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Tips for writing literature reviews, which are documents that give an overview of scholarly conversations about a particular topic or research question. It explains the difference between a literature review and a summary, and provides guidelines for formulating a research question that is audience-aware, ambitious, arguable, answerable, and appropriate in scope. It also discusses organizing and analyzing arguments using the toulmin method, and making your own contribution to the scholarly conversation. Useful for university students, particularly those working on capstone essays or research projects.
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A literature review is a document or portion of an essay that gives an overview of the scholarly conversation about a particular topic or research question. Students often confuse the literature review with the kind of summary that forms the basis of a book report, which gives a paragraph- by-paragraph or section-by-section description of what a writer says. Instead, a strong literature review summarizes, and sometimes analyzes, the arguments made by scholars. Literature reviews often focus on scholarly theories and can be a useful tool when entering a larger project like a Capstone essay. The end goal is an overview that situates the student-scholar’s own argument as a meaningful contribution to a discussion on a specific topic. YOUR RESEARCH QUESTION The basis for a strong literature review is a research question that is:
research question you have set forth. Before you include an article in your literature review, ask yourself: how does this article relate to my specific research question? ORGANIZING YOUR LITERATURE REVIEW There are a number of ways to organize your literature review. It might help to organize scholarly work by the way it relates to particular aspects of your research question or by various schools of thought rather than in the chronological order of a conversation. Here are some questions to consider as you decide how to write up your review:
Think ahead to how your lit review sets up your own contribution. Two of the most effective ways to make your argument is to challenge warrants based on empirical experience and warrants based on authority (Booth, Colomb and Williams 12 8 - 29). Systematic research and a scholar’s own experience in a field lead to claims that rely on these types of warrants. The way to challenge this type of warrant is by countering a scholar’s argument with contradictory or more compelling evidence. You are also looking at ways to demonstrate that a scholar’s claims are not totally reliable, which you will do through collecting stronger data or using the evidence from theories or concepts of different authorities within a field to back up your claims. There are no cut-and-dried formulas for writing a literature review. By focusing on giving an overview of the scholarly arguments, understanding the shared cultural and critical assumptions, identifying the claims and evidence each author puts forth, and looking for gaps in the discussion, you can use literature reviews as an effective tool for your reader and yourself. The argument you draw out of your literature review will be more informed, more nuanced, and ultimately more effective, which is the goal of this scholarly exercise. SOURCES: Booth, Wayne C., Gregory G. Colomb and Joseph M. Williams. The Craft of Research. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1995. Print. Lunsford, Andrea A., John J. Ruszkiewsicz and Keith Walters. Everything’s an Argument. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2007. Print. Hart, Chris. Doing a Literature Review: Releasing the Social Science Research Imagination. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1999. Print.