Critique
Sheet for Research Papers
(based on Prof. Harold F. Schiffman)
Your Name
Last
Name
Email
Title
Click boxes to include
corresponding message in the email. If you don't need any of the titles
(green colored items), leave all the boxes in the group blank including the
title box.
1. Statement
of Purpose: the Hypothesis you want to test.
This paper has one, stated clearly and succinctly, near the beginning.
It has one, but it's sort of vague, or hesitant.
I can sort of guess what it is, but I shouldn't have to.
Hypothesis currently unclear.
Other comments:
2. Review of Literature.
Your paper has one, located somewhere near the beginning of the paper.
Your paper currently lacks one.
Your paper has a vague or poorly-defined review, or it is located in an
inconvenient place, or is spread out all over the place.
You review some of the literature, but don't link it to what your project is
about.
Other
comments:
3. Transitions.
This paper makes smooth transitions.
There are a few places where transitions should be smoother, (marked in the
paper). You might want to use "connecting words" such as moreover,
however, nevertheless, thus, hence, etc.
Transitions in this paper are jerky; they give the impression that
paragraphs have been moved around or inserted without regard for how they
fit with what precedes them and what follows them.
Transitions would be helped by demarcating certain sections with
subheadings, e.g. Statement of Purpose, Review of Literature, etc.
(See below, format).
Other comments:
4. Citations.
You use a format that cites a minimum of information, e.g. Authorname, date
(year), and page numbers, but fills the bill.
Currently, there are very few citations or indications of sources.
Your citations are overly complete in the text giving us information
that is best left for the bibliography.
Citations are
inadequate: they list authors, but no year; or no page numbers.
Your paper tends to rely rather heavily on one author/one source only. This
makes it in effect a review of that owrk, and should be explicitly stated to
be such.
Your paper seems to ignore sources that are in fact crucial to your topic.
(See below for suggestions).
Your paper seems to use only sources found on the Internet or using
"on-line" library catalogues, ignoring print resources published before
1968.
The way your paper deals with things that are common knowledge could be
improved.
1. The fact that something is common knowledge does not need to be cited,
but it does need to be made clear that you think it is common
knowledge and therefore does not need to be proven. (See full checklist for
a way you can state this.)
2. Or, your paper tends to accept/portray as common knowledge things that
are not necessarily so accepted.
Your paper mentions sources in the text that are not spelled out in the
bibliography.
Your paper accepts [one or more] source(s) uncritically.
You have chosen a not very credible source ('straw man') against which you
are forcefully arguing.
Your paper ignores the work(s) of
Other
comments:
5. Style and Format.
Occasionally I have marked areas where what we call style is
problematical.
Spelling problems are marked in margins etc. with 'sp'
Stylistic problems are given alternative suggestions. (Sometimes marked in
margin 'awk' for awkward.)
If some
words or phrases are repeated or overused, the mark repet for
`repetitious' may appear in the margin.
If the symbol (#) appears, it means 'start a new paragraph'.
Occasionally, it might help things if you used subheadings to clearly
demarcate sections of the paper: Statement of Purpose, Review of the
Literature, Methodology, Conclusions, or other headings might make
things clearer.
Other comments:
6. Content and Argument Structure.
Reminder: the content portion of the paper is the main part. If your
form is okay, then your content section will be able to concentrate on
convincing the reader of your position. If other things are not clear, it
will be hard to see what it is you are trying to do.
Your paper shows evidence of your having thought about such issues as
gender, class, race, sexuality, glamor and other issues, or metaphors for
these issues, that we have focussed on in class.
Your paper vaguely touches on these issues, but doesn't give them much
weight, wandering off into other topics but missing the main point.
Your paper shows very little evidence of your having benefited from anything
we discussed in class, or read for class.
You make unwarrented conclusions or give inadequate evidence for your
conclusions at one or more points in the text; (see marginal comments).
Other comments:
7. Summary and Conclusion.
Your conclusion is clear and obvious, and related to your Statement of
Purpose, i.e. it tells us that you have done what you set out to do.
Your conclusion is there, but needs to be more explicitly or forcefully
stated.
At the moment, I can't detect an obvious conclusion in your paper.
Your conclusion claims more than has in fact been demonstrated. (One way to
fix this is to change what you claim to be your statement of purpose at the
beginning, rather than change the ending.)
Your conclusion is vague, hesitant, flounders around and misses a number of
obvious points, or is weak and obviously hastily constructed.