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Dr Ali Samer Muhsan
PETROLEUM ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
Today’s aims
• Getting you to think about the purpose
of a literature review
• Getting you to think about what your
own literature review will look like
• Critical thinking, reading and writing
• Planning and structuring options
• Interactive!
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
What is a literature
review (for)?
• When thinking about what a literature review is, we
need to think about what it is for. What is the
purpose of a literature review?
• In pairs, discuss what you think a literature review
is for? Jot your ideas down on paper.
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
What is a literature
review (for)?..(Cont..)
• Establishes the terms and context. How else will you define exactly what
you’re looking at and where its limits are?
• Presents a survey of preceding literature on the topic. How else will you
know what’s been done already?
• Explores ways that others have solved similar questions/ problems.
How else will you select an appropriate methodology and approach?
• Outlines the relationship of these texts to each other. How else will you
know what the different perspectives and debates are, and where you are
coming from?
• Evaluates the quality and relevance of the literature. How else will you
be able to build on or reject it?
• Establishes the gaps or inadequacies. How else will you justify your own
contribution?
• Demonstrates your scholarly rigor. How else can I have faith in your
conclusions?
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
Literature Review
• A critical analysis of existing research in your field; it highlights both
the strengths and weaknesses of existing research
• Allows you to gain a critical understanding of your field
• Opportunity to think about what has been done in your field;
opportunity to think about the similarities, patterns, trends and also
differences across the existing research
• By identifying strengths and weakness, you will be able to think
about what has not/needs to be done in your field
• The gap in the literature is your justification for your research
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
More than just a
chapter…
• A literature review is a process as well as an outcome!
• Literature review as an outcome: appears in the final
draft of your thesis as part of your introduction or as a
separate chapter.
• Literature review as a process: critical engagement
(thinking, reading and writing) with relevant research
on your topic. It is a crucial and formative stage of your
thesis journey.
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
• Undergraduate level: backing your points up with
appropriate, authoritative sources
• Masters Level: demonstrating that you
understand how knowledge is created
• PhD Level: demonstrating that you can create
new, original knowledge
• Professional academic: peer review, building a
coherent body of work of your own and assuring
others’ work
Critical Thinking as a Student
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
Reading critically
Think about:
• What were the research aims of the paper/book?
• Is the research aim achieved? If so, how did they do it?
• Are there any problems with their methodology?
• Was it a strong or a weak research model?
• How will this research help with your own research?
• What can you take from it?
• What needs to be avoided?
• What are you doing differently?
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
Critical thinking
(a three-year-old’s guide)
• Why?
• How does that work?
• What’s that made of?
• What’s that for?
• What does that mean?
• But X says…
• How do you know?
• So what?
• Says who?
• What happens if…
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
What critical thinking
can mean in terms of
the literature review
❑ Understanding research on its own terms – testing its viability
❑ Understanding research in relation to other arguments
❑ Critiquing research in relation to what you want to do
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
Starting to think about your
own literature review
Key Players and Sources
• First stage of the literature review is to identify the key
people in your field and collate all relevant sources about
your topic.
Ask yourself:
❑ What research and theory is there on my topic?
❑ What are the key sources (books, articles) on my topic?
❑ How has the topic/problem been investigated over time?
❑What are the strengths and weaknesses of these
debates?
❑What will your contribution be? How will it be different?
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Where to Start?!
• YOU DON’T NEED TO READ EVERYTHING
YOU Can’t!
• You don’t need to read every text
• You don’t need to read every word
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
What’s your story?
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Getting started: Planning the review
• Planning is about organising the structure of your
literature review (your story will help with this!)
• How ill you organise the information?
• Chronologically?
• Thematically?
• By trends/approaches/techniques?
• Major debates/controversies?
