This document provides guidance on writing the introduction section of a literature review. The introduction should briefly introduce the topic, key concepts, and scope/organization of the review. It typically covers 2-3 pages. The document then discusses different styles for organizing the subsections of the literature review, including discussing studies individually or grouping them, and organizing by findings or scoring studies. It provides tips for writing the review such as outlining first, writing in sections, and finding patterns in the literature to synthesize it. The goal is for the rationale of the proposed work to be clear by the end of the review.
2. THE INTRODUCTION of the REVIEW
OF RELATED LITERATURE
Aim
1. Introduces and makes a brief pitch for the topic
2. Introduces key concepts and terms
3. Describes the scope and organization of the
review
A Good way to end it is by laying out the
scope of the rest of the chapter: the topics
covered; the sequence; criteria for
inclusion; benchmarks for
ideas/conclusions by era
Acts as an advanced organizer
Covers about 2-3 pages
6. Idea
(Author, Year)
(Author, Year)
Idea
(Author, Year)
(Author, Year)
Idea
(Author, Year)
(Author, Year)
Idea
(Author, Year)
(Author, Year)
Idea
(Author, Year)
(Author, Year)
Idea
(Author, Year)
(Author, Year)
I STILL PREFER IT THIS WAY!
7. The Subsections of the Lit Review:
Style #1
Make an introduction for the subsection
(see the previous guidelines)
Describe relevant studies ONE BY ONE
Cluster related studies together
Provide comparable information for each study
Pull the material together with a summary
and an overall critique at the end of the
subsection
8. The Subsections of the Lit Review:
Style #2
Make an introduction for the subsection
(see the previous guidelines)
Describe a category of studies as a group
(ie, weaker; same method; same sample)
and discuss briefly
Devote more time to seminal works or
stronger studies
Pull the material together with a summary
of the conclusions and prevailing ideas
9. The Subsections of the Lit Review:
Style #3
Make an introduction for the subsection
(see the previous guidelines)
Organize according to findings
Use the studies reviewed to support the
logical series of points being developed by
the review (which is organized by findings)
You need to be a two pronged funnel to do
this
Pull the material together with a summary
and highlight which finding has the greatest
evidence
10. The Subsections of the Lit Review:
Style #4
Make an introduction for the subsection
(see the previous guidelines)
Make a synthesis of the literature by
scoring particular studies on the basis of:
Strength of procedure
Strength of instruments
Sample size
Positive statistic found/reports
Meta-analysis
Results of studies that investigated the same
issue are grouped statistically to evaluate the
characteristics of the group of studies as a whole
11. Expect these difficulties:
Writer’s Block
Breaking free from the notion that
you have to start writing from the
beginning
Too much detail – the chatty one
12. Some things to remember
1. Get your outline.
2. Write the individual sections of the
outline
3. JUST WRITE. Forget the errors or the
fears. JUST WRITE.
4. Express/Articulate PRODUCT GOALS.
5. Reward yourself for accomplishing the
small goals.
6. Find patterns in the literature.
Synthesize.
13. Ways to Synthesize
Use integrative
transition
sentences and
phrases to help
readers see
patterns as they
read the
document
Although most studies
previously described used
correlational designs,
Padilla and Preclaro
(2007) explored the issue
of mentoring novice
teachers using the
experimental design.
Their findings were
similar to the previous
studies.
14. Ways to Synthesize
Use comparative
and evlauative
phrases. Use
this when you
describe a study.
Padilla and Preclaro
(2007) could not
replicate the findings
reported by Hermosa
(2006). Unfortunately,
the small sample size in
their comparative groups
may have limited the
power of their
experiment to detect
significant differences.
15. Some things to remember
7. Are findings consistent over
a series of studies?
8. Consider how the findings
may be have become
different.
9. Which studies are good?
Strong? Poorly done? Why?
16. Some things to remember
10. At the end of the literature review, you
should have clearly shown the patterns of
findings and methods that are prevailing in
your area.
11. Use a professional tone – you may be
criticizing your teacher’s work
12. Do not be emotional – there is no such
thing as perfect research
13. At the end of the review of literature, the
rationale for what you propose and why
you propose to do it in a specific way
SHOULD BE OBVIOUS.