Wednesday, 11 December 2013

Literary Reviews

As part of the research process, I need to produce literary reviews of the major research pieces I have used to write up my dissertation style essay. 

This advice on http://www.reading.ac.uk/internal/studyadvice/StudyResources/Essays/sta-startinglitreview.aspx (University of Reading website, DEC 2013) will be very helpful to get started on my literary reviews:


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Why write a literature review?

New discoveries don't materialise out of nowhere; they build upon the findings of previous experiments and investigations. A literature review shows how the investigation you are conducting fits with what has gone before and puts it into context.
A literature review demonstrates to your reader that you are able to:
  • Understand and critically analyse the background research
  • Select and source the information that is necessary to develop a context for your research
It also:
  • Shows how your investigation relates to previous research
  • Reveals the contribution that your investigation makes to this field (fills a gap, or builds on existing research, for instance)
  • Provides evidence that may help explain your findings later
If you are doing a thesis, dissertation, or a long report it is likely that you will need to include a literature review. If you are doing a lab write-up or a shorter report, some background reading may be required to give context to your work, but this is usually included as an analysis in the introduction and discussion sections.

What is a literature review?

A literature review is a select analysis of existing research which is relevant to your topic, showing how it relates to your investigation. It explains and justifies how your investigation may help answer some of the questions or gaps in this area of research.
A literature review is not a straightforward summary of everything you have read on the topic and it is not a chronological description of what was discovered in your field.
A longer literature review may have headings to help group the relevant research into themes or topics. This gives a focus to your analysis, as you can group similar studies together and compare and contrast their approaches, any weaknesses or strengths in their methods, and their findings.
One common way to approach a literature review is to start out broad and then become more specific. Think of it as an inverted triangle.
 Diagram of research
  • First briefly explain the broad issues related to your investigation; you don't need to write much about this, just demonstrate that you are aware of the breadth of your subject.
  • Then narrow your focus to deal with the studies that overlap with your research.
  • Finally, hone in on any research which is directly related to your specific investigation. Proportionally you spend most time discussing those studies which have most direct relevance to your research.

How do I get started?

Start by identifying what you will need to know to inform your research:
  • What research has already been done on this topic?
  • What are the sub-areas of the topic you need to explore?
  • What other research (perhaps not directly on the topic) might be relevant to your investigation?
  • How do these sub-topics and other research overlap with your investigation?
Note down all your initial thoughts on the topic. You can use a spidergram or list to help you identify the areas you want to investigate further. It is important to do this before you start reading so that you don't waste time on unfocussed and irrelevant reading.

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The parts that I thought were key have been highlighted or emboldened.

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