Scaffolded Literature Review (Global Supply Chains during COVID-19 Disruption)
Purpose
Students produce a scaffolded literature review on how global supply chains operated and changed during a major disruption (COVID-19). The task builds search skills, critical appraisal, synthesis, and academic writing.
What students submit
- Synthesis Matrix (≈3,000 words)
- ~30 academic sources (peer-reviewed journals and scholarly books/chapters).
- For each source (~100 words), students record:
- Full citation
- How it was found (which university-provided database/search tool)
- Theme(s) it informs (e.g., resilience, risk management, inventory strategy, logistics bottlenecks, reshoring)
- 1–2 sentences on how the source supports their argument
- Matrix is tabular; an example is on Blackboard.
- Critical Literature Review (≈1,000 words)
- Integrates and critically evaluates the same 30 sources.
- Shows converging/diverging perspectives, identifies gaps, and advances a clear argument about COVID-19’s impacts on global supply chains.
- Harvard referencing in text and in a complete Reference List.
- Consistency rule: The same 30 sources must appear in the matrix, the review, and the reference list.
Research expectations
- Use the University catalogue, reading list, and licensed databases (not general Google/Google Scholar alone).
- Reading list = starting point; students should expand via university search tools.
- Emphasize peer-reviewed, global-supply-chain/operations sources (SCM, OM, logistics, international business, trade).
Support & formative assessment
- A dedicated assignment support class (date/time in Module Info Pack).
- International Support Sessions plus online support during the semester.
- Formative option: submit one short extract of the literature review (not full drafts).
- Tutors can meet students for a verbal outline discussion of the planned summative submission.
- Submission logistics (how/where/when) are on the module site/Assessment Pack.
What a “critical literature review” means (for students)
- A focused, argument-led overview of significant literature (cf. Saunders et al., 2018).
- Demonstrates breadth (major strands of the debate) and depth (evaluation, not description).
- Explains how sources were gathered, why selected, and what gaps remain (e.g., developing-country suppliers, SME resilience, multi-tier transparency).
Suggested sub-themes students can organize around
- Disruption & risk: exposure, propagation (bullwhip), single-sourcing vs multi-sourcing, tier-2/3 visibility
- Resilience strategies: redundancy vs flexibility; nearshoring/reshoring; dual sourcing; safety stock vs agility
- Network design & governance: global vs regional hubs, supplier diversification, contracts, collaboration
- Operations adjustments: inventory policies (“just-in-time” → “just-in-case”), capacity reallocation, demand sensing/forecasting
- Logistics & infrastructure: port congestion, air/sea modal shifts, cold-chain for vaccines, last-mile constraints
- Digitization & data: supply-chain visibility tools, traceability, platform coordination
- Policy & institutions: export controls, trade frictions, essential-goods prioritization, standards/compliance
- Social & sustainability: labor conditions, supplier viability, ESG trade-offs during crisis
Assessment criteria (marking focus)
- Search & Selection – Quality/relevance of academic sources; appropriate use of university databases.
- Synthesis Matrix – Clarity, justification of choices, accurate mapping of sources to themes.
- Critical Review Writing – Coherent argument using all matrix sources; balanced critique and synthesis; identification of gaps.
- Referencing – Accurate, comprehensive Harvard throughout.
Learning outcomes addressed
- Critically evaluate current issues in business and management (COVID-19 disruption of global supply chains).
- Critically assess academic literature in business/management research.
Suggested teaching scaffold
- Frame the question (Week 1)
- Define scope (global supply chains; COVID-19 period); co-create thematic map from the list above.
- Finding evidence (Week 2)
- Live demo of university databases; build search strings (e.g., “supply chain resilience AND COVID-19”; “nearshoring pandemic”; “bullwhip effect pandemic”); set inclusion/exclusion criteria.
- Build the matrix (Week 3)
- Agree matrix columns (Citation | How Found | Theme(s) | 100-word contribution); show Blackboard example.
- From matrix to argument (Week 4)
- Teach synthesis: compare/contrast findings, methodological quality, contexts (industries/regions), and limitations.
- Formative check-in (Weeks 5–6)
- Collect short extract; give brief feed-forward; optional verbal-outline meetings.
- Writing clinic (Week 7)
- Critical paragraphing (claim–evidence–explain–counterpoint); use of sub-headings; signposting.
- Referencing workshop (Week 8)
- Harvard style; common errors; ensure cross-document consistency.
- Final polish (Week 9)
- Verify source consistency across matrix/review/references; proof and submit.
Quick tutor checklist
- Students are using licensed university resources (not relying on Google/GS).
- 30 peer-reviewed/academic sources with clear COVID-19/global-supply-chain relevance.
- Each matrix entry states how the source was located and why it matters.
- Review is argument-driven, not a list; shows tensions (e.g., resilience vs cost) and gaps.
- Harvard referencing consistent in text and reference list.
- The same 30 sources appear in matrix, review, and references.
Typical pitfalls to flag early
- Descriptive summaries with no critique/synthesis.
- Missing search provenance (how sources were found).
- Overuse of non-academic or news pieces instead of scholarly work.
- Inconsistency between matrix, review, and references.
- Too narrow (single industry/region) or too broad (no clear focus) without justification.