• Probably a combination of these
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
• You can:
• Jot down ideas
• Move them around
• Create links
• Put text on nodes
• Swap between ‘Diagram’ and
‘Outline’
• Transfer to Word
Mind-mapping
software: Inspiration
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Writing the Review
✓ Start with an overview
✓ Decide on organising principles (themes,
trends, methodology, chronology,
controversies – usually a combination of
some of these)
✓ Use headings for the different sections of
the review
✓ Provide summative signposts of where
your argument is leading
✓ Summarise your review/highlight ‘gap’ in
research
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Clarity
Tips for clear writing:
➢ Clear introduction: overview of topic, aim of review
and structure
➢ Clear paragraph structure
➢ Make sure the subject of your sentence is clear
➢ Don’t assume knowledge
➢ Make sure key terminology and difficult ideas are
always explained thoroughly (ask your yourself: does it
make sense?)
➢ Be objective and balanced
➢ Use signposts to orientate the reader
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Your critical voice:
signposting
• Where appropriate, begin sections and
paragraphs with a statement which
synthesises or analyses, rather than just
describes
• Use signposting words to demonstrate how
texts relate to each other and also what
you think of them
Eg. However, yet, moreover, indeed, similarly
etc
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Paragraphs and Flow
• Paragraph:
- Topic sentence
- Discussion of topic
- Closing sentence
• Thematic and grammatical links
- Logical progression from one paragraph
to the next
- Demonstrate links in your language
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
Illustrating Trends:
Synthesising Literature
• Avoid list-like structure by illustrating
trends and patterns
For example:
Research into thesis titles has emphasised
the use of the colon to distinguish the
thematic focus from the precise focus of
the work (Smith, 1999; James, 2002;
Webster, 2007; Helgesen, 2008).
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Use of citations in the
literature review
Two types of citations:
• Integral: The author’s name appears in the sentence.
• Example (author-date system): Lillis (2001) argues that
both tutors and students often lack explicit knowledge of
the conventions governing the construction of academic
texts.
• Non-integral: The author’s name appears outside sentence.
• Example: Both tutors and students often lack explicit
knowledge of the conventions governing the construction
of academic texts (Lillis, 2001).
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Citation and writer’s
voice
Whose voice is dominant - the writer’s or the original author’s?
• The moon is made of cheese (Brie 1999).
• Brie (1999) argues that the moon is made of cheese.
• As Brie (1999) points out, the moon is made of cheese.
• According to Brie (1999), the moon is made of cheese.
However, ….
• Brie (1999) argues out that the moon is made of cheese.
However, ….
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
What other information do you need to
gather?
• What questions couldn’t you answer in
your literature review story?
• What don’t you know (yet!) about your
field?
• Use this to move forward!
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
Learning from models
• Look at samples of good theses in
your field
• Read reviews in prestigious
journals in your field
Created by Dr Ali
Samer (2018)
Further reading
Greenhalgh, T. (2006) How to Read a Paper: The basics of evidence-based medicine
Third edition. Oxford: Blackwell and BMJ
Hart, C. (1998) Doing a Literature Review. London: SAGE
Ridley, D. (2008) The Literature Review: A Step-by-Step Guide for Students. London:
SAGE
Yudkin, B. (2006) Critical Reading: Making sense of research papers in life sciences
and medicine. London: Routledge
Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
DR. ALI SAMER MUHSAN
BEng (Mech.), MEng (Mat.), PhD (Mech.)
