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Conducting Literature Review Conducting Conducting Literature Review Literature Review A very brief overview A very brief overview

Literature Review

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Page 1: Literature Review

Conducting Literature Review

Conducting Conducting Literature Review Literature Review

A very brief overview A very brief overview

Page 2: Literature Review

About Me – Dr. Merza Abbas – Assoc. Prof. – Chairman of Graduate Studies,

Centre for Instructional Technology & Multimedia

[email protected], [email protected]

Page 3: Literature Review

Achievement?

• Best Thesis/Dissertation Awards – USM : Ibrahim Jbeili (2004) – META: Hamidah Maidinsah (2004)

Tumpang syok sahaja

Page 4: Literature Review

Ibrahim‛s Award

Page 5: Literature Review

Why do a master degree? • To do a better job

– To teach better: more effectively, more efficiently, more productively, etc…

– To improve the quality of learning • To move to better jobs • Because it is exciting, challenging, etc…

– Because it‛s there

Page 6: Literature Review

Why do a master degree? • To do a PHD, to be a researcher • To acquire “constructive” knowledge as

well as “destructive” knowledge • To learn to deconstruct and/or

reconstruct knowledge (how do you know what you know is correct?)

• No real applications except for a PHD or in a research environment

Page 7: Literature Review

What is a graduate program?

Diploma

Bachelor

Grad. Dip/ Prof. exams

Master

PHD

Skills: Accept w/o question

Critical review of theories: Accept when “proven”

More skills & theories: Accept w/o question

Skills & theories: Accept w/o question

Critical review of paradigms: Accept when irrefutable

Page 8: Literature Review

Paradigm 

Theory 

Model 

Practice 

Structure of 

Academic thinking 

P R E S C R I P T I V E 

Res. 

D E S C R I P T I V E 

Res.

Page 9: Literature Review

Structure of Scientific Revolution (Kuhn, 1970)

Paradigm

Anomalies New Paradigm

Normal Science

New Normal Science

Another new Paradigm More Anomalies

Master programs

Doctoral Programs

Page 10: Literature Review

Objectivist Paradigm

through activation of mental processes such as schemas, strategies, & metacognition

Cognitive

through accumulation of sub-skills and sub-procedures

Cybernetic

through conditioning and use of extrinsic “motivational”processes

Behaviourist

Focus: Mastery of content/skills Theory

Mental processes are predictable:

External factors can change

internal processes

Page 11: Literature Review

Constructivist Paradigm

through scaffolding, cooperative/collaborative learning,

Social learning

through meaningful & purposeful learning

Humanist

through inquiry and solving real-life problems

Mental Development

Focus: reasoning skills & science process skills

Theory

Mental processes are not predictable:

Knowledge is private & is personally constructed

Page 12: Literature Review

What is a thesis/dissertation?

• Report of a scholarly investigation – Proof of theory-practice mastery – Genuine & Original thought/argument

• Document to pass a sentence – Verify/fine-tune theories, models, practice – Reject/Debunk paradigms, theories, models

Page 13: Literature Review

What is in a thesis/dissertation?

• Chapter 1: Introduction – Problem Statement – Research Questions – Hypotheses, etc

• Chapter 2: Literature Review • Chapter 3: Research Methodology • Chapter 4: Results / Data Analysis • Chapter 5: Discussion & Conclusions

Page 14: Literature Review

Describe nature accurately 

Sense & state causal question 

Recognize & state Alt. H & Theories 

Generate logical predictions 

Plan & conduct controlled expt. 

Organize & analyze expt. data 

Draw & apply reasonable conclusions 

Skills for Research & Thesis Writing

Dari Lawson (1995)

Page 15: Literature Review

Literature Review • What is it? • What is it for? • Where do we start? • How do we do it?

– Quantitative research – Qualitative research

• How do we know we‛ve done a good job? • Worked example(s)

Page 16: Literature Review

Literature Review: M.Ed. Evaluation Form

• Perkaitan Sumber yang disoroti dengan masalah kajian.

• Terdapat teori/model untuk menyokong masalah kajian.

• Sumber yang disoroti adalah terkini dan mencakupi skop kajian.

Page 17: Literature Review

What is it? • High quality overview

– Clarity, Flow, Relevance, Recency, Empirical focus, Independence

• With technically accurate citations and references – List all articles cited in text, – Cite all articles listed in reference – Use the APA standard.

Page 18: Literature Review

What is it for?

• Support for ideas in Chapter 1 • Elaboration of ideas in Chapter 1 • Reference for discussion and

conclusions in Chapter 5 – Must be thorough, exhaustive, & up-to-

date

Page 19: Literature Review

Where do we start? • Choose a paradigm • Problem Statement (3-5 pages: tentative cause

& effect statements) – Problems = anomalies – Choose a suitable theory/model – Identify Independent Variables (IV) – Identify Dependent Variables (DV) – Identify Moderator Variables (MV)

• Write clear Research Questions – How will the IVs affect the DVs among the MVs? – Develop the Hypotheses

• Derive a Title from the Research Questions • Tip: RQ = Summary of Problem Statement

Page 20: Literature Review

Information Processing Model

Motivation Executive Control

Long Term

Memory

Short Term/ Working Memory

Sensory Register Senses

Muscles

E N V I R O N M E N T

Response Generator

Learning: process of Encoding and decoding

Stimuli/Knowledge items into meaningful structures

using various cognitive strategies

Page 21: Literature Review

New Information causes disequilibrium

Piaget‛s theory • Learning:

process of resolving cognitive conflicts Assimilation

Existing Schema in equilibrium

Accomodation

New Schema in equilibrium

Self-regulation

Page 22: Literature Review

How do we do it? • Expand from the Title

– Expand concepts to content outline – Use cause and effect structure

• Expand from the Research Questions • Expand from the Problem Statement • Take note of the

– Academic Pecking Order – Sources of Knowledge – Who else has done this, in what paradigm, with what

subjects, & with what results: go to ASKERIC, Google, etc. • Tip: Hypotheses are summaries for Lit. Review.

Page 23: Literature Review

The Academic Pecking Order

Innovators

Developers

Reporters

Students

No name dropping, padding Please!

Page 24: Literature Review

Sources of Knowledge

• Experience • Authority • Deductive Reasoning • Inductive Reasoning • Scientific Thinking/Research

(Empirical studies)

Page 25: Literature Review

Concludes with a new theory

Deductive Reasoning

Inductive Reasoning

Forms tentative hypotheses

to test

Detects patterns &

forms

Begins with specific

observations 

Confirms original theory 

Collects data/ observations 

to test H’thesis 

forms hypotheses 

to test 

Begins with a theory that explains an 

event 

Scientific Thinking

Dari Sopiah Abdullah (2004)

Page 26: Literature Review

How do you know you‛ve done a good job?

• Does the review support every hypothesis?

• Does the review support Chapter 5? • Up-to-date, thorough, exhaustive,

original? • Can be turned into a book / a monograph?

Page 27: Literature Review

Tuckman‛s (1999) criteria • Context • Magnitude (number of references) • How empirical & up-to-date • Connectedness to the problem • Well-organized? • Establish significance? • Convincing argument?

Page 28: Literature Review

Let‛s try an example • Paradigm • Variables • Research Questions • Title • Literature Review Outline

Page 29: Literature Review

How to improve learning?

Page 30: Literature Review

Thank you Thank you Thank you