Improving Your Argument By Identifying A Literature Gap

Authors

  • Timothy F. Slater University of Wyoming

Keywords:

Discipline-Based Education Research, Publishing, Literature Review

Abstract

More often than not, a peer-reviewed journal article’s literature review is a boring to read as it is to write. However, literature reviews do not need to be laborious for all involved. Instead, the best literature reviews offer a crisp view of a researcher’s landscape and succinctly provides a compelling case for critical research that needs to be done in order to move the field forward. In order to provide readers with a useful literature review, it is critical that authors avoid providing paragraph after paragraph describing a summative chronology of the topic in the literature, but instead provide a critical synthesis of what is known, and what is not known about a topic. In the end, if the reader is convinced of what will be known and advanced as a result of a researcher undertaking the considerable time and effort to conduct and publish a given study, the reader is much more likely to cite your paper downstream in their own work.

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Published

2018-06-01

How to Cite

Slater, T. F. (2018). Improving Your Argument By Identifying A Literature Gap. Journal of Astronomy &Amp; Earth Sciences Education, 5(1). Retrieved from https://journals.modernsciences.org/index.php/JAESE/article/view/67

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Section

Articles