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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
156 views9 pages

Eapp Encode

Eapp essay

Uploaded by

WET WATER
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Parts of your reaction paper

Part 1: The introduction and summary

The first part of your paper will include a quick, objective summary of the work you’re reacting to. It
should include the author’s name and the title of the piece as well as the publication date. The
summarization itself should be a highlight reel of the main points and a condensed explanation of the
key supporting elements.

You should feel free to use direct quotes for ideas that you deem are especially important to your
reaction. At this point, it’s unnecessary to go into detail on any one point or introduce any subjective
opinions. That will come later.

Part 2: Your thoughts, feelings and opinions

The second part of the paper is where you express your opinions on the key points of the work,
supported by reliable sources. For each point in your reaction, circle back to reference the
corresponding part in the original piece. This is your analysis, the most important section of this paper.
Your reactions can answer a question relating the work to real-life situations in society, they can
respond to the emotions evoked in you when you read/watched it or they can articulate how the
original work shifted or solidified your perspective on the subject.

Part 3: Your conclusion

Your evaluation should discuss the accuracy, organization, importance and completeness of the work.
This is where you’ll take a stance on whether you recommend this work to others and the reasons for
your answer. Your conclusions should be presented concisely and reiterate your thesis and the main
points that took shape as you wrote. Finally, your cited sources should be listed according to the writing
style you’re using (MLA, APA)

REACTION PAPER or response paper

Is a form of paper writing in which the writer expresses his ideas and opinions about what has been read
or seen. Writing a reaction paper is mainly based on how you feel or think about something.
One may be asked to write a reaction paper on movies, articles, magazines, novels, journals, and
educational websites. BUT MOSTLY CONSISTS OF ANYTHING WRITTEN

Format- mostly free writing or does not follow a rigid structure (can use “I” or “They say” format).

The purpose of reaction paper is to encourage students to think critically about texts and how those
texts are in conversation with each other.

STEPS IN WRITING A REACTION PAPER

1. Read and analyze the work thoroughly.

2. Craft your thesis statement.

3. Create the paper’s outline.

4. Compose the first draft.

5. Polish and repeat

REVIEW PAPER

Provide new insights or interpretation of a subject through thorough and systematic evaluation of
available evidence. Note, that a review paper is more than a literature overview. It must contain an in-
depth critical review of the literature.

The purpose of a review paper is to succinctly review recent progress in a particular topic.

Parts of Review Paper

1. INTRODUCTION – THE act of being introduced


2. BODY- how those result shape our current understanding of the topic.

3. CONCLUSION- the end or finish of an event or process.

4. LITERATURE CITED- contains the complete reference for each of the in text citations used in your
paper.

How To Write A Review Paper:

Step 1: Write the Title.

First of all, you need to write a title that reflects the main focus of your work. Respectively, the title can
be either interrogative, descriptive, or declarative.

Declarative – states main findings or conclusions of the article

Descriptive – describes the subject of the article, but leaves out the findings/conclusion

Interrogative – the subject of the article takes the form of a question

Step 2: Cite the Article.

Next, create a proper citation for the reviewed article and input it following the title.

Step 3: Article Identification.

After your citation, you need to include the identification of your reviewed article:

Title of the article

Author

Title of the journal

Year of publication

All of this information should be included in the first paragraph of your paper.

Step 4: Introduction.
Your organization in an assignment like this is of the utmost importance. Before embarking on your
writing process, you should outline your assignment or use an article review template to organize your
thoughts coherently.

If you are wondering how to start an article review, begin with an introduction that mentions the article
and your thesis for the review.

Follow up with a summary of the main points of the article.

Highlight the positive aspects and facts presented in the publication.

Critique the publication through identifying gaps, contradictions, disparities in the text, and unanswered
questions.

Step 5: Summarize the Article.

Make a summary of the article by revisiting what the author has written about. Note any relevant facts
and findings from the article. Include the author’s conclusions in this section.

Step 6: Critique It.

Present the strengths and weaknesses you have found in the publication.

Step 7: Craft a Conclusion.

In this section, revisit the critical points of your piece, your findings in the article, and your critique. Also,
write about the accuracy, validity, and relevance of the results of the article review. Present a way
forward for future research in the field of study. The Post-Writing Process: Proofread Your Work

Finally, when all of the parts of your article review are set and ready, you have one last thing to take
care of — proofreading. Although students often neglect this step, proofreading is a vital part of the
writing process and will help you polish your paper to ensure that there are no mistakes or
inconsistencies.

Proofreading is the final stage of the writing process when the paper is evaluated for mechanical
correctness, such as grammar, punctuation, spelling, omitted words, repeated words, spacing and
format, and typographical errors.

