Qualifying Exam Literature Review: An evidence-based, organized synthesis of the literature reviewed associated with your selected field
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Resources
Literature Review Genre Basic presentation
Don’t forget to watch the Videos below
EDS Milestone Formatting, Copy-Editing, and Quality Checklist
Writer’s Workshop Detailed presentation and Recording
Recording from April 18th group advising session
University of Illinois’ Writer’s Workshop
The purpose and organization will shift as you progress from the General Field —> Special Field —> Research Proposal (Prelim) –> Dissertation.
Be sure that you start with your General Field first before referring to your dissertation study.
What is a Literature Review as a Qualifying Exam and Within a Dissertation?
A literature review is not a narrative essay, but rather investigates and synthesizes existing scholarship in a way that provides context for the research study and informs and eventually justifies the research question/s, theoretical framework, and selected research methodology.
A literature review is more than a summary of the sources, it has an organizational pattern that combines both summary and synthesis. It should not merely be descriptive—it should present definitions, theories, debates, and research data in the field of interest. It should be a fair representation of the perspectives and voices of a range of scholars across the field. It should include the context of the study and evidence to support the claims being made.
What is a Literature Review as a Qualifying Exam and Within a Dissertation?
A literature review is not a narrative essay, but rather investigates and synthesizes existing scholarship in a way that provides context for the research study and informs and eventually justifies the research question/s, theoretical framework, and selected research methodology.
A literature review is more than a summary of the sources, it has an organizational pattern that combines both summary and synthesis. It should not merely be descriptive—it should present definitions, theories, debates, and research data in the field of interest. It should be a fair representation of the perspectives and voices of a range of scholars across the field. It should include the context of the study and evidence to support the claims being made.
Literature Review Workshop Videos
Please watch these videos prior to attending the live session where we will do some hands-on exercises and work on your draft together
Part 1: Dr. Kalantzis discusses in this video the purpose and content of the literature review
Part 2: Dr. Kalantzis discusses in this video the literature review genre and the type of writing that is required
Academic Phrases and Evidence-Based Verbs
This academic phrasebook can help you diversify how you present the findings from the literature that you have reviewed.
Tables and Figures
Tables and Figures
Also, you can include tables, infographics, videos, etc., but be sure to source them and demonstrate their relevance by connecting them in the nearby text. Be sure to cite them in captions. Best practice is to number them based on the chapter (Table 2.1, Table 2.2 while in Chapter 2).
Additional Help Resources
Please keep in mind our Exam-Dissertation Sequence Literature Review requirements when reviewing these other sources
- Writing a Literature Review by Jane Webster & Richard T. Watson
Additional Resources for Writing a Lit Review
- Demystifying the Literature Review (UofI Library)
- Literature Review Basics (link to more links)
- APA Citations (UofI Library)
- Write a Killer Literature Review (Udemy course)
- Strunk, William and E.B. White. 1979. Elements of Style. New York NY: Longman. (A classic!)
- Sword, Helen. 2012. Stylish Academic Writing. Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press.
- The University of Chicago Press Editorial Staff. 2017. The Chicago Manual of Style. Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press. Online edition.
- Coursera Academic Writing Course.
- Important: we ask that you not use “noted”, “highlights”, “mentions” – be sure select evidence-based verbs
- When the examples say “Scholars say,” you should list the actual scholar(s) in that space like Bloom, Hasting, and Madaus (1971) claim formative assessment…
- Pay attention to the pluralization of verbs. Multiple authors claim; single author claims
- Academic Phrasebook: This book has examples of the kind of language that is used for literature reviews. Click on the book cover to purchase.
Literature Review Genre Checklist
In addition to the EDS Milestone Checklist and Rubrics, consider the following: