A Literature review, in this case, will be your analysis of the sources you have

A Literature review, in this case, will be your analysis of the sources you have identified using the systematic review approach. It is important that you 
USE SECTION HEADERS (second and third levels)
USE MULTIPLE SOURCES IN EACH PARAGRAPH 
USE PROPER APA CITATION STYLE GUIDE  (and include reference list at the end, match all in-text citations 
WRITE USING PROPER ENGLISH AND PROOFREAD YOUR TEXT 
ANALYZE, DO NOT JUST SUMMARIZE 
THIS IS NOT AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY 
Your Conceptual framework chapter should : 
PRESENT A THEORETICAL MODEL 
APPLY THE MODEL 
USE SECTION HEADERS 
USE SOURCES 
BE EDITED AND PROOFREAD 
GO IN DEPTH AND ALLOW YOU TO BRING CONCEPTUAL CLARITY INTO THE COMPLEXITY OF THIS PHENOMENON (BRIDGE THEORY WITH PRACTICE, OFFER THEORETICAL/CONCEPTUAL INSIGHT, SHOW THEORETICAL INTEGRATION) 
SOURCES USED:
Febriana, A., & Mujib, M. (2024). Increasing Productivity of Gen Z Employees: The Role of Flexible Work Arrangements and Participative Style. SA Journal of Human Resource Management, 22https://doi.org/10.4102/sajhrm.v22i0.2489
Lakshmypriya, K., & Ramakrishna, G. (2020///Jan-Jun). Leading the Gen Z Workforce – Analogy on Communicative and Transformational Leadership Principles from the Bhagavad Gita. IPE Journal of Management, 10(1), 88-100. https://libproxy.csun.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/leading-gen-z-workforce-analogy-on-communicative/docview/2453147040/se-2
Chillakuri, B. (2020). Understanding generation Z expectations for effective onboarding. 
[Generation Z onboarding expectations] Journal of Organizational Change Management, 
33(7), 1277-1296. doi:https://doi.org/10.1108/JOCM-02-2020-0058
Dokadia, A., Rai, S., & Chawla, D. (2015). Multigenerational Differences in Work Attributes & 
Motivation: An Empirical Study. Indian Journal of Industrial Relations, 51(1), 81–96. 
http://www.jstor.org/stable/43974540
Supriatna, M.D., Sofiani, N.F., & Anindita, N. (2021). More flexible working, more productive 
workers? (Case in pandemic situation). In Proceedings of the 2nd international 
conference on administration science, ICAS 2020 (pp. 156–159). 
Harr, C. R., Brice, T. S., Riley, K., & Moore, B. (2014). The Impact of Compassion Fatigue and 
Compassion Satisfaction on Social Work Students. Journal of the Society for Social Work 
and Research, 5(2), 233–251. https://doi.org/10.1086/676518
Barck-Holst, P., Nilsonne, Å., Åkerstedt, T., & Hellgren, C. (2019). Coping with stressful 
situations in social work before and after reduced working hours, a mixed-methods study. 
European Journal of Social Work, 24(1), 94–108. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691457.2019.1656171
Kinger, N., & Kumar, S. (2023). Generational differences in work values in the workplace. Folia Oeconomica Stetinensia, 23(2), 204-221. doi:https://doi.org/10.2478/foli-2023-0027
Gong, B., Ramkissoon, A., Greenwood, R. A., & Hoyte, D. S. (2018). The Generation for 
Change: Millennials, Their Career Orientation, and Role Innovation. Journal of 
Managerial Issues, 30(1), 82–96. http://www.jstor.org/stable/45176570
Bowman, M. E. (2019). Attachment Theory, Supervision, and Turnover in Child Welfare. Child 
Welfare, 97(1), 1–20. https://www.jstor.org/stable/48623574
Griffiths, A., Royse, D., Flaherty, C., & Collins-Camargo, C. (2020). Perceptions of Workload 
and Job Impact as Predictors of Child Welfare Worker Health Status. Child Welfare, 
98(3), 97–120. https://www.jstor.org/stable/48623666
Paul, M., Harrison, C., Litt, J., & Graef, M. (2020). Worker Turnover is a Persistent Child 
Welfare Challenge – So is Measuring It. Journal of Public Child Welfare, 14(3), 369-384.
Walters, J. E., Jones, A E., & Brown, A.R (2020). Work experiences of rural social workers in the 
United States. Journal of Social Service Research, 46(6), 770-788.
Griffiths, A., Desrosiers, P., Gabbard, J., Royse, D., & Piescher, K. (2019). Retention of child 
welfare caseworkers: The wisdom of supervisors. Child Welfare, 97(3), 61-83. Retrieved 
from https://libproxy.csun.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/
retention-child-welfare-caseworkers-wisdom/docview/2308133403/se-2
Turley, R., Roberts, S., Foster, C., Warner, N., El-Banna, A., Evans, R., Nurmatov, U., Walpita, 
Y., & Scourfield, J. (2022). Staff Wellbeing and Retention in Children’s Social Work: 
Systematic Review of Interventions. Research on Social Work Practice, 32(3), 281–309. 
https://doi.org/10.1177/10497315211052639