Transcript Slide 1

The Literature Review
and
the 3 R’s
Gone fishin’
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Module 7
Write a research proposal (4,000 words)
Submit to Student Project Ethics Committee
(SPEC) for approval
Once approved – submit to AS for 1st
marking
Module 8
Carry out your research project
Write up into research dissertation (12,000
words) – submit to AS for 1st marking
MA in Practice-based Play Therapy
Working title
 Research question
 Aims and objectives
 Introduction (and/or Background)
 Literature review
 Study design
 Methodology and methods
 Data analysis
 Ethical considerations
 Study timetable
 References
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Research Proposal Template
Working title
 Research question
 Aims and objectives
 Introduction (and/or Background)
 Literature review
 Study design
 Methodology and methods
 Data analysis
 Ethical considerations
 Study timetable
 References
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Research Proposal Template
Webinar series: webinar 1
Working title
 Research question
 Aims and objectives
 Introduction (and/or Background)
 Literature review
 Study design
 Methodology and methods
 Data analysis
 Ethical considerations
 Study timetable
 References
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Research Proposal Template
Webinar series: webinar 2
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Working title
Research question
Aims and objectives
Introduction (and/or Background)
Theoretical context
Literature review
Study design
Methodology and methods
Data analysis
Ethical considerations
Study timetable
References
Research Proposal Template
Webinar series: webinar 3
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Research articles in peer-reviewed academic
journals
Cochrane reviews
Practice articles
Books by one author
Chapters in edited books
Conference proceedings
Dissertations or theses
Websites
Other sources; historical documents, legal
documents, government papers etc
Literature sources – quality not
quantity
Find sources relevant to your research question
Keep a list of how, where and when you found
them (see Search Strategy paper in Session 2
resources)
 Keep a clear list of sources – full and accurate
reference ready for your bibliography
 Summarise their key points
 Rate their importance to your work
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BUT THIS IS NOT ENOUGH!!
An excellent literature review synthesises and
analyses your sources
Lists and summaries?
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Think of your literature review as a story or
pathway
As you read sources note down the themes
that arise (include things that writers seem
to agree on and seem to disagree on)
See how one thing links to another – look for
similarities and differences (analyse)
Draw the themes together and write about
these (not a list of authors or sources)
Synthesis and analysis
Turn your reading into a drawing or
spidergram or mindmap so that you can
literally SEE the themes or ideas emerging
and you can SEE how they relate to each
other
Draw ...
What is the effect of an early therapeutic
intervention on the reflective functioning of
deprived mothers?
Boolean operators AND / OR
“Reflective functioning AND mothers”
Generate keys words for searching
from your research question
Outline the main issues at the beginning
 Provide the analysis and synthesis of the
themes in the middle
 End by summarising the issues,
differences, paradoxes, dilemmas and
questions yet to be resolved.
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Rough guide to lit rev format
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Characteristics of bedtime reading: absorbing,
transporting, entertaining .... sleeping!!
Critical reading is actually 3 things
◦ Reading quickly looking for key things; skimming
through
◦ Thinking about what you are reading
◦ Writing brief notes and collect quotes; write (code) on
the text (unless not your’s!)
Design your own notation system –
I draw stars, long lines down margins, exclamation marks
etc – I use a colour marker on the front page at the top
– red, orange and green – for important, quite important
and less important etc
Critical reading not bedtime
reading!
Writers write
 Writing is a process
 You don’t know what your writing will be
until the end of the process.
 If writing is your practice; the only way to
fail is not to write (Sher, 1999, p.5)
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Sher, G. (1999) One Continuous Mistake: Four noble truths for writers.
London: Arkana.
Writing – four rules
Is not dry and boring and difficult to
understand (unless it’s very technical or been
poorly written!!)
It is clear and logical and even vibrant!
Clear thinking = clear writing
(muddled thinking = muddled writing)
Work on your writing – craft it – draft it –
laugh at it!
Academic writing ....
Write a paragraph on your current
material
2. Re-write it until it is clear and
transparent
3. Under this paragraph write a onesentence summary of the paragraph
4. Under this write a link sentence which
says how the next paragraph will
logically follow the first
5. Then write the next paragraph
(when you get good at this, “think” stages
3 and 4 rather than write them down)
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Exercise: micro-structuring
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MUST start a system for this now
Basically is academic courtesy and imperative to
avoid plaigerism (extremely serious academic
offence – software used to identify!)
References are for when you use others’ ideas
work or direct quotes within your writing
To keep the text flowing you write a short
reference (also known as a citation) immediately
following the relevant text – author and date
(and page number if a direct quote)
You write the full list of authors, dates, titles,
place of publication and publisher in a section at
the end called References
Referencing
What is the difference between a
bibliography and a references section?
Useful exercise - correct your diploma
essay referencing – check your
bibliography
You WILL lose marks for incorrect
referencing!!
Quiz question
Little tour today!!
www.refworks.com
Separate masterclass available in the summer
FREE RefWorks available through CCCU Library
Set up your own account
Access from any PC anywhere
Writes your bibliography and/or references for you in
Harvard!
If you really want to, you can write code into your
dissertation which pulls the citation in from RefWorks
On the other hand:
You might prefer an index box system
You can also use Word functions to store your references
See paper in Session 2 resources
A committee which examine your proposed
research in detail and approve it to be carried
out under the auspices of CCCU
 Meet monthly (dates on Blackboard)
 Submit your bundle of papers by submission
date to committee secretary
 Plan carefully – submit your papers well in
advance of your proposed research fieldwork
 Send you an email detailing any necessary
changes (you then re-submit to Chair)
 Send you a letter giving you approval and the
go-ahead to begin your research project
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Student Projects Ethics Committee
(SPEC)
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Ethics checklist – this is a toolkit which decides if you need
to submit a full application – YES answers lead to a full
submission, NO answers you just register your project with
the Head of Department of Health and Social Care.
Retrospective studies may still need full approval granting.
Your research proposal (4,000) words
All project protocols; participant information pack, informed
consent letter, copies of measures to be used
SPEC application form
SPEC declaration form
Peer review form
Gatekeeper letter
Risk assessment for project
Researcher CV, CRB and insurance
Copy PTUK/PTI ethical framework
Overseas declaration
Preparing the papers ...
Thank you!!!!