Senior Lecturer, Petroleum Engineering Department
UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI PETRONAS,
32610 Seri Iskandar, Perak Darul Ridzuan, Malaysia
Tel: +605-368 7378; H/P & WhatsApp: +6013-517 7844; Fax: +605-368 7139
Email: ali.samer@utp.edu.my; alisameer2007@gmail.com Website: www.utp.edu.my
Researcher ID: https://publons.com/researcher/2944055/ali-samer-muhsan/
Scopus Author ID: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=54585662300
Orcid: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8270-0091
Researchgate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ali_Muhsan
Academia: https://independent.academia.edu/AliSamer
Google scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=oJ9qIQoAAAAJ&hl=en
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-ali-samer-muhsan-18b60522/

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How to Do and Write The Literature Review by Ali Samer-2018'

  • 1. Dr Ali Samer Muhsan PETROLEUM ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
  • 2. Today’s aims • Getting you to think about the purpose of a literature review • Getting you to think about what your own literature review will look like • Critical thinking, reading and writing • Planning and structuring options • Interactive! Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 3. What is a literature review (for)? • When thinking about what a literature review is, we need to think about what it is for. What is the purpose of a literature review? • In pairs, discuss what you think a literature review is for? Jot your ideas down on paper. Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 4. What is a literature review (for)?..(Cont..) • Establishes the terms and context. How else will you define exactly what you’re looking at and where its limits are? • Presents a survey of preceding literature on the topic. How else will you know what’s been done already? • Explores ways that others have solved similar questions/ problems. How else will you select an appropriate methodology and approach? • Outlines the relationship of these texts to each other. How else will you know what the different perspectives and debates are, and where you are coming from? • Evaluates the quality and relevance of the literature. How else will you be able to build on or reject it? • Establishes the gaps or inadequacies. How else will you justify your own contribution? • Demonstrates your scholarly rigor. How else can I have faith in your conclusions? Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 5. Literature Review • A critical analysis of existing research in your field; it highlights both the strengths and weaknesses of existing research • Allows you to gain a critical understanding of your field • Opportunity to think about what has been done in your field; opportunity to think about the similarities, patterns, trends and also differences across the existing research • By identifying strengths and weakness, you will be able to think about what has not/needs to be done in your field • The gap in the literature is your justification for your research Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 6. More than just a chapter… • A literature review is a process as well as an outcome! • Literature review as an outcome: appears in the final draft of your thesis as part of your introduction or as a separate chapter. • Literature review as a process: critical engagement (thinking, reading and writing) with relevant research on your topic. It is a crucial and formative stage of your thesis journey. Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 7. • Undergraduate level: backing your points up with appropriate, authoritative sources • Masters Level: demonstrating that you understand how knowledge is created • PhD Level: demonstrating that you can create new, original knowledge • Professional academic: peer review, building a coherent body of work of your own and assuring others’ work Critical Thinking as a Student Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 8. Reading critically Think about: • What were the research aims of the paper/book? • Is the research aim achieved? If so, how did they do it? • Are there any problems with their methodology? • Was it a strong or a weak research model? • How will this research help with your own research? • What can you take from it? • What needs to be avoided? • What are you doing differently? Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 9. Critical thinking (a three-year-old’s guide) • Why? • How does that work? • What’s that made of? • What’s that for? • What does that mean? • But X says… • How do you know? • So what? • Says who? • What happens if… Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 10. What critical thinking can mean in terms of the literature review ❑ Understanding research on its own terms – testing its viability ❑ Understanding research in relation to other arguments ❑ Critiquing research in relation to what you want to do Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 11. Starting to think about your own literature review Key Players and Sources • First stage of the literature review is to identify the key people in your field and collate all relevant sources about your topic. Ask yourself: ❑ What research and theory is there on my topic? ❑ What are the key sources (books, articles) on my topic? ❑ How has the topic/problem been investigated over time? ❑What are the strengths and weaknesses of these debates? ❑What will your contribution be? How will it be different? Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 12. Where to Start?! • YOU DON’T NEED TO READ EVERYTHING YOU Can’t! • You don’t need to read every text • You don’t need to read every word Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 13. What’s your story? Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 14. Getting started: Planning the review • Planning is about organising the structure of your literature review (your story will help with this!) • How ill you organise the information? • Chronologically? • Thematically? • By trends/approaches/techniques? • Major debates/controversies? • Probably a combination of these Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 15. • You can: • Jot down ideas • Move them around • Create links • Put text on nodes • Swap between ‘Diagram’ and ‘Outline’ • Transfer to Word Mind-mapping software: Inspiration Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 16. Writing the Review ✓ Start with an overview ✓ Decide on organising principles (themes, trends, methodology, chronology, controversies – usually a combination of some of these) ✓ Use headings for the different sections of the review ✓ Provide summative signposts of where your argument is leading ✓ Summarise your review/highlight ‘gap’ in research Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 17. Clarity Tips for clear writing: ➢ Clear introduction: overview of topic, aim of review and structure ➢ Clear paragraph structure ➢ Make sure the subject of your sentence is clear ➢ Don’t assume knowledge ➢ Make sure key terminology and difficult ideas are always explained thoroughly (ask your yourself: does it make sense?) ➢ Be objective and balanced ➢ Use signposts to orientate the reader Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 18. Your critical voice: signposting • Where appropriate, begin sections and paragraphs with a statement which synthesises or analyses, rather than just describes • Use signposting words to demonstrate how texts relate to each other and also what you think of them Eg. However, yet, moreover, indeed, similarly etc Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 19. Paragraphs and Flow • Paragraph: - Topic sentence - Discussion of topic - Closing sentence • Thematic and grammatical links - Logical progression from one paragraph to the next - Demonstrate links in your language Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 20. Illustrating Trends: Synthesising Literature • Avoid list-like structure by illustrating trends and patterns For example: Research into thesis titles has emphasised the use of the colon to distinguish the thematic focus from the precise focus of the work (Smith, 1999; James, 2002; Webster, 2007; Helgesen, 2008). Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 21. Use of citations in the literature review Two types of citations: • Integral: The author’s name appears in the sentence. • Example (author-date system): Lillis (2001) argues that both tutors and students often lack explicit knowledge of the conventions governing the construction of academic texts. • Non-integral: The author’s name appears outside sentence. • Example: Both tutors and students often lack explicit knowledge of the conventions governing the construction of academic texts (Lillis, 2001). Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 22. Citation and writer’s voice Whose voice is dominant - the writer’s or the original author’s? • The moon is made of cheese (Brie 1999). • Brie (1999) argues that the moon is made of cheese. • As Brie (1999) points out, the moon is made of cheese. • According to Brie (1999), the moon is made of cheese. However, …. • Brie (1999) argues out that the moon is made of cheese. However, …. Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 23. What other information do you need to gather? • What questions couldn’t you answer in your literature review story? • What don’t you know (yet!) about your field? • Use this to move forward! Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 24. Learning from models • Look at samples of good theses in your field • Read reviews in prestigious journals in your field Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 25. Further reading Greenhalgh, T. (2006) How to Read a Paper: The basics of evidence-based medicine Third edition. Oxford: Blackwell and BMJ Hart, C. (1998) Doing a Literature Review. London: SAGE Ridley, D. (2008) The Literature Review: A Step-by-Step Guide for Students. London: SAGE Yudkin, B. (2006) Critical Reading: Making sense of research papers in life sciences and medicine. London: Routledge Created by Dr Ali Samer (2018)
  • 26. DR. ALI SAMER MUHSAN BEng (Mech.), MEng (Mat.), PhD (Mech.) Senior Lecturer, Petroleum Engineering Department UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI PETRONAS, 32610 Seri Iskandar, Perak Darul Ridzuan, Malaysia Tel: +605-368 7378; H/P & WhatsApp: +6013-517 7844; Fax: +605-368 7139 Email: ali.samer@utp.edu.my; alisameer2007@gmail.com Website: www.utp.edu.my Researcher ID: https://publons.com/researcher/2944055/ali-samer-muhsan/ Scopus Author ID: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=54585662300 Orcid: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8270-0091 Researchgate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ali_Muhsan Academia: https://independent.academia.edu/AliSamer Google scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=oJ9qIQoAAAAJ&hl=en Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-ali-samer-muhsan-18b60522/