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Systematic review is a transparent and replicable process for synthesizing research to minimize bias through exhaustive searches and an audit trail. It is highly recommended when a researcher has formulated a specific research question. For broader exploratory studies, a traditional narrative review can be adopted initially. Researchers should then conduct a mapping exercise to focus their area and questions before systematically reviewing all relevant literature. The mapping allows areas to narrow from broad to focused and assists with assessing a study's significance, limitations, and arguments for validity and reliability. Researchers should apply proper search techniques like Boolean strings and document studies systematically using a template analyzing publications by sub-area, year, methodology, sector, and country to understand emerging areas and conceptual frameworks for developing strong research questions.
Systematic review is a transparent and replicable process for synthesizing research to minimize bias through exhaustive searches and an audit trail. It is highly recommended when a researcher has formulated a specific research question. For broader exploratory studies, a traditional narrative review can be adopted initially. Researchers should then conduct a mapping exercise to focus their area and questions before systematically reviewing all relevant literature. The mapping allows areas to narrow from broad to focused and assists with assessing a study's significance, limitations, and arguments for validity and reliability. Researchers should apply proper search techniques like Boolean strings and document studies systematically using a template analyzing publications by sub-area, year, methodology, sector, and country to understand emerging areas and conceptual frameworks for developing strong research questions.
Systematic review is a transparent and replicable process for synthesizing research to minimize bias through exhaustive searches and an audit trail. It is highly recommended when a researcher has formulated a specific research question. For broader exploratory studies, a traditional narrative review can be adopted initially. Researchers should then conduct a mapping exercise to focus their area and questions before systematically reviewing all relevant literature. The mapping allows areas to narrow from broad to focused and assists with assessing a study's significance, limitations, and arguments for validity and reliability. Researchers should apply proper search techniques like Boolean strings and document studies systematically using a template analyzing publications by sub-area, year, methodology, sector, and country to understand emerging areas and conceptual frameworks for developing strong research questions.
Systematic review can be regarded as a process of synthesizing research in a
systematic and transparent manner. Systematic reviews differ from traditional
narrative reviews by adopting a replicable, scientific and transparent process, in other words a detailed technology, that aims to minimize bias through exhaustive literature searches of published and unpublished studies and by providing an audit trail of the reviewers decisions, procedures and conclusions (Cook, Mulrow and Haynes, 1997). When the researcher has formulated a research question, then the adoption of a systematic review is highly recommended. However, when your start probing on a wider paradigm you can adopt the traditional approach of exploratory studies. During this stage you need to do the mapping exercise so as to focus your area of research and formulate the research question. Now you can start the systematic review of all literature that you read. Adopt a systematic approach such as the template (below) for all documents that you select as relevant. When deciding relevance to your research apply a mapping (scoping) exercise (see below). The mapping exercise allows for the areas from the broader sense to the focus sense. This would eventually assist you in thinking about significance of your study, limitations of your research and arguments of validity and reliability of your study. Mapping exercise would then have to include the authors and year of the papers that you feel is relevant to your research area. Remember that when searching papers, report, unpublished papers etc from all sources, databases etcIts important that you apply proper search techniques i.e. Boolean, search strings etc. PhD students The template can be included or complemented with endnote, This would help students to analyse data according to the number of studies according to the sub areas, year of publications, methodological approaches (research design), industry or sector, country etc. so as to understand the emerging areas, development of conceptual framework, models, new areas and significance of your research and finally your research questions. This type of analysis would definitely be a good case for your upgrade to PhD and finally viva. Most examiners are usually concern that a candidate has not systematically reviewed all relevant literature in order to argue the basis for original theory
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Topic: Main area Sub area Theory:
Methodology: Research questions Type Sample Findings:
Limitations and Future Research:
Critical review: Significance Theory Methodology Findings
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