articles, you must now decide and evaluate what should be included in the review. Be selective, you have to consider issues,themes, that link different articles.

27 Phase 5 Organizing and Writing the Literature Review After accessing, reading and evaluating the material. These materials need to be organized. You may organize the selected readings by theoretical approaches, by specific concepts or issues, and by methodologies

28 i)Excellent Writing After you have located, read, analyzed and evaluated the literature, the next stage is actual writing. Here are some tips: Keep your paragraphs short Subheadings are essential, as it clarifies the structure. They break up the materials into more readable units Avoid too many long direct quotations from the studies. Paraphrase other writers works rather than quote lengthy passages Don’t cite references that you haven’t read

29 Some traps to avoid: Trying to read everything! ◦ not to provide a summary of all the published work that relates to your research, but a survey of the most relevant and significant work. Reading but not writing! ◦ Writing can help you to understand and find relationships between the work you’ve read, so don’t put writing off until you’ve “finished” reading. Not keeping bibliographic information! - Source: http://www.clpd.bbk.ac.uk/students/litreview http://www.clpd.bbk.ac.uk/students/litreview web.pdx.edu/~bertini/literature_review.pdf

30 2.7 Final Checklist Here is a checklist from University of Melbourne: (http://www.lib.unimelb.eduau/postgrad/litreview/finalchecklis t.html)http://www.lib.unimelb.eduau/postgrad/litreview/finalchecklis t.html i)Selection of sources Have you indicated the purpose of the review Have you ascertained the parameters of the review and are they reasonable Have you emphasized on recent development of the research Have you focused on primary sources with only selective use of secondary sources Is the literature selected relevant to your study Is your bibliographic data complete


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