The literature review: 8 tips to fix the dirty red underbelly of your dissertation proposal

Somewhere in your dissertation proposal, you will be required to provide a lengthy, detailed discussion of what other researchers have written on your topic. Usually, that discussion is the Literature Review, which constitutes the entirety of Chapter 2 in your dissertation proposal.

I’m guessing you are tediously familiar with the process of writing research papers. That’s what the literature review is, essentially—a long and gruesomely detailed research paper. (If you don’t like doing research and writing, I’m sorry. Maybe now is the time to rethink your decision to enter graduate school. Oh dear, too late!)

I’ve seen my share of literature reviews. Some are good, others, not so much. Some reviews seem to be a fruit-basket-upset of everything ever published on a topic, no matter who wrote it (can you say Wikipedia?). Some dissertators seem to use no structure or outline, meandering through the extant literature like a drunkard in a field of daisies. Not only is this approach boring and confusing for the reader, but it also fails to fulfill the purpose of the literature review, which is to convince readers of the viability of your research problem.

What is a literature review?

The literature review is an in-depth synthesis of strategically chosen discussions presented by previous researchers about a topic, objectively examined from all sides with the aim of convincing your reviewers that there is a need for your study. Let’s unpack that bit by bit.

A literature review is a synthesis…

First, what is a synthesis? The word might remind you of the word synthetic, which has come to mean manufactured, artificial, or fake, like synthetic fur or motor oil. That is not how we are interpreting synthesis. You know how a tapestry weaves together threads of different textures and colors? That is a synthesis of thread. You know how when you make chocolate chip cookies, you mix some flour, some sugar, a couple eggs, some chocolate …? That is a synthesis of ingredients to create something yummy. A synthesis is simply a combining of elements—in our case, ideas.

A literature review is a strategic synthesis…

Even if it is “exhaustive,” your literature review is not just a random mishmash of everything under the sun. Instead, you should strategically choose what to include and exclude. I can hear you say, strategically? What is that all about, Dr. Carol?

Take a step back for a minute. What is your ultimate goal? To earn your Ph.D.? Okay. What do you need to do to get there? Finish your proposal and get it approved so you can start collecting data, right? What do you need to do before you do that? Convince your reviewers that you have a proposal that deserves to be approved!

Strategic means all your choices are designed to move you closer to the goal of getting approval. Any element of your literature review (or any other part of your proposal, for that matter) that doesn’t support that goal should be ruthlessly cut away. Your literature review is a strategic discussion of your topic.

Strategic also relates to the fact that you will be required to revisit the research you write about in Chapter 2 when you discuss your findings in Chapter 5. After data collection and analysis, as you write your report, you must place your findings in the context of past research: In other words, did your findings confirm or disconfirm what other researchers have found? How does your study’s findings relate to what has come before?

To answer these questions, you need to find the direct line between the research you discussed in Chapter 2 and your own study’s problem, purpose, theory, methodology, and methods. Thus, your literature review is the foundation of your study—its raison d’être, as it were—and it breathes life into your data when you get to Chapter 5. Without the context of your literature review, how will we know if your findings are meaningful?

A literature review is a strategic synthesis that shows the need for your study

The ultimate purpose of the literature review is to show the need for your study. In fact, your entire proposal is a sales pitch for your study. The literature review gives the reader the background and rationale leading up to the problem you identified. It’s your body of evidence, your proof that the problem is worth studying.

Imagine you are at a dinner party with your family and your annoying cousin asks, “Hey, what is your dissertation about?” And you say, “I think teachers need to do a better job.” Your cousin says, “Whoa, cool, and then asks you that important question: “How do you know there is a problem?”

A literature review is a strategic synthesis that shows the need for your study from other researchers’ points of view

The literature review answers the question, How do you know there’s a problem? You can’t just follow your instinct to yell at your cousin: “Trust me, I just know!” You might know a lot, but what you know is irrelevant for your literature review. Chapter 2 isn’t about what you know. It’s about what other people know. I’m referring to all those researchers whose shoulders you and I are standing on—yeah, those guys. Safety in numbers, people. Cite all those giants, big and small, because they provide the rationale for your study. If Famous Authors A and B claimed that teachers need to do a better job, then readers will be more inclined to take their claim seriously—more inclined than if you, Unknown Doctoral Candidate, made the claim.

