Introduction:
A strong literature review isn’t just academic formality—it builds the foundation for your thesis and helps define your research gap.
Tips:
Start with trusted sources: PubMed, Scopus, Google Scholar
Select 30–40 recent and relevant papers
Organize reviews by themes, not chronologically
Critically analyze – don’t just summarize
Use reference managers (Zotero, EndNote, Mendeley)
Keep your plagiarism score < 20% using tools like Turnitin
Conclusion:
If building a quality literature review is overwhelming, Igeeks offers dedicated support for sourcing, analyzing, and formatting it correctly.





