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Research Methodology

The Literature Review

What is a Literature Review

Classification and evaluation of what accredited scholars and researchers have written on a topic

Organized according to a guiding concept such as a research objective, thesis, or the problem/issue to be addressed

Objective of a Lit Review

Not to rack up points by listing as many articles as possible

Demonstrate an intellectual ability to recognize relevant information, and to synthesize and evaluate it according to the guiding concept

Your reader not only wants to know what literature exists, but also your informed evaluation of the literature.

Objective of a Lit Review

To meet both of these needs, you must employ two sets of skills: Information seeking: the ability to scan

the literature efficiently to identify a set of potentially useful articles and books

Critical appraisal: the ability to apply principles of analysis to identify those studies which are unbiased and valid. Your readers want more just than a descriptive list of articles and books

Lit Review - Deliverables

NOT just a summary, but an organized synthesis of your search results. It must Organize information and relate it to

the research question you are developing Synthesize results into a summary of

what is and isn't known Identify controversy when it appears

in the literature Develop questions for further research

Literature Review - BiasNo author is free from outside

influence, such as A particular theoretical framework or model

(e.g. a feminist examination of gender inequity in medical research)

The author's rhetorical purpose (e.g. a researcher's reasons for advocating the effectiveness of a certain drug)

An experience-based practical perspective (e.g. the belief that one approach to software development is more effective than another)

Questions to ask about your Literature Review Do I have a specific thesis, problem, or

research question which my literature review helps to define?

What type of literature review am I conducting?

Am I looking at issues of theory, methodology, policy, quantitative research, qualitative research?

What is the scope of my literature review? What types of publications am I using; e.g., journals,

books, government documents, popular media?

What discipline am I working in; e.g. IT, psychology, science, medicine?

Questions to ask about your Literature Review

How good are my information seeking skills?

Has my search been wide enough to ensure I've found all the relevant material?

Has it been narrow enough to exclude irrelevant material?

Is the number of sources I've used appropriate for the length of my paper?

Is there a specific relationship between the literature I've chosen to review and the problem I've formulated?

Questions to ask about your Literature Review

Have I critically analyzed the literature I use?

Do I just list and summarize authors and articles, or do I assess them?

Do I discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the cited material?

Have I cited and discussed studies contrary to my perspective?

Will the reader find my literature review relevant, appropriate, and useful?

Questions to ask about your review material

Has the author formulated a problem/issue? Is the problem/issue ambiguous or clearly

articulated? Is its significance (scope, severity, relevance)

discussed?

What are the strengths and limitations of the way the author has formulated the problem or issue?

Could the problem have been approached more effectively from another perspective?

What is the author's research orientation

Questions to ask about your review material

What is the author's theoretical framework (e.g. psychoanalytic, developmental, feminist)?

What is the relationship between the theoretical and research perspectives?

Has the author evaluated the literature relevant to the problem/issue?

Does the author include literature taking positions s/he does not agree with?

Questions to ask about your review material

In a research study, how good are the three basic components of the study design (i.e. population, intervention, outcome)?

How accurate and valid are the measurements?

Is the analysis of the data accurate and relevant to the research question?

Are the conclusions validly based upon the data and analysis?

In popular literature, does the author use appeals to emotion, one-sided examples?

Is the author objective, or is s/he merely 'proving' what s/he already believes?

Questions to ask about your review material

How does the author structure his or her argument?

Can you 'deconstruct' the flow of the argument to analyze if/where it breaks down?

Is this a book or article that contributes to our understanding of the problem under study, and in what ways is it useful for practice?

What are the strengths and limitations?

How does this book or article fit into the thesis or question I am developing?

The Literature Review

The Literature Review

STEP ONE: Articulating the Context Define the research problem Gather background information Identify key concepts

STEP TWO: Preparing for the Search Create Concept Lists Determine Where to Perform the Search

The Literature Review STEP THREE: Performing the Search

Learning the conventions of each database Searching the databases Decision: Were the Results Appropriate?

NO: consider possible solutions YES: continue to step four

The Literature ReviewSTEP FOUR: Obtaining Materials Cited in the Search Results

Are the materials available locally? Learn options for retrieval

STEP FIVE: Evaluating the Results Determine your criteria for evaluating the relevance of retrieved materials

The Literature Review

DECISION Satisfied with Materials Obtained? NO: You may wish to revise your search. YES: Hooray!

CITE YOUR REFERENCES "with Style" Use the appropriate style manual to construct your bibliography

Lit Review - Step 1 Articulating the Context Define the research problem

Often a new researcher defines a topic too broadly and has difficulty finding relevant prior research. Less frequently, the topic is too narrow

Gather background information This step is important if the researcher has done

little systematic reading in the area for research Dictionaries, Specialized encyclopedias,

Bibliographies (books, journal articles etc)

Lit Review - Step 1 Articulating the Context

Identify key concepts It is important to analyze the research

statement for its component concepts This helps when decisions are made

about where to search for information

Lit Review - Step 2 Preparing for the Search

Create Concept Lists Database searching is most efficient if concepts

are represented concisely and linked within the search

The first terms that come to mind are often the most useful as they are likely to appear in the records retrieved in the database searched

However, it is important to have synonyms, narrower terms, and broader terms to use in case alternate terms are used, or to narrow or expand the search

Lit Review - Step 2 Preparing for the Search

Determine Where to Perform the Search The options are diverse Where will the most relevant research

reports be indexed? Library for books, journals, dissertations,

videos, audio, CD-ROMs etc Internet for information on anything!

Lit Review - Step 3 Performing the Search

Learning the conventions of each databaseDatabase records and fieldsKeyword searchingBoolean matching

Searching the databases Know how to access various databasesConnect to the databases and look for

relevant information

Lit Review - Step 3 Performing the Search

Decision: Were the Results Appropriate?No

Do you need to return to step 1 and redefine the problem to be researched?

Did you create concept lists which included all the synonyms needed? Did you use boolean operators? Did you search in the most relevant databases? Do you think maybe you missed one? Go back to step 2

Would it be useful to return to Step Three to consider how well you understood the particulars of searching databases in general?

Yes Go to step 4

Step 4 - Obtaining Materials cited in Search Results Are the materials available locally?

Although some of the databases contain full text articles, you will probably need to get your hands on the materials via a library

Learn options for retrievalLibrary's catalog lists all the books, journal

subscriptions, videos, and other materials in the library

Not in library - consult with a librarian about your options

Inter library loan, subscriptions etc

Lit Review - Step 5Evaluating the Results

Determine your criteria for evaluating the relevance of retrieved materials

Decision - Satisfied with Materials Obtained?

No Same choices as at the end of Step 3 Go back to Step 1, Step 2 or Step Three

depending on problemLibrarians deal with people every day who are

frustrated with their information search. Never hesitate to ask for help! Refer you to a subject specialist in the library's

reference team.

Yes Finished

Cite your ReferencesUse the appropriate style manual to

construct your bibliography Your bibliography and references

should adhere to a specified format See APA Look at previous theses and copy

style!

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