A literature review is a strategic synthesis that shows the need for your study from other researchers’ points of view, not yours

I often see dissertators stating their opinions and offering recommendations and solutions to the so-called problem, right there in the literature review. The literature review is not the place to spout your opinions! If you already know the solution to the problem, then why bother doing your study? What’s there to learn?

The review should be about other researchers’ opinions, findings, and conclusions. You’ll get your turn in Chapter 5. For now, in Chapter 2, you are the emcee, not the performer. Your job is to combine all the voices you have gleaned from the mountains of research you’ve read and synthesize those voices into the story of your proposed study. Be a detective. Be a scribe. Stay off the soapbox.

However, keep in mind, the literature review is not an annotated bibliography, although the literature reviews in many proposals and dissertations seem to be organized that way (and I have to presume that many of these dissertators eventually obtain approvals). Some dissertators diligently discuss a study, followed by another study, followed by another, and another, and rarely bother to tie the discussions together in any meaningful way. What is the reader supposed to glean from this piecemeal listing of studies?

Sadly, many dissertators expect a lot from their readers, sometimes even including the chore of discerning the point of the entire literature review. Your average reader might put up with such a muddled approach, but most reviewers won’t, I guarantee you. If you don’t lead them through your literature review and point out the conclusions you want them to make along the way, then don’t expect them to do that work for you.

8 tips for your literature review success

1. Use a logical structure

Most successful dissertators start Chapter 2 with an introduction, explain how they searched for sources, and then present their review, organized by topic in some logical fashion. I’ve seen many variations, but this structure seems to work the best. When I say best, I mean the one that most effectively lays out the background, leads the reader through the discussion, and persuades the reader of the need for the study. The literature review should be carefully constructed to convince the reader, point by point, that there is a problem that needs studying.

2. Write from an outline

I know you probably dislike writing from an outline, but I encourage you to do it! Your entire proposal writing process will flow more smoothly if you have your roadmap (your outline) clearly before you. Boring? Hey, a dissertation is not a creative writing project! Stay in the herd until you get your degree—then you can blaze your own trail, literarily speaking. Remember, writing your literature review is an iterative process. Keep working at your outline until it makes sense. Tie your citations to your outline.

3. Define your variables and key terms

Some variables are difficult to define, but you need to present your reader with working definitions of all variables. Are you studying academic quality? Identify how others have defined it, and cite the sources. Are you using acronyms or abbreviations to stand for more complex concepts? Identify them and define them briefly in the introduction, even if they are defined in a list of key terms elsewhere in your paper.

4. Use terms consistently

Dissertators often fail to use terms consistently throughout the proposal. It’s so common, I even made an autotext snippet that I can insert into my editor’s notes, so I don’t have to keep typing the same cautions and recommendations over and over. It’s such a simple thing, but I understand why it happens. It’s easy to forget what terms you used when many weeks or months may pass between writing and submitting your chapters.

In addition, writers get bored with their own words—after you’ve read the same pages a billion times, you don’t even see the words anymore, you recall them from memory. Your eyes skip right past the things an editor would catch, like, for example, how in Chapter 1, you called your survey “Teachers Attitude Performance Questionnaire” (TAPQ), and in Chapter 3, you called it “Teachers Performance Attitude Survey” (TPAS). Readers are easily confused by changes in terms. Especially if you introduced the instrument in Chapter 2 and wrote that the originators of the survey called it the “Academic Satisfaction, Attitude, and Performance Test”! What is your poor reader to think?

5. Cite your sources

Many dissertators seem to start typing at the top of the chapter and pound away until they get to the end, inserting few if any citations along the way to support their statements. All the facts, claims, assertions, statistics, opinions … If you read it or heard it somewhere, you must cite the source. Most literature reviews have too few citations. Sometimes, though, a dissertator will pile on the citations to support a noncontroversial statement, like 10,000 children attended kindergarten last year, followed by five sources packed into one bulging set of parentheses. Really? Who is going to argue? Save your big guns (multiple citations) for the controversial statements that other researchers may feel compelled to debate. If you are confused about where and when to cite, see REASON 22 in my book.

See my previous rant on plagiarism.

6. Be objective

Your literature review should be an objectively presented view of all sides of the research problem. Strategically choosing sources means you may choose to include some sources but not others. This is okay. You want to include the sources that support the need for your study. However, you will run into trouble if you only include the research that supports your position and ignore the research that detracts from your position. Show that you understand all facets of the topic by presenting an objective and thorough literature review.

