Contenu connexe Similaire à Literature Review: Development and Peer Review (20) Plus de Spelman College (18) Literature Review: Development and Peer Review1. What is a literature review?
Summarizes sources, gives background, blah blah blah....
How does a literature review function?
1. Enables you to establish trustworthiness and credibility with your audience.
Effect: Placing yourself in a preexisting conversation about your interested topic. However,
others have already begun that conversation so you have the burden of figuring out how you are
going to present your knowledge about your topic in such a way that others will be able to see
why what you are doing is both relevant, significant/important.
2. Demonstrates how you came to the conclusion that your research problem/question is worth
investigating.
Effect: We usually can trace (or make a trace) of how we determined our research
problems/questions are valid. When you observe how are researchers TALKING ABOUT THE
SUBJECT, you will begin to notice the ways in which other researchers use the literature review
to “narrate” how their consultation of materials led them to some type of conclusion about the
research problem/questions. In fact, the way researchers talk about subjects is the exigence for
a great deal of research. In other words, any research problems/questions stem from issues
with concepts and key terms. Sometimes the terminology needs to be reconsidered or updated
to fit a more contemporary context or needs to be modified when considering historical contexts.
So what gets included?
1. What’s a brief definition of the subject and its importance?
2. Who seems to get cited most often when researchers undertake this subject area? Is there
work you’ve consulted that isn’t being cited, but you feel should be included in the conversation?
3. What trends exist when researchers investigate this area? (what are the subtopics?)
● What terminology is used? Which arguments recur? You can use your lit review as an
opportunity to show your sensitivity to the way researchers in your field conceptualize
your subject (likewise, you can use it to dispute the way researchers in your field are
conceptualizing the subject).
● When you notice the prevalence of a critique, consider what’s legitimate about the
critique. Are there contexts that go overlooked.
What Gaps:
1. Legitimacy of key/terms concepts?
2. Accuracy, effectiveness, or legitimacy of methodology?
2. 3. Accuracy, relevance, or importance of findings?
4. Missing data in between acknowledged research?
When organizing the lit review, keep track of sources through JSTOR or Google Scholar.
Begin a document with your research problem!
Before you actually select particular articles to read. Be a surveyor, embody your best
Sacajawea realness!
1. When surveying the terrain what are the patterns and trends:
● Do I notice any key terms/concepts recurring?
● Do I notice that one work seems to be cited over the other?
● Do I notice certain conflicts? Do I notice that these conflicts take on different types of
conversation?
○ Participatory planning
○ New urbanism
○ Philanthropy and policy
2. When articles stand out to you, select them. Begin an annotated bibliography.
a. Here’s what this work is about: type of source, main argument, evidence presented, etc.
(summary)
b. Here’s why I think this work is important, significant, useful, need to be critiqued, etc.
(interpretation)
c. Here’s where and how I plan to use this work in my actual research paper (utility)
NUMBER OF SOURCES: Matters or Doesn’t?
You’ll have zero problem having multiple sources if you write about substantive issues pertinent
to your research problem/question. Nevertheless, its safe to say at least 1215 is sufficient.
3. Group the sources
Give em’ some labels
Transform the labels into topic sentences
For example: Several authors discuss the limitations of participatory planning in the 21st
century, or in deindustrialized geographic areas.