Writing The Review of Related Literature
Writing The Review of Related Literature
Writing The Review of Related Literature
Choose a topic that you are familiar with and highly interested in analyzing; a topic your
intended readers and researchers will find interesting and useful; and a topic that is
current, well-established in the field, and about which there has been sufficient research
conducted for a review. This will help you find the “sweet spot” for what to focus on.
Step 2: Research and collect all of the scholarly information on the topic that might be
pertinent to your study.
Step 3: Analyze the network of information that extends or responds to the major works
in your area; select the material that is most useful. Use thought maps and charts to
identify intersections in the research and to outline important categories; select the
material that will be most useful to you review.
Step 4: Describe and summarize each article—provide the essential information of the
article that pertains to your study.
*Determine 2-3 important concepts (depending on the length of your article) that are
discussed in the literature; take notes about all of the important aspects of this study
relevant to your topic being reviewed.
*For example, in a given study, perhaps some of the main concepts are X, Y, and Z.
Note these concepts and then write a brief summary about how the article incorporates
them. In reviews that introduce a study, these can be relatively short. In stand-alone
reviews, there may be significantly more texts and more concepts.
Step 5: Demonstrate how these concepts in the literature relate to what you discovered
in your study or how the literature connects the concepts or topics being discussed.
*In a literature review intro for an article, this information might include a summary of the
results or methods of previous studies that correspond and/or confirm to those sections
in your own study. For a stand-alone literature review, this may mean highlighting the
concepts in each article and showing how they strengthen a hypothesis or show a
pattern.
*Discuss unaddressed issues in previous studies. These studies that are missing
something you address are important to include in your literature review. In addition,
those works whose theories and conclusions directly support your findings will be
valuable to review here.
Step 6: Identify relationships in the literature and develop and connect your own ideas
to them—this is essentially the same as step 5, but focused on the connections
between the literature and the current study or guiding concepts or arguments of the
paper, not only on the connections between the works themselves.
A literature review should be structured like any other essay: it should have an
introduction, middle or main body, and a conclusion.
Introduction
define your topic and provide an appropriate context for reviewing the literature;
State the scope of the review – i.e. what is included and what isn’t included. For
example, if you were reviewing the literature on obesity in children you might say
something like: There are a large number of studies of obesity trends in the
general population. However, since the focus of this research is on obesity in
children, these will not be reviewed in detail and will only be referred to as
appropriate.
Main body
provide insight into the relation between your chosen topic and the wider subject
area e.g. between obesity in children and obesity in general;
Move from a general, wider view of the literature being reviewed to the specific
focus of your research.
Conclusion