7. Look for the tension

Most likely, you will need to introduce and discuss one or more theories. Presenting an objective 360° view of the research means presenting arguments for and against each theory. Debate over theory among academics can be tense. Have you ever read articles by disgruntled academics defending their precious survey instruments? Back and forth, from one journal article to the next, they rave about obscure statistical procedures that prove their points, just barely refraining from calling each other incompetent boobs. They can really set fire to the publishing airwaves. This is good; seek out this tension and explain the controversies for your readers.

8. Update your literature review before you submit your proposal.

I had to make sure at least 85% of my sources were from peer-reviewed sources published within the previous five years. Because my entire Ph.D. program took me eight years to complete, some of my sources were getting a bit ripe toward the end of my program. I’ve seen dissertators in the education field only cite sources older than ten years—talk about ripe! Time moves on, events happen, new laws are enacted. Don’t rant about the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 without addressing recent changes to the law. I know it’s a pain to update Chapter 2 after you’ve got it precariously nailed together, but I encourage you to be a good scholar and update your sources periodically. Maybe if you are an art historian, citing only hundred-year-old sources is de rigueur, but in the social sciences, you destroy the credibility of your study if you don’t cite current facts.

The literature review: You gotta have it

You might dread the literature review as the swampy quagmire of your dissertation proposal, something to be slogged through once, in hip-high waders, and left behind. Unfortunately, you must have a literature review, in one shape or another, so you might as well do your best to help it fulfill its purpose, which is to persuade your reviewers to approve your dissertation proposal.

If you need help with other things, like managing your sources, citing your sources, or using Microsoft Word to format your paper, check out my book 28 ½ Reasons Why You Can’t Get Your Dissertation Proposal Approved. Maybe I can help.

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10 questions I wish I’d asked before I started my Ph.D. program

If I could get into a Wayback machine, I would set the controls for mid-2005, when I was pondering the idea of enrolling in graduate school. I remember the moment when I stood looking over my boss’s shoulder while he did a computer search for Ph.D. programs. He found a fully online Ph.D. program in marketing at a for-profit (fully accredited) online university. At that moment, if I could, I would have bopped myself upside the head and yelled, “What the heck do you think you are doing?” But I wasn’t there to stop myself from taking the bait. Without doing my homework, I applied and enrolled. Thus, I fell into the black hole of a fully online for-profit Ph.D. program.

In 2005, online education wasn’t exactly new, but earning a doctorate completely online was. Big traditional brick-and-mortar universities hadn’t yet tapped into the huge market of nontraditional learners slavering for degrees, I among them. The for-profits were there to meet the demand.

If I had been in my right mind, I would have asked the following questions:

1.  Is this school reputable?

Back in 2005, I didn’t know anything about the panorama of higher education. That some schools were organized to earn a profit meant nothing to me. My previous learning experiences were at state universities. Had I done my homework, I would have quickly learned about the controversial nature of for-profit higher education. Oddly enough, if I had waited a couple years, I would have had many more choices of flexible schedule higher education options, even at local state universities. I urge you to read about the types of accreditation so you know the standards that schools must meet. Become informed so you can make informed decisions about your education. Read online reviews of the schools you are considering and talk directly to alumni if you can. I did not do this.

2.  Is this program reputable?

I knew I had to choose an accredited institution, but I didn’t understand that programs can be accredited too. For example, business programs can be accredited through either AACSB or ACBSP. They sound almost the same, don’t they? It’s all alphabet soup if you aren’t informed. According to the for-profit universities, both accreditations seem great. Check into it further before you decide. You will find that there is a big difference between the two. Specifically, if you plan on teaching, find out which accreditation the institution you want to hire you prefers, before you enroll. I did not do this; I didn’t know I needed to until I filled out some applications for teaching jobs that required candidates to have attended AACSB-accredited schools. Those of us who attended ACBSP-accredited schools need not apply.

