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Session Aims . To Explore the Purposes of a Literature ReviewTo Identify Sources to be used in a reviewEnsuring Internet searching is done wellTo look at ways of Structuring your ReviewBased upon Ch7 of Doing Postgraduate ResearchThese slides are on the Workshops' website linked from rdskill
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1. Undertaking a Literature Review Stephen Potter
2. Session Aims
To Explore the Purposes of a Literature Review
To Identify Sources to be used in a review
Ensuring Internet searching is done well
To look at ways of Structuring your Review
Based upon Ch7 of Doing Postgraduate Research
These slides are on the Workshops’ website linked from rdskills.open.ac.uk (in ‘notes and resources’)
DPGR website has additional student resources at:
http://www.sagepub.co.uk/potter/ 11.15 – 11.25
Some departments require you to keep a Training Portfolio. Ensure you keep your U500 Workshop notes and activities in this.
For others keeping a research journal is very useful (see Section 3 of U500)
Do remember to raise anything from these workshops with your supervisor. 11.15 – 11.25
Some departments require you to keep a Training Portfolio. Ensure you keep your U500 Workshop notes and activities in this.
For others keeping a research journal is very useful (see Section 3 of U500)
Do remember to raise anything from these workshops with your supervisor.
3. Purposes of a Literature Review You know about subject
You can review your area critically
You have used existing knowledge to focus your research question
You have used existing knowledge to chose your research method/approach
You have something to compare with you own results
Look at Woodley review
What purposes does this fulfil?
Other impressions.
4. Sources Journals
Conference Papers and Proceedings
Books
Dictionaries
Newspapers
Other students’ dissertations and theses
Government documents
Statistics and market data
Visual materials
Plans
Designs
TV/Radio
Grey literature:
Company reports Trade literature Unpublished research documents
Exhibitions and performances
See DPGR Ch 7.3
5. Internet Searching Use the internet properly - Library provides advice
Check Sources:
5 Ws: who, why, where, what and when?
Is the author (or their institution) known and respected in this field?
Is reference made to other work in this field?
Rather than a general web search, look for related links from websites or blogs you already trust
Does the information seem objective? Is there an underlying marketing or propaganda motive?
Is the information properly referenced?
How current is the information? Is it properly dated?
6. Further advice Library (and courses) will advise
BBC website has useful site – linked from DPGR website. This is at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/webwise/askbruce/articles/browse/goodsites_1.shtml
7. People and NetworksDPGR Ch 7.5 Authors
Practitioners
Journalists
Media Researchers
‘Stakeholders’ Contacting People
Conferences
Interviewing
Run a Workshop
Give a Seminar
Start a blog/tweats or join a discussion list
Other ideas??
8. Activity Make a list of the people and organisations who might be interested in the results of your research
9. Keeping Organised DPGR Ch 7.5 Vital – can be immense timewaster if not
Fully record sources
May use same source for different purposes
Bibliographic packages available
See DPGR Ch 7.5
10. Research Journal Endnote allows you to keep notes of references, but you also need to keep a record of how your research and thinking develops
Key resource in writing up to explain rationale for research and your learning processes Reminder about keeping a research journalReminder about keeping a research journal
11. Structure for a Review Often structured by your research process stages:
1 Project aims
2 General subject background (‘wide and thin’)
3 Focus on work in specific subject area – major part (subdivided by categories – ‘deep and narrow’ or ‘drilling down’)
4 Key issues identified from the literature that needs researching
11.25 – 11.4011.25 – 11.40
12. Review Structure Structuring more focussed section can take a number of approaches:
(a) Chronological
1 Early history
2 1960s and 1970s
3 Recent developments
(b) Sequential stages
1 Market research
2 Market planning
3 Market decisions
(c) Ways of understanding
1 Networks
2 Movements
3 Organisations
Woodley’s review is chronological but structured by emerging understanding – a mix of (a) and (c).
13. Writing Style What makes an article/chapter hard to read?
(We discussed this in the Academic Literacy session)
Create a flow or ‘storyline’ (sequence)
Provide ‘signposts’
“Pulling together” summary points where your writing takes any new direction. Say ‘this is what I have discovered, the implications are these and so we need to explore this, this and this to develop our understanding further’.
A good structure should set you up for a good writing style
Try doing a mini-review ASAP (e.g. a position or discussion paper on an aspect of your research) 11.40
GROUP ACTIVITY
Chris, Sue, Dave and I join in groups
11.40
GROUP ACTIVITY
Chris, Sue, Dave and I join in groups
14. And remember Happy Hour in the Cellar Bar at 5.30pm