Title: Critically reviewing the literature as part of research
1Critically reviewing the literature as part of
research
Professional Development and Research Lecture
7 Lecturer R. Milyankova Tel. 0886 974
000 E-mail R.Miliankova_at_gmail.com
2Objectives of this session
- Understand the importance and purpose of critical
literature review to the research project - Know what you need to include when writing your
critical review - Be aware of the range of primary, secondary and
tertiary literature sources available - To generate ideas that will help you in the
choice of a research topic
3Why critical review?
- Knowledge doesnt exist in a vacuum, and your
work only has value in relation to other
peoples. Your work and your findings will be
significant only to the extent that theyre the
same as, or different from, other peoples work
and findings. - Jankowicz
4The literature review process
Types of literature Articles Reports Books
5The purpose of the critical review
- To help you to refine further your research
questions and objectives - To highlight research possibilities that have
been overlooked implicitly in research to date - To discover recommendations for further research
- To avoid repeating work that has been done
already - To sample current opinions on the topic in
newspapers, professional and trade journals - To discover and provide an insight into
appropriate strategies and methodologies
6Approaches to critical review
- Deductive approach using literature to identify
theories and ideas that you will test using data - Inductive approach to explore your data and to
develop theories from them that you will relate
to the literature
7The content of the critical review
- To include the key academic theories within your
chosen area - To demonstrate that your knowledge in the chosen
area is up to date - To show relations to previous research
- To assess strengths and weaknesses of previous
work and take them into account in your arguments - To justify your arguments
- To enable readers of your project report to find
the original work you cite - N.B. Thus you avoid charges in plagiarism
8What is meant by critical?
- Refer to work by recognized experts in your
chosen area - Consider and discuss work that supports and/or
opposes your ideas - Make reasoned judgments regarding the value of
others work to you research - Support your arguments with valid evidence in a
logical manner - Distinguish clearly between fact and opinion
9The structure of the critical review
- From general to specific
- Provide brief overview of key ideas
- Summarize, compare and contrast the key writers
- Narrow down to highlight the most relevant to
your work - Provide a detailed account of the findings of
your work - Highlight the issues where you will provide fresh
insights - Lead the reader into the corresponded sections
10Checklist for evaluating your literature review
- Does your review start at a more general level?
- Does the literature covered relate clearly to
your research questions and objectives? - Have you covered the key theories of recognized
experts in the area? - Is the literature you have included up to date?
- Have you been objective in the discussions and
assessment of other peoples work? - Have you included references that are counter to
your own opinion? - Are facts and opinions clearly distinguished?
- Is your argument coherent and cohesive - do the
ideas link together? - Have you made reasoned judgements about the value
of others work to your own? - Have you justified clearly your own ideas?
11The structure of the critical review
Primary (Grey) Reports Theses E-mails Conference
reports Company reports Some government
publications Unpublished manuscripts
- Secondary
- Newspapers
- Books
- Journals
- Internet
- Some government publications
Tertiary (Search tools) Indexes Abstracts Catalogu
es Encyclopedias Dictionaries Bibliographies Citat
ion indexes
12Planning the literature search
- Define the parameters of your search language,
subject area, business sector, geographical area,
publication period, literature type - Generate key words and search terms
- Discuss your ideas as widely as possible
13Defining parameters
- Language of publication (English)
- Subject area (Accountancy)
- Business sector
- Geographical area (Europe)
- Publication period (last 10 years)
- Literature type (journals and magazines)
14Generating key words (search terms)
- Discussion with colleagues, tutor, librarians
- Initial reading
- Dictionaries, thesauruses, encyclopaedias,
handbooks - Brainstorming
- Relevance trees
15Relevance trees
- Look similar to an organizational chart
- Hierarchical graph-like arrangements of
headings and sub-headings, describing your
research questions and objectives and help you
decide - - which key words are relevant to your research
questions and objectives - - which areas you will search first and which
later - - which areas are more important they have
more branches
16Relevance tree
Is there a link between benchmarking and TQM
Benchmarking (BM)
TQM
Links between BM and TQM
ISO 9000
Precise standard
Benchmarking theory
Benchmarking practice
Implementation
Techniques
Types
Case studies
17Conducting the search
- Searching using tertiary sources
- Obtaining relevant literature referenced in books
and journal articles you have already read - Scanning and browsing secondary literature in the
library of the University - Searching using Internet
18Evaluating the literature
- Assessing the relevance take notes for the
relevance of each item and the reasons why you
come to this conclusion this will be included
as a part of your critical review - Assessing sufficiency ask your project tutor
for help about both quality and quantity of
literature read - Referencing and bibliography
- - The Harvard system
- - The APA system
- - Footnotes (Vancouver system)
19Evaluating the literature
- How recent is the item?
- Is the item likely to have been superseded?
- Is the context sufficiently different to make it
marginal to your research? - Have you seen references to this item in other
items that were useful? - Does the item support or contradict your
arguments? - What are the methodological omissions within the
work? - Is the precision sufficient?
20Recording the literatureHarvard system
- Saunders, M., Lewis, P. and Thornhill, A. (2003)
Research Methods for Business Students (3rd
edition), London Pitman.