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Doing a Literature Review

Doing a Literature Review. Process. Searching Background Focused Thinking Organization Common themes Contrast and compare. Reading Background reading Critical reading Writing Note taking Summarizing Synthesis. Process (Reality). Reading: Background. Writing: Notetaking.

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Doing a Literature Review

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  1. Doing a Literature Review

  2. Process Searching Background Focused Thinking Organization Common themes Contrast and compare • Reading • Background reading • Critical reading • Writing • Note taking • Summarizing • Synthesis

  3. Process (Reality) Reading: Background Writing: Notetaking Reading: Critical Thinking: Organization Searching: Background Writing: Summarizing Searching: Focused Thinking: Common themes Thinking: Contrast and compare Writing: Synthesis

  4. Process (Reality) Reading: Background Writing: Notetaking Reading: Critical Thinking: Organization Searching: Background Writing: Summarizing Searching: Focused Thinking: Common themes Thinking: Contrast and compare Writing: Synthesis

  5. Process (Reality) Reading: Background Writing: Notetaking Reading: Critical Thinking: Organization Searching: Background Writing: Summarizing Searching: Focused Thinking: Common themes Thinking: Contrast and compare Writing: Synthesis

  6. It’s messy… so

  7. Choosing a Topic • Choose something that interests you • Look at news stories to find something that is current • Canadian Newsstream • Factiva • Look at key journal editorials/news • Journal Citation Reports • Medicine, General • Multidisciplinary Sciences

  8. Getting Started • Find out what information is available • Summon • Do some background reading • Find a review article • Use a database filter (Pubmed, Scopus, WoS) • Use review as a search term • Find a book • Look at the Table of Contents • Find an encyclopedia entry • Often provide background readings

  9. Map your topic • Think of the landscape of your topic • Outline the various aspects/concepts/main ideas

  10. An Example of Concept Mapping

  11. or it might look like this... • or

  12. Example: AIDS in Africa

  13. Focus your topic • Pick one or two aspects to focus on • Go deeper into these areas • Develop a research question(s)

  14. Example: AIDS in Africa • Malnutrition • What impact does AIDS have on malnutrition? • What is being done to combat this issue? • Are theses interventions effective? • What more can be done? • Poverty • What is the relationship between AIDS and poverty? • What other factors are involved? • What programs exist to tackle this problem? • Why do certain programs/interventions work and others not? • Orphans • How has AIDS affected children of parents with AIDS in Africa?

  15. Identify Search Terms • From concepts/main ideas to search terms • PICO • Population • Intervention • Comparison • Outcome • Synonyms • Controlled vocabulary

  16. Combining Search Terms • Boolean operators – AND, or, NOT • Phrase searching – “…” • Truncation - * • Proximity operators – N/x, NEARx

  17. Example: AIDS in Africa • AIDS in Africa • (AIDS or “acquired immune deficiency syndrome” or HIV) • (Africa or Sub-sahara* or Eastern or Burundi or ….) • (Child* or youth) • orphan* • (Malnutrition or “nutritional deficiency” or malnourishment) • (Poverty or “low income” or poor) • You may need to do separate searches for different aspects of your topic

  18. Where to look • Think about who/what is interested in the topic • Think about what subject area might cover this topic

  19. Example: AIDS in Africa • African governments • NGOs • AIDs researchers • Economists • Nutritionists

  20. Where to look • Subject Guide > Detailed Guide > Health • Subject Guides > Quick Guides • Political Science • Economics • Public Policy • etc… • Government Information • Canadian – federal, provincial • International

  21. Example: AIDS in Africa • WHO • IRIS Digital Library • Health Topics • PubMed • CINAHL • Worldwide Political Science Abstracts • World Bank • Government Info

  22. Data and Statistics • Data • Canada • ODESI • WHO • Data and statistics • United Nations • UNdata • OECD • OECD.Stat

  23. Keeping it all organized • Citation Management • Mendeley • Endnote • Zotero

  24. Note Taking • Underline • Highlight • Take notes in your own words

  25. Summary vs Synthesis Summary Synthesis An integrated essay based on multiple sources • A summary is a brief statement of a source(s) • In order to synthesize several sources you should first summarize each source individually

  26. Summarize • Why did they bother? • Problem statement, rationale • What was the objective/hypothesis? • How did they do it? • What did they find? • So what? • Significance, implications • Relevance to your research topic?

  27. Synthesize – organization • Sequential • Show progression of the field/topic…. • Topical • Topic 1 with subtopics, topic 2 with subtopics…. • Methodological • No other method has proven…. • Theoretical • Contrast and compare theories….

  28. Identify Common Themes • Hypotheses • Populations studied • Theories • Methods • Outcomes

  29. Contrast and Compare • He said/she said • Do different studies agree or disagree • Do they agree on some things but disagree on others

  30. Identify Gaps • What is missing? • What can be studied next?

  31. Proofreading and editing • Write a draft • Let it sit • Look at it with fresh eyes • Ask your ____ to read it

  32. Resources about lit reviews • Books • Writing literature reviews: A guide for student of the social and behavioral sciences • The literature review: A step-by-step guide fro students • Doing a literature review in nursing, health and social care • Doing your literature review: Traditional and systematic techniques • They say/I say: the moves that matter in academic writing • Online • Carleton • UofT • UBC

  33. Need Help? QUESTIONS? Visit the library Call Research Help Desk 613-520-2600 x2735 Email heather.macdonald@carleton.ca

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