Analyzing The Past To Prepare For The Future: Writing A Literature Review
Analyzing The Past To Prepare For The Future: Writing A Literature Review
Analyzing The Past To Prepare For The Future: Writing A Literature Review
Tense
• Opinion is varied on whether when writing about prior research, however Present tense is preferred because
it gives reader a greater sense of immediacy.
• In line when discussing concepts, and our concept-centric approach to literature
• The present tense is terser and thus faster for the reader to process.
Theoretical Development in Article
• A review should identify critical knowledge gaps and thus motivate researchers to close this breach. That is,
writing a review not only requires an examination of past research, but means making a chart for future
research.
• Highlighting the discrepancy between what we know and what we need to know alerts other scholars
opportunities for a key contribution. Usually, this roadmap is accomplished by developing a conceptual
model with supporting propositions.
• Extending current theories or developing new theories will create directions for future research. However,
extending or developing theories is a difficult task and is often the weakest part of a review. Nonetheless, it
is the most important part of a review and generally needs the most elaboration.
• The reasoning for propositions may come from three main sources: theoretical explanations for "why," past
empirical findings, and practice or experience. The why or logical reasoning is the most important
component of the explanation. It must always be part of any justification. It represents "the theoretical glue
that welds the model together
Evaluating Theory
• Writers argue that good theories should be memorable and provide answers to why.
• They should explain, predict, and delight (Weick 1995). Others propose that they should be interesting
(Davis 1971) parsimonious, falsifiable, and useful (Sutton and Staw 1995).
• Some argue that theories should be built multiple paradigms (meta triangulation). Thus, they should exhibit
creativity, relevance, and comprehensiveness (Lewis and Grimes 1999)
• Reviewers are looking for good theories, but there is no cookbook approach to accomplishing this. One
important way to assist you in this evaluation process is to have colleagues read and comment on work
before submitting it for review.
• Creating Discussion and Conclusions: Some reviews end abruptly with a short conclusion. However, even
though you have completed the majority of your review paper at this point, you can still tell your colleagues
more.
• A review paper embodies the "state of the field." As such, it represents a benchmark for others conducting
future research in the area
Summary
• An ideal article:
• motivates the research topic and explains the review's contributions
• describes the key concepts
• delineates the boundaries of the research
• reviews relevant prior literature in IS and related areas
• develops a model to guide future research
• justifies propositions by presenting theoretical explanations, past empirical findings, examples
• presents concluding implications for researchers and managers. And on top of this, the exemplary review
article should be explanatory