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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
About the Authors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Who is this book for?
How is this book different?
The rationale and history behind the contributions from researchers and from an information specialist
Features of the book
Layout of the book
Part I Getting Information
1 Preliminaries
What is a literature review?
Terminology used in this book
Different styles of review
Two styles or approaches
A critical approach
Knowledge and literature
Why and when will you need to review the literature?
The research question and the literature review
What is appropriate literature?
Choosing which style of review: a traditional narrative review or a systematic review?
Project management
Summary
2 Searching For Information
Introduction
Developing online searches by identifying key words and creating a search record
The range of information sources available for complex searches
What do you need from a resource to make it appropriate for locating journal articles for your review?
Summary
3 Reading Skills
Introduction
Be analytical in your reading
Where to start
Reading techniques – scan, skim and understand
Reading different types of material
Grey literature: non-academic sources and policy reports
Recording and note-making
Summary
4 From Making Notes to Writing
Introduction
Note-making
From notes to writing
Writing: critical writing and types of argument
Making a value judgement and bias
Summary
PART II Using Information
5 The Traditional Review
Overview of the debate
Types of review: critical, conceptual state of the art, expert and scoping
Drawing up an analytical framework – how to sort the material
Moving to analysis and synthesis
The presentation of your review
Summarising the gap – dare to have an opinion
Summary
6 Writing Up Your Review
Overview
A short summary
A self-standing review
Abstract, executive summary and annotated bibliography
Writing the review
Key words or phrases to help you move from stage 1 to stage 2
The ‘so what?’ question, originality and making a value judgement
Summary
7 The Systematic Review
Overview
Definitions
Development of the review protocol
Formulating the review question
Documenting your progress
Locating studies and sources of information
Selecting studies: inclusion and exclusion criteria
Appraisal – assessing the quality of research
Data extraction
Synthesis, drawing conclusions, what the review shows
Evolving formats of systematic review
Summary
8 Meta-Analysis
Overview
What is meta-analysis?
Can I use meta-analysis to summarise the results of my systematic review?
undertaking your meta-analysis
Displaying the results of a meta-analysis
Is your meta-analysis free from bias?
Performing a sensitivity analysis
Summary
9 Referencing And Plagiarism
Introduction
Why is referencing important?
What do you need to reference?
How many references should I provide?
When and how to reference
Referencing systems
Where to find citation information you need
Plagiarism
Copyright
Conclusion
Summary
Appendix 1: Further Reading
Appendix 2: Critical Review Checklist
Appendix 3: Systematic Review – Online Resources
Appendix 4: Resources for Meta-analysis
Glossary
References
Index
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