3.  Will I need to incur huge student loan debt to get this degree?

Before I enrolled, I was determined I would not borrow any money to attend any university. I proudly paid cash as I went, one course at a time, but I had no clue how long it would take or ultimately cost, because tuition went up annually, sometimes by a lot. Thanks to relatively recent federal legislation, colleges and universities are required to post consumer information on their websites about the costs and outcomes of their programs. Unfortunately, if the programs are small, the schools get a pass. Read reviews on the schools you are considering. It will open your eyes to the real costs and outcomes. However, take it all with a grain of salt: most reviews are written by unhappy customers. The for-profits hire persistent recruiters (salespeople) who will promise you a lot to entice/persuade/motivate/coerce you to apply. If you feel like you are being pressured to enroll, you are. Don’t sign until you are sure you have made the best choice for you.

4.  Will getting this degree make me more valuable to my employer?

I thought having a Ph.D. in Marketing would make me more valuable to my career college employer. Not long after I enrolled, the administrators at the career college cut the Marketing program. If your employer has promised you a promotion and tuition reimbursement, get it in writing. Consider the stability and growth of the organization for which you work. Look around and see how many other Ph.D.s have trod the path you intend to tread. If you are blazing a new trail, keep your eyes open. You might end up realizing that the only one who benefits from getting a Ph.D. is you—and possibly not financially… more along the lines of self-actualization.

5.  Will this program challenge me?

Some of my online courses challenged me. However, assignments at my alma mater differed greatly in length, depth, and rigor. Some courses seemed full of make-work assignments. Some textbooks were excellent, others were mediocre. Most books were abysmally out of date (for example, e-commerce and pretty much anything to do with marketing and market research). The courses that challenged me were the dissertation courses, where I learned if I had the skills and persistence to become a scholar.

6.  Will I get enough interaction and support from mentors and classmates?

At my online for-profit university, the level and quality of interaction with mentors varied greatly. A few mentors seemed fully present (virtually speaking), caring, and accessible. Most gave a bare minimum of feedback and encouragement—in their defense, I’m sure they mentored dozens of dissertators; I was just another faceless name in their email inbox. Only one was MIA, but her absence had serious repercussions on my timeline and pocketbook. As I progressed into my dissertation courses and textbooks were left behind, I felt keenly the lack of feedback and support, especially from fellow dissertators. Despite being an introvert, I missed talking things through with others.

7.  Will I get value from earning this degree?

Define value any way you want. Will getting this Ph.D. make you rich? Happy? Smart? A better writer? Employable? Whatever it is, be clear on the benefits you expect from earning this degree. You might not get exactly what you imagined. Just saying.

8.  How will members of my work community perceive the value of my degree?

Before you enroll at a for-profit higher education institution, ask around your workplace to get opinions of the school. Talk to people who hire people like you. Find out what they have to say about the reputation of the school and the caliber of its graduates. You may find out there are many alumni from for-profit institutions gradually infiltrating the workforce and paving the way for those of us who come after. Then again, you might find out that the for-profit university you were considering isn’t even on the lowest rung of the higher education ladder.

9.  Do I need this degree to progress in my field?

If you need the terminal degree to teach or gain some exalted position in your organization, I guess your choice is clear. But if you are toying with the idea of attending a Ph.D. program because you think it might be cool or fun or because it would finally get your folks off your back, I urge you to rethink your goals. The Internet is rife with stories of disgruntled and disillusioned post docs who advise people like you in eloquent and bitter words to stop, stop, go do something else. Academe is not paradise. I wish I had read their stories before I embarked on my journey. I didn’t need a Ph.D. to teach at a rinky-dink career college. That means the whole eight-year, $50,000 debacle was unnecessary.

10. Do I need this degree to be happy?

I kept going because I’m not a quitter. When I start something, these days, I usually finish it, or have a darn good reason to abandon it. Eight years is a long time; I had many opportunities to reflect on my definitions of happiness and success. I don’t regret earning my doctoral degree, but if I could go back in time to mid-2005, I would have a heart-to-heart with myself. I would ask one more question: If money and time were no object, what would you like to do with the rest of your life? If earning a Ph.D. is part of the answer, then flail on, Dissertator. If not, well, it’s never too soon to start doing what you love.

Disclaimer

It probably wouldn’t surprise you to learn my dissertation topic was academic quality in for-profit vocational programs. I have some reservations about the commitment to education espoused by for-profit institutions whose first objective is to earn a return on the investment of shareholders—in other words, to make a profit. The profit motive and a commitment to providing quality education may be able to coexist in one organization—most likely in the classroom.

