Review of Literature
Review of Literature
Review of Literature
Definition
A literature review surveys books, scholarly articles, and any
other sources relevant to a particular issue, area of research, or
theory, and by so doing, provides a description, summary, and
critical evaluation of these works in relation to the research
problem being investigated. Literature reviews are designed to
provide an overview of sources you have explored while
researching a particular topic and to demonstrate to your readers
how your research fits within a larger field of study.
2. Integrative Review
Considered a form of research that reviews, critiques, and
synthesizes representative literature on a topic in an integrated
way such that new frameworks and perspectives on the topic are
generated. The body of literature includes all studies that address
related or identical hypotheses or research problems.
3. Historical Review
Historical literature reviews focus on examining research
throughout a period of time, often starting with the first time an
issue, concept, theory, phenomena emerged in the literature, then
tracing its evolution within the scholarship of a discipline. The
purpose is to place research in a historical context to show
familiarity with state-of-the-art developments and to identify the
likely directions for future research.
4. Methodological Review
A review does not always focus on what someone said [findings],
but how they came about saying what they say [method of
analysis]. Reviewing methods of analysis provides a framework
of understanding at different levels [i.e. those of theory,
substantive fields, research approaches, and data collection and
analysis techniques], how researchers draw upon a wide variety
of knowledge ranging from the conceptual level to practical
documents for use in fieldwork in the areas of ontological and
epistemological consideration, quantitative and qualitative
integration, sampling, interviewing, data collection, and data
analysis.
5. Systematic Review
This form consists of an overview of existing evidence pertinent
to a clearly formulated research question, which uses pre-
specified and standardized methods to identify and critically
appraise relevant research, and to collect, report, and analyze data
from the studies that are included in the review. The goal is to
deliberately document, critically evaluate, and summarize
scientifically all of the research about a clearly defined research
problem.
6. Theoretical Review
The purpose of this form is to examine the corpus of theory that
has accumulated in regard to an issue, concept, theory,
phenomena. The theoretical literature review helps to establish
what theories already exist, the relationships between them, to
what degree the existing theories have been investigated, and to
develop new hypotheses to be tested. Often this form is used to
help establish a lack of appropriate theories or reveal that current
theories are inadequate for explaining new or emerging research
problems.
Structure and Writing style
The structure of a literature review should include the
following:
Find Models
Use the exercise of reviewing the literature to examine how
authors in your discipline or area of interest have composed their
literature review sections. Read them to get a sense of the types
of themes you might want to look for in your own research or to
identify ways to organize your final review.
Methodological
A methodological approach focuses on the methods utilized by
the researcher.
Use Evidence
A literature review section is, in this sense, just like any other
academic research paper. Your interpretation of the available
sources must be backed up with evidence [citations] that
demonstrates that what you are saying is valid.
Be Selective
Select only the most important points in each source to highlight
in the review. The type of information you choose to mention
should relate directly to the research problem, whether it is
thematic, methodological, or chronological. Related items that
provide additional information.
Use Quotes Sparingly
Some short quotes are okay if you want to emphasize a point, or
if what an author stated cannot be easily paraphrased.