Skip to main content

Literature Review

 

What is a Literature Review?

A literature review is a scholarly used to examine the state of knowledge and understanding of the academic literature on a topic or issue placed in context.  It summarizes, synthesizes, and critics (evaluates) journal articles, books, conference papers, books, government documents, and other documents of academic value to illuminate how knowledge has evolved within the field and highlight what has been done, what is generally accepted, what is emerging and what is the present state of thinking on the topic.

Literature reviews have two types. First, it can be a stand-alone product, which summarizes, synthesizes, and critiques existing studies on specific a topic and drives a conclusion about current understanding. This type of literature review is written in a structure similar to a standard essay, i.e., introduction, main body, and conclusion (See this article as an example). Second, it can be part of a larger research project, which provides an overview of current knowledge that allows you to identify relevant theories, methods, and gaps in the existing research, and helps you justify your research questions. Typically, this type is organized into five parts: (1) introduction to the problem; (2) what is known about the topic (key theories, findings, methods, and/or trends); (3) relevant previous studies’ findings, theories, or constructs; (4) discrepancies, limitations, or gaps; and (5) research question or hypothesis.

 

Importance of Literature Review

Literature reviews are important because it facilitates you to know your field comprehensively so that you can make informed decisions, act competently, and set policies in your field of expertise. Research typically begins with literature reviews because, as it is previously stated, they help the researcher justify proposed studies, uncover patterns of findings in the field, enter into scientific debate, and discover gaps in knowledge that lead to future research questions. To emphasize the importance of literature review, Boote and Beile (2005) stated “a researcher cannot perform significant research without first understanding the literature in the field” (p. 3).

 

Literature Review Differences in Quantitative and Qualitative Research

According to Creswell (2014), the literature review of quantitative research is different from the literature review of qualitative research in three ways: “the amount of literature cited at the beginning of the study, the use it serves at the beginning, and its use at the end of a study” (pp. 80-81).

Since the literature review in a quantitative study should justify the research problem's importance and offer a rationale for (and foreshadow) the study purpose and research questions or hypotheses, the researcher needs to discuss a considerable literature at the beginning. As such, the literature review of quantitative studies can be written as a separate section titled "Review of the Literature". To show whether the findings confirm or disconfirm prior predictions, the literature is also cited at the end of quantitative studies.

The literature review in qualitative research should also justify the research problems importance. But, unlike quantitative research, it does not lead to the research questions by presenting various views concerning the phenomena under study. the underlying reason for not discussing the literature extensively is to allow the views of the participants to emerge without being constrained by the views of others from the literature. Consequently, the literature review of qualitative research is relatively short and is positioned at the end of the Introduction section. In this case, the proposal (or research article) does not contain a separate section on literature review. However, some institutions or instructors may request to include a complete literature review in qualitative research. In this case, the literature review is included a separate section like that in quantitative research.

Steps in Conducting Literature Review

There is no prescribed path to follow in conducting a literature review. Yet, to write a literature review as a part of a research project, you will typically go through the following five interconnected steps: (1) identify the key terms (that are relevant to your research problem) to use in your search for literature; (2) locate literature by consulting various types of materials and databases; (3) critically evaluate and select the literature for your review; (4) organize the literature you have selected by abstracting or taking notes on the literature and developing a visual diagram of it; and (5) write a literature review that reports summaries of the literature for inclusion in your research report.

Step 1: Identifying Key Terms

Key terms identification can be conducted by turning the research problem into a “working title” and/or posing a short, general research question that you would like answered in your study. If, for instance, your research problem is “The effect of using short stories on EFL learners' reading proficiency," (because it has been well-phrased as a title) you can use it directly as a working title. You can also form another working title from it, such as "Short stories effect on EFL learners' reading skills". Then, based on the problem, you might pose a research question like "Do short stories affect EFL learners' reading proficiency?" or "Is there any significant effect of short stories use on EFL learners' reading proficiency".

Step 2: Locating Literature

Using the identified key terms, you can start the search for relevant literature by exploring databases (Google Scholar, JSTOR, EBSCO, ERIC, etc.). assessing the electronic journals available on a topic, searching in an academic library, and asking your lecturers to recommend good sources. A Literature review can include both primary and secondary source materials, but you need to prioritize locating primary sources for two reasons. One, primary sources present the original author's viewpoint as they serve the literature in the original state. Second, they also offer better details of original research than secondary sources do (Creswell, 2014).

Step 3: Critically evaluate and select the literature for your review

When you locate the literature, it is necessary to ensure whether it is good and relevant to use in your particular research. To determine whether a source is good or not, prioritize to include sources published in refereed journals; then continue to non-refereed journal articles; then books; then conference papers, dissertations, and theses; and finally non-reviewed articles posted to Web sites. To determine the source relevance, while selecting literature for a review, consider the following criteria. First, does the source focus on a topic similar to that you want to study (topic relevance)? Second, does the source involve or examine participants and sites similar to those you proposed to study (participants and site relevance)? Third, does the source investigate the same questions you want to address (problem and question relevance)? Fourth, is the source downloadable, available, or accessible from a website or the library (accessibility relevance)? The source is relevant to your study if you answer yes to them (Creswell, 2014).

Step 4: Organize the literature

After ensuring their relevance, you need to organize the literature to make it easy for you to reference them later. This step involves reproducing (photocopying, scanning, or downloading) and filing the sources. At this time also need to get the connections and relationships among the sources by identifying the themes, debates, and gaps. To do this, quickly read the sources, mark, take notes, or summarize pertaining ideas so that you can easily insert them later into your written review. The pertaining ideas to consider include: (1) themes, i.e. the concepts and questions that recur across the sources; (2) trends and patterns in theory, method, or results acknowledged by the approaches that become more or less popular over time; (3) debates, contradictions, or conflicts on which the sources disagree; (4) crucial publications, i.e. any influential theories or studies that changed the direction of the field; and (5) gaps that are identified by missing elements in the literature or the weaknesses necessary to address.