However, the ten faculty members I interviewed said quality often took a backseat as administrators and owners focused on wringing every last drop of profit from students, teachers, staff, books, computers, facilities, and systems. When generating profit is the goal and the product strategy to achieve that goal consists of providing education, you can’t excel at doing both. One has to give, and I fear students and faculty bear the cost.

If you are working on your dissertation proposal, I suppose it’s too late to back out now. You might as well keep going. The finish line is closer than the starting line. If you find yourself getting mired in methodology, unable to get your proposal approved, take a look at my book 28 ½ Reasons Why You Can’t Get Your Dissertation Proposal Approved. Maybe I can help.

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All about plagiarism for dissertators whose backs are against the wall

Do you know what plagiarism is? Are you thinking to yourself, plagiar-what? Is that some sort of disease? (Uh-oh, said the editor.) If you aren’t familiar with the term plagiarism, read this post—it may save your career.

What is plagiarism?

Plagiarism is the unattributed use of someone else’s words, thoughts, ideas, and concepts (Plagiarism.org, 2014). You can call it borrowing, but essentially, plagiarism is stealing. Specifically, to plagiarize means

  • to steal and pass off (the ideas or words of another) as one’s own
  • to use (another’s production) without crediting the source
  • to commit literary theft
  • to present as new and original an idea or product derived from an existing source. (Merriam Webster online, n.d.)

In other words, plagiarism is an act of fraud. It involves both stealing someone else’s work and lying about it afterward. Whatever you borrowed, if you don’t say clearly who you borrowed it from and provide a usable link or reference back to the original source, you run the risk of being accused of plagiarism, which can get you expelled from your doctoral program. Yep. Expelled. Kind of a big deal.

Examples of plagiarism

  • Turning in someone else’s work as your own
  • Copying words or ideas from someone else without giving credit
  • Failing to put a quotation in quotation marks or “cherrypicking” parts of a quotation, taking the words out of context
  • Giving incorrect information about the source of a quotation
  • Changing words but copying the sentence structure of a source without giving credit
  • Copying so many words or ideas from a source that it makes up the majority of your work, whether you give credit or not

How plagiarism happens

Plagiarism happens. Usually it is unintentional. Think about this scenario and tell me it hasn’t happened to you: In rabid researcher mode, you comb through multiple databases, download hundreds of articles, follow umpteen threads on Google Scholar, dig into Ebrary and Google Books … you suck up information like a kid with a milkshake, gloating with glee when you find some particularly juicy or seminal article that some kind soul uploaded to the Web so you didn’t have to fork out a fortune to buy the book. Yum.

You copy, paste, and paraphrase text and ideas into your paper, immersed in your quest, relishing your progress. After a few hours of happy hunting, it suddenly dawns on you that you haven’t been citing your sources. In fact, you haven’t even kept track of where you found some of those obscure articles. Were they in a database? Did you get there through EBSCOHost or ProQuest? Or was it an article on a publisher’s website? Argh! Curses!

Now you are at a crossroads. You have two choices. One is long, tedious, boring, and frustrating; the other is short and relatively painless, but could lead to some serious consequences later, if anyone found out what you did. I am sure you know I’m talking about plagiarism.

Why dissertators feel tempted to cheat

The right thing to do

The right thing to do is to go back through your process, find all those sources you accessed, and record the citation information carefully, completely, and accurately, making sure to include robust URLs and dois (digital object identifers) and avoiding university proxies that no one but you or your fellow classmates can access. And then, next time you go searching for sources, you vow to keep track as you go along, like the responsible scholar you are. Right? Then you cite your sources in your paper like a citation maniac! (I tend to follow the maxim of when in doubt, cite. I figure it is better to CYA (cover your ass) than get in trouble for plagiarism later.)

The wrong thing to do

The wrong thing to do is failing to include citations in your paper, or perhaps worse, making up citations that might or might not relate to the words you paraphrased, hoping that no one will check.

As an editor, I don’t consider it my job to make sure your citations are accurate in terms of content. I check format, but as far as content goes, I have to trust your scholarly integrity. However, when I edit paragraph after paragraph of content with nary a citation, or maybe with one citation at the end of the paragraph, my plagiarism antenna pokes out of my head, and I start sniffing around for more signs of trouble. I go through the references and check that (a) they exist, (b) they are accurate, and (c) they are reasonably accessible to a typical reader.

