1 / 19

Writing a Literature Review

Writing a Literature Review. Wiser workshop 27 th January 2010. Overview. What is a literature review ? Information seeking Critical Reading Synthesis and structure Reflections on your literature review. What is a Literature Review?. According to Bell (1999, p90):

denali
Download Presentation

Writing a Literature Review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Writing a Literature Review Wiser workshop 27thJanuary 2010

  2. Overview • What is a literature review? • Information seeking • Critical Reading • Synthesis and structure • Reflections on your literature review

  3. What is a Literature Review? According to Bell (1999, p90): “Any investigation, whatever the scale, will involve reading what other people have written about your area of interest, gathering information to support or refute your arguments and writing about your findings.”

  4. Why is it important? • Teaches you more about the subject • Shows you had read widely • Demonstrate critical analysis • Helps you refine your ideas • Develops your subject-related vocabulary • Provides the context for your research • Enables comparison between your results and published research

  5. What skills do I need? • Information seeking • scanning the literature efficiently • identifying a set of useful articles and books • Critical reading • analysing texts to identify relevant, unbiased and valid studies • Synthesising • putting ideas from various sources together to build your argument

  6. Information seekingWhere do I find information? • Books – library catalogue • E-books • E-journals • Databases • Library Focus • Supervisor suggestions • Websites?

  7. Information seeking What do I do? • Start broad then focus • Be prepared to go outside your subject • Mind map key ideas / themes • Records references and quotes carefully!

  8. Critical readingEvaluating websites • Who is the author? • Can you see bias or a vested interest? • How detailed is the information? • Does it say where the information is from? • Is it out of date? • How does it compare to other sources?

  9. Critical reading We do not expect academic authors to be lying or trying to swindle us But there may be hidden layers...

  10. Critical reading Academia is rarely about finding absolute truths... But is more often a case of discussing • Viewpoints • Interpretation • significance

  11. Critical readingAuthors mean to be... • Logical – but have made a mistake • Impartial – but have made assumptions • Honest – but have been mislead • New – but haven’t seen my evidence

  12. SynthesisingWhat should I be writing about? • What has already been written on the topic • What has not been written on that topic and problems with existing literature • How your research addresses the 'gap', or ‘weakness’ in the existing knowledge base • Don’t just reproduce/summarise! • Show how the literature relates to the research project.

  13. Synthesising Useful questions to guide you • What is already known in the area? • Where are the inconsistencies or shortcomings in present knowledge? • Why study (further) the research problem? • What contribution can the present study be expected to make?

  14. Synthesising Structuring the Lit Review When you have mapped out the contents, you need to decide the order in which you are going to write about them: • general to specific • chronologically • according to different schools of thought • argument and counterargument

  15. Synthesising Tips on Structure • Group authors who worked on similar themes & link ideas • Make clear links between ideas inside the literature review and your own research

  16. Synthesising Don’t... • Just list all the books you have read and write a bit about each • Keep making the same points • Put any of your data in the literature review or discuss your findings

  17. Reflect on your literature review • What are you doing right? • What might you be doing wrong? • Have you had any feedback yet? • What can you do to improve it?

  18. Final suggestions • Keep revising your work on the literature review – it will be a work in progress • Continue reading around the subject & adding to the review • Re-read the literature review & keep improving it

More Related