An evaluation of consultants' works and academics' works with reference to literature review in Housing Studies dissertation projects (information from perplexity.ai)
My question: "In the context of doing literature review (notably on writing the literature review chapter in the dissertation reports) in Housing Studies dissertation projects, please compare and evaluate the quality of published works of (1) white papers working papers and books of practitioners and consultants and (2) academic publications, primarily in academic journals and books)."
The reply: "Academic publications in journals and books generally offer higher quality for Housing Studies dissertation literature reviews due to rigorous peer review, while practitioner white papers and working papers provide practical insights but often lack equivalent scrutiny. This comparison highlights trade-offs in rigor, relevance, and applicability for dissertation work.
Academic Publications
Practitioner Works
Key Comparison
|
Aspect |
Academic
Publications |
Practitioner
Works |
|
Peer
Review |
Rigorous,
multi-stage |
Minimal or
internal |
|
Methodological
Rigor |
High,
with replicable standards |
Variable,
often descriptive |
|
Theoretical
Depth |
Strong,
advances field discourse |
Practical,
less emphasis on theory |
|
Relevance
to Dissertations |
Core for
critical synthesis |
Supplementary
for policy insights |
|
Citation
Impact |
High
(e.g., impact score 5.09) |
Lower,
niche influence |
Evaluation for Literature Reviews
Prioritize 50-70% academic sources (e.g., 15+ of 30 references) for adequacy in undergraduate Housing Studies dissertations, ensuring relevance, critical analysis, and thematic organization. Practitioner materials enhance diversity and recency but require validation against peer-reviewed works to address gaps like bias. This balance demonstrates scholarly engagement while informing policy-relevant research."
A collection of blog notes on using chatgpt for research purpose.
No comments:
Post a Comment