Most of you know that when you include direct quotations, you must include the page number of the content. This is so readers can find the quote and read more about the subject. Reviewers can check to see if you took someone’s words out of context. It happens occasionally that dissertators either misinterpret or outright butcher someone else’s thoughts in their efforts to paraphrase. I don’t check your sources to make sure you paraphrased them accurately. However, if I spot a quotation that is not cited, I will try to find the page number. If I happen to notice that your interpretation of the authors’ words was taken out of context and spun to suit your argument, I will leave you a polite comment in the margin of your paper, warning you about the dangers of plagiarism.

Excuses for plagiarism

Sometimes plagiarism is intentional, but I believe dissertators rarely do it with malicious intent. When you are tired and the deadline is near, the effort to find citation information can be overwhelmed by the desire to get the paper done and submitted. Good enough is good enough for now; perfection can come later. Am I right? Ah, the slippery slope.

If you build good writing and research habits early in your academic career, it will be easier for you when the deadlines are clamoring and the pressure to cut corners is intense.

I don’t usually interact with the dissertators whose papers I edit. However, I was a teacher at a career college for 10 years. I’ve heard many excuses for why students feel compelled to plagiarize. Here are a few:

I tried (unskillfully) to put it into my own words.

Hey, no shame. We aren’t born with writing skills. We have to acquire them through practice. Learning how to write well is not like shopping for a toaster at Wal-Mart (darn). Academic writing is challenging even for good writers. Read lots of articles and dissertations to learn how other writers paraphrase and cite.

I forgot to copy the source.

It takes some practice to develop a system for managing your source information so you can create your citations. Read some tips in REASON 22 in my book. Make this system your habit. It is a lot easier to manage your sources as you go along, rather than wait until the end to figure out which source applies to which bit of text in your paper.

I didn’t know it was wrong.

It seems like everything on the Internet is free. We download movies and music. We copy pictures and text. We forward stories and webpages to our friends, we post them on Facebook. What we may not know is that many things on the Internet are considered “intellectual property.” That means it belongs to someone else, not to us. We are stealing!

Consequences of plagiarism

Plagiarism has consequences. If you’ve done it before, you might feel like you dodged a bullet. You might say, never again! Or you might say, I got away with it once, I probably can again. Ask yourself:

  • Will I likely get caught?
  • What are the potential consequences if I get caught?
  • Who do I harm?
  • Can I live with myself?

Only you can decide. However, plagiarizing your dissertation can come back to haunt you years after you did the crime. Here are two examples to nudge you in the right direction:

  • In Germany, defense minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg was forced to resign when it was discovered he had plagiarized large parts of his thesis; his university stripped him of his doctorate (Pidd, 2011).
  • In 2013, German education minister Annette Schavan lost her doctorate when it was discovered she had failed to properly cite other researchers’ work in her dissertation (Brumfield, 2013).

I’m pretty sure plagiarism isn’t unique to German scholars. Imagine working so hard for so many years to earn your doctorate, only to have it stripped from you. All that time and money down the drain. Think about that before you decide to cut corners on citing your sources.

If you want to earn the title of scholar, you need to do your best to follow the academic rules of the road. Writing a dissertation may be one of the hardest things you will ever do. The value of your work is diminished in direct proportion to the level of disregard you have for properly citing your sources. That was a convoluted sentence, wasn’t it? Let me put it this way: Cheaters may gain in the short run, but the honorable dissertator wins out in the end.

Check out plagiarism.org [http://www.plagiarism.org/] for lots of information about plagiarism, presented by WriteCheck, a service designed to help scholarly writers avoid plagiarism.

Sources

Brumfield, B. (2013, February 6). German education minister loses Ph.D. over plagiarized thesis. CNN. Retrieved from http://www.cnn.com/2013/02/06/world/europe/german-minister-plagiarism/

Merriam Webster. (n.d.). Plagiarism. Retrieved from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plagiarize

Pidd, H. (2011). German defence minister resigns in PhD plagiarism row: Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg had been stripped of doctorate by University of Bayreuth. The Guardian. Retrieved from http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/mar/01/german-defence-minister-resigns-plagiarism

Plagiarism.org. (2014). What is plagiarism? Retrieved from http://www.plagiarism.org/plagiarism-101/what-is-plagiarism

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If you need some help figuring out why you can’t get your dissertation proposal approved, check out my book.

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