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EDUC 3088 Senior Research Seminar

A guide for senior capstone research projects in education

The Purpose of a Literature Review

  1. In a  literature review you are meant to analyze NOT SUMMARIZE a selection of published scholarly writing--books, articles, and other relevant scholarly sources-- on a specific topic or  research question.
  2. The objective of your literature review is to critically analyze and evaluate the existing body of scholarship related to your proposed research.
  3. The process of creating your review allows you to select and analyze a comprehensive body of background information that defines and provides the foundations of your project.  In this way, it is not an annotated bibliography wherein you summarize the articles you find and share how you will use them, and it is not a research paper where you simply choose materials that support your research.

 

 

Here are a few places to start for finding examples of literature reviews in the field of education. You can see how they're written and possibly find sources that might be useful for you to include in your own literature review. 

Review of Educational Research

Review of Research in Education

Annual Reviews

Teacher's College has a resource guide that is an excellent reference and guide for your work

TC Research Guides: The Literature Review

Elements: What to include?

Depending on the type of literature review you're writing, you can organize it in different ways. But, it is important to include the following in any literature review you write: 

  1. Purpose or Objective - Clearly describe why you are writing the review. State the purpose of your project. What's the subject, theoretical framework, or issue you'll be researching and writing about?. And above all, don't forget to  explain what you hope to accomplish with the critical examination of the sources in your literature review. You can also talk about what motivated your work on the topic
  2. Organize your sources – Choose an organizational structure that makes sense for your topic. You might organize chronologically or thematically, or you might choose some other way to organize the review that is unique to your topic. You will likely identify subtopics within your themes that you will organize in order of relevance within the chosen organizational schema of your review.  
  3. Analyze – Provide analysis of both the uniqueness of each source and its similarities with other source
  4. Conclusion  - Summarize of your analysis and evaluation of the reviewed works and how it is related to its parent discipline, scientific endeavor or profession

 

 

 

Types of Literature Reviews

As Kennedy (2007) notes*, it is important to think of knowledge in a given field as consisting of three layers. First, there are the primary studies that researchers conduct and publish. Second are the reviews of those studies that summarize and offer new interpretations built from and often extending beyond the original studies. Third, there are the perceptions, conclusions, opinion, and interpretations that are shared informally that become part of the lore of field. In composing a literature review, it is important to note that it is often this third layer of knowledge that is cited as "true" even though it often has only a loose relationship to the primary studies and secondary literature reviews.

Given this, while literature reviews are designed to provide an overview and synthesis of pertinent sources you have explored, there are several approaches to how they can be done, depending upon the type of analysis underpinning your study. Listed below are definitions of types of literature reviews:

Argumentative Review

This form examines literature selectively in order to support or refute an argument, deeply imbedded assumption, or philosophical problem already established in the literature. The purpose is to develop a body of literature that establishes a contrarian viewpoint. Given the value-laden nature of some social science research [e.g., educational reform; immigration control], argumentative approaches to analyzing the literature can be a legitimate and important form of discourse. However, note that they can also introduce problems of bias when they are used to to make summary claims of the sort found in systematic reviews.

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. A well-done integrative review meets the same standards as primary research in regard to clarity, rigor, and replication.

Historical Review

Few things rest in isolation from historical precedent. Historical reviews are focused 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.

Methodological Review

A review does not always focus on what someone said [content], but how they said it [method of analysis]. This approach provides a framework of understanding at different levels (i.e. those of theory, substantive fields, research approaches and data collection and analysis techniques), enables researchers to draw on 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, and helps highlight many ethical issues which we should be aware of and consider as we go through our study.

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. Typically it focuses on a very specific empirical question, often posed in a cause-and-effect form, such as "To what extent does A contribute to B?"

Theoretical Review

The purpose of this form is to concretely examine the corpus of theory that has accumulated in regard to an issue, concept, theory, phenomena. The theoretical literature review help 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. The unit of analysis can focus on a theoretical concept or a whole theory or framework.

* Kennedy, Mary M. "Defining a Literature." Educational Researcher 36 (April 2007): 139-147.

All content is from The Literature Review created by Dr. Robert Larabee USC