Fall, 2002 (Roos, Soc. 501)
Assignment 4: Analytic literature review (due November 21st)
Now's the time to get thee to a library to orient your final
project sociologically. Look for a set of articles or books that address the
substantive issues you have raised in your assignments thus far. What sociological
literature(s) is(are) relevant to help you frame your statistical investigations?
I don't expect that you'll have a fully developed literature review for this
assignment, but I do expect that by your final project you'll address at least
7-10 relevant articles/books.
You have several weeks to accomplish all this, so make substantial progress towards your final project. If you do it right, you'll be able to weave your literature review into your developing paper without too much angst.
To write an analytic review, don't just review what X, Y, and Z say about your topic. There is nothing more boring. Rather use previous literature to develop your own argument. Evaluate (don't just describe) how others' work helps you to organize your own ideas. How do you build on previous research? How does previous research lead you to expectations about the relationships among your variables? Ultimately, you'll use your review to develop your framework in the introduction, structure how you talk about methods in the methods section, and frame your results in the analysis section. So this step in the process is a very important one.
Continue on in your spare time running data that will be relevant to your final project. Try other trivariate relationships. Are there any relevant 4-variable crosstabs that you should try? Watch out for small n's in columns, as an indicator of when to collapse, or when to stop adding variables.
Appendix C in Babbie can give you some hints on how to write a research report. Better yet, check out some recent journal articles (e.g., American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, Work and Occupations).
Assignments must be typed.