Finally, organize these pertaining ideas to structure the outline of your review whose divisions and subdivisions depend on the variables or factors involved in your research problem. In the organizational structure of the review, these variables are presented in a logical argument that smoothly leads into the research project and justifies both the need for work and the methodology you are going to use. The review typically ends with (1) a conceptual framework, a written or visual representation of an expected relationship between variables, and (2) hypotheses (for quantitative study) or research purpose and research questions (for qualitative study).

To illustrate, if your research problem is “the effect of using short stories on junior high EFL learners' reading proficiency’, you can outline your literature review into the following divisions (and subdivisions):

1. Short Stories in Language Learning
   1.1. The Nature of Short Story
   1.2. Trends of Using Short Story in EFL Learning
   1.3. Advantages and Disadvantages of Using Short Story in EFL Learning
2. Reading Proficiency
   2.1. The Nature of Reading
   2.2. Methods for teaching Reading
   2.3. Reading Proficiency
3. Teaching EFL Reading Using Short Stories
   3.1. Reasons for Teaching Reading Using Short Story
   3.2. Trends of Using Short Story to EFL Reading Proficiency
4. Gaps in Literature
5. Conceptual Framework
6. Hypothesis/Research Purpose and Research Questions

Step 5: Write the literature review

As stated earlier a literature review should have an introduction, the main body, and a conclusion. The introduction typically describes the focus of the review and how it is organized. To describe the focus, restate your research central problem in a summary of the scholarly context by accentuating the timeliness of the topic (e.g. “various recent studies have focused on the effect of using short stories on EFL learners’ reading proficiency” or highlighting a gap in the literature (e.g. “despite the numerous research on the effect of using short stories on EFL learners’ language skills proficiency, few researchers have taken the reading proficiency of junior high school students into consideration”). In the next paragraph, briefly describe the outline of your review.

The main body summarizes, synthesizes, analyzes, and interprets relevant ideas in the previously planned outline. Each division/subdivision begins with an overview of the main points of each source and combines them into a coherent whole through appropriate quoting, summarizing, and paraphrasing. But overviewing the ideas is not enough. You should also add your interpretations where possible, compare and contrast different theories, concepts, etc. to indicate your own position, discuss the significance of findings concerning the literature as a whole, and critically evaluate the ideas by mentioning their strength and weaknesses. Make sure that you write in well-structured paragraphs by starting each with a topic sentence and employing correct transition words. You should also appropriately cite and reference conforming to the style (APA, MLA, AMA, etc.) required in your research project.

The conclusion summarizes the major themes found in the literature and provides the reasons to conduct your study. To write the summary, ask yourself, "From all the research I have reviewed, what are the major results and findings?" The answer to this question will provide the identification of three to four themes that emphasize the major ideas under each division in the main body of the review.

The reasons to conduct your study reveal why the current literature is deficient and why research on the topic of your research is necessary. These reasons describe how your study will add to knowledge and justify the importance of your research problem.

References

Boote, D. N., & Beile, P. (2005). Scholars before researchers: On the centrality of the dissertation literature review in research preparation. Educational Researcher, 34(6), 3-15

Creswell, J. W. (2014). Educational research: Planning, conducting and evaluating quantitative and qualitative research (4th ed.). Harlow: Pearson.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Types and Functions of Plot

Type of Plots  The plot used in fictions can be differentiated into four types: linear, episodic, parallel, and flashback. The most common plot employed in short stories is the linear plot. Some short stories, though quite rarely, also use flashback plot. The episodic and parallel plots, however, are found only in long fiction, i.e. novels. Short storied do not use episodic and parallel plots because short stories normally concentrate on a single event with a very limited number of characters, while episodic and parallel plots include a series of events or more than one plot. The following section describes each plot briefly. The Linear Plot The linear plot (sometimes is also called dramatic or progressive plot) presents action or occurrences chronologically. It typically starts with an exposition (or introduction to the setting and characters) and the conflict. After that, the rising action follows which leads to a climax. Soon after the climax, falling action emerges which brings

Identifying a Research Problem (and Writing the Statement of the Problem)

  Research is essentially a problem-driven process. It starts and focuses on a specific problem or phenomenon. During the research process, data is collected and theories are elaborated to explain the problem. In other words, identifying and determining the problem to study is the first and the most important aspect to deal with in undertaking research. Thus, the research problem is the foundation of a research project. If the foundation is shaky the entire project is doomed to failure. Despite its critical importance, identifying and stating a research problem are the most challenging aspects of undertaking research, especially for novice researchers. This might be due to an insufficient understanding of how to identify and write for a study. This article describes research problem identification as the first step of a research process. It starts by describing what a research problem is, how to identify it, and where to obtain it. Then it briefly probes the criteria for determining a

An Analysis of the Theme of Hemingway’s “Old Man at the Bridge”

  An Analysis of the Theme of Hemingway’s “Old Man at the Bridge” Introduction The theme is one of the most interesting elements of fiction, including a short story. It refers to the central idea or meaning that the author wants to convey to the readers. Some stories convey a single theme, but some other stories have several themes. Since short stories are related to human life, Alternbend and Lewis (1966, p. 78) define theme as “The general vision of life or the more explicit proposition about human experience that literature conveys”. In relation to this, one of the easiest ways to determine the theme of a short story is by asking ourselves, “What does the story say about life? The theme of fiction is generally presented through the other elements of fiction, particularly the plot and characterization. This article is a venture to analyze the theme of Hemingway’s Old Man at the Bridge . This story is interesting to analyze due to two reasons. First, it is based on Hemingway’s exp