- Typical organizing principles:
- By theme: use when explaining key themes or issues relevant to the topic. This is the most common way to organize literature reviews.
- By methodology (also called a methodology review): use when discussing interdisciplinary approaches to a topic or when discussing a number of studies with a different approach.
- By chronology: use when historical changes are central to explaining the topic.
- Note that any of these methods can be combined. For example, within each theme, you could organize your review by methodology or chronology, if appropriate.
- Look for the following:
- findings that are common or contested;
- important trends in the research; and
- the most influential theories.
- Develop headings and subheadings that reflect the major themes or patterns you detected.
- If your literature review is extensive, find a large table surface, and use post-it notes or note cards to organize all your findings into categories. Move them around when (a) they fit better under different headings, or (b) you need to establish new topic headings. (But be sure to secure them to the surface if you walk away, or at least take a photo - there's nothing worse than having to start over.)
Percentage of time on this step: 10%