Here to help!
A literature review DOES:
A literature review DOESN'T:
The literature review should be organized in some logical fashion:
Still confused? See this guide from UNC for a more detailed explanation of lit reviews.
This 2-minute video provides a brief overview of the point of a literature review and includes pointers on organization.
In various disciplines, the term "literature review" may refer to:
In some disciplines, like the social sciences and the "hard" sciences, scholarly articles almost always have a "Literature Review" section.
In other disciplines, like the humanities, scholarly articles do not have a section so clearly demarcated; rather, they cite the literature throughout the text, so that the narrative review of scholarly literature develops in tandem with the study or thesis itself.
Nevertheless, the basic principles of how academic literature should be "reviewed" (sense #3 above) are fairly consistent. In your RCSA Student Grant Proposal, the literature review should be part of the "Project Narrative" component of your application.
See the "Completed narrative" link here for an example of a successful Project Narrative from a prior year.
The links above are from just some of the titles on research and writing available in the Max Chambers Library.
To find more books like these in our collection, see links on the Further Resources page or search the catalog using these subject terms:
"report writing"
research
authorship
dissertations
To find discipline-specific books, add the subject term for the discipline.
For example, a subject query might look like this:
psychology AND (authorship OR "report writing" OR research OR dissertations)
For more help on subject searching, contact us directly, or view the Search Path tutorial.
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