The Chapter 2 summary is very important; it should be much
more than a quick overview. Think of this section as where the reader can go to
understand the key points in the literature in just a few pages. It should
provide the reader with a good understanding of the literature. First,
summarize the major themes that you found in the literature, the themes will
probably be related to your variables. How to do this? Think through: what are
the main issues that you found in the chapter? As a writer, I would approach it
by reading through the chapter and highlighting the major themes that I find in
each subsection. Copy those into the summary and rewrite them so they make a
coherent summary.
Second, summarize what is known and not known about your
topic. What gaps are missing? Read through the paper again and highlight (in a
different color – I love color coding!) everywhere that you found gaps in the
literature. Again, copy those and rewrite them into a summary.
Then carefully explain how your study will fill at least one
of those gaps. Talk about how your study will extend the knowledge of the topic.
If you have along the way, drawn out a concept map (see
10/23 post); it will make the summary easier for you to write. It will be
clearer where the gaps are and how your study will be addressing them.
Next time we will look at Chapter 3: Setting. Do you have an
issue or a question that you would like me to discuss in a future post? Would you like to be a guest writer? Send me
your ideas! leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
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