To proofread your paper properly, start with reading it fully and by checking the following points:

Grammar

Punctuation
Mechanics

Other mistakes

Next, identify whether or not there is any unnecessary data in the paper and remove it. Lastly, check the
points you discussed in your work; make sure you discuss at least 3-4 key points. In case you need to
proofread, rewrite an essay or buy an essay, we are always here for you.

Critique – systematic way of objectively reviewing a masterpiece to highlight both strength and
weakness and its applicability to practice.

- A detailed analysis and assessment of something, especially a literary, philosophical, or political


theory.

Criticize – to point out faults.

- Indicate the fault of somethung or someone in a disaproving way.

INTRODUCTION

Critic paper summarize and judge a book, journal article, and artwork among other sources. Learners
must follow an academic writing step and use formal writing style. To write a good critique paper, ut
pays to adhere a smooth flow of thought in your evaluation of the piece.

VARIETY OF WORKS

• Research paper – published journal articles, scientific report, and general reviews

• Media – news reports and periodicals

• Creative works – paintings, poems, songs, novels

RULES TO DEVELOP

(a) Covering knowledege of the subject or object under review

(b) Deeper understanding of related works

© Appreciation of work’s purposes under analysis

(d) Recognize the intended audience and advancement of a central argument in critique essays

€ Considering how a piece relates to a broader issue or context


NOTE (TO REMEMBER)

If you are asked for a personal response, remember that your assessment should not be the expression
of an unsupported personal opinion.

⭐ One must avoid biased judgement during assessment

⭐ A critique may express a positive as well as a negative assessment

⭐ Don’t confuse “critique” with “criticize”

⭐ Read the article more than once. You must have thorough knowledge of the article

⭐ Consider the credentials of the author

⭐ Consider the credentials of the source used in the article

STEPS IN CRITIQUING AN ARTICLE :

(1) Read thoroughly the article

Before starting the writing process, students must understand the work under discussion for writing
critique papers. Reading it more than once helps to ensure you haven’t missed any important detail.

The following steps lead to better results:

• studying the work under consideration;

• making notes on relevant sections of the critique papers;

• appreciating the main argument and the purpose of the • object or work;

• considering how the work relates to a broader issue or context.

(2) Identify the author’s main point or thesis statement

Determine whether or not the supporting points provided hold up the article’s main points adequately
and compile your evaluation and review of the article.

Evaluation contains the answers to the following questions:

• What are the author’s credentials or areas of expertise?

• Do you agree with the author?


• Did the author use appropriate methods to gather

The evidence?

• Was the evidence used by the author accurate?

• Are the article and the evidence still valid or are they outdated, leading to an invalid conclusion?

• Was the author successful in making his/her point?

(3) Analyze each segment or section of the article and write a brief summary of each in your own
words

Summarize the article’s supporting points, the author’s purpose and main points or evidence cited that
are used for back up. Summarize the main points objectively. In particular, the process includes stating
how authors portray original messages using characters, ciphers, media, or styles, covering how to write
a critique paper. In practice, summaries should be shorter than evaluation parts of critique essays.

(4) Write the introduction, body, and conclusion

A. Introduction

One must write a short introduction. In this case, the opening paragraph should be approximately 10%
of the overall word length of a critique paper.You may apply the 5W and 1H approach. Your critique
should be able to answer WHY, WHEN, WHERE, WHAT, WHO, AND HOW questions. Hence, the
introductory part should:

• identify the work under review, the date of formation and author or creator;

• explain the context of the work under evaluation – the required information may include social or
political context and place of work in an academic tradition;

• have a thesis statement that indicates the type of evaluation used.

Don’t parrot or repeat what the writer wrote in his paper.

B. Body
C. Conclusion

The closing paragraphs contain a summary of the overall evaluation of the work. Basically, one should
include:

• key reasons identified during the assessment process;

• purpose of the evaluation;

• recommendations for improving the whole work.

• incorporate the key takeaways of the document examined.

(5) Reference List

The reference list in critique essays contains cited credible sources. In turn, students should confirm

(6) Proofreading

Revising critique papers helps to identify major grammatical mistakes. In this case, taking adequate time
to read through the work improves the quality and expected outcomes.

STEPS IN CRITIQUING A WORK OF ART

(1) Describe the piece of art by giving the artist’s name and the work’s title and type, subject, object
and even sensory qualities.

(2) Analyze or have an in-depth examination of the art’s technical description and how technical
elements were used

(3) Interpret the artist’s perspective, inspiration and historical milieu in making a particular piece of
art

(4) Evaluate the importance anc success of the work of art

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