Argumentative Research Essays Assignment
Order ID:89JHGSJE83839 Style:APA/MLA/Harvard/Chicago Pages:5-10 Instructions:
Argumentative Research Essays Assignment
WRITER:
For peer review, exchange your draft with your partner. Provide detailed answers to the questions below (a simple yes/no is not sufficient). When you have completed the sheet, return the worksheet to your partner. You may also make comments directly on the essay.
FORMAT
- Is the document formatted in correct MLA style? Do the margins, identification, header, spacing, font type and size meet MLA requirements?
FOCUS
- Evaluate the introduction. It should be relevant and focused, and it should let you know what the paper topic is and what sort of audience is being targeted. It should build up to a thesis statement. Does the introduction catch your attention? Is the thesis stated in the introduction? If not, what suggestions can you make?
- Identify the thesis statement. Does the thesis introduce both the topic and the claim the writer argues about that topic? Make suggestions for improvement or comment on the strengths of the thesis.
- Has the essay’s author considered the audience’s needs? Has he or she provided enough explanation for a reader who is new to the subject matter? Are the writing level and tone suitable for an academic audience?
- Is the draft written in third person point of view? Does the writer mistakenly shift into second person (you) or use first person (I, we, our)? If so, mark where the writer needs to correct his or her use of second person pronouns.
ORGANIZATION
- Is the draft well organized overall (introduction, body, and conclusion)? Does the essays method of organization (chronological, simple to complex, order of importance) provide a logical framework? What suggestions can you make to improve organization?
- Does each paragraph begin with a topic sentence that states the paragraph’s main point, connects the paragraph to the essay’s thesis statement, and unifies the paragraph’s content? If not, what suggestions can you make to improve topic sentences?
- Mark places in the essay where signal devices (transitions) would improve flow.
CONTENT
- Do the supporting sentences in the body paragraphs provide enough specific examples and details? Do any examples digress from the paragraph’s main point? Mark places in the essay where more examples are needed or where more concrete and specific words would make the examples more effective. Also, mark examples that do not relate to the paragraph’s topic sentence. Comment on whether you think these examples should be deleted, or whether the topic sentence should be revised to fit the examples.
- Where might evidence seem weak or irrelevant? Where does the writer rely too heavily on outside sources instead of making his or her own argument and supporting it with research information?
- Does the writer anticipate and respond to opposing viewpoints? If not, mark in the essay where you think the writer should address opposing views. .
- Did the writer integrate quotations into his or her own sentence using signal phrases? If not, mark places in the essay where writer needs to add signal phrases.
- Did the writer include in-text parenthetical citations at the ends of sentences that contain information from an outside source? Does the period at the end of the sentence follow the parentheses? Also, look for unnecessary punctuation inside the citation; there should not be a comma between an author’s name and the page numbers.
- Did the writer list all outside sources used in the paper on the works cited page? Is the works cited page formatted in correct MLA style?
- Does the essay have a fully developed concluding paragraph? Does it leave the reader with a sense of closure and summarize the essay’s main point? Can you make suggestions for improvement?
- Are there places where repetitious sentence patterns or redundant vocabulary makes the essay monotonous? Where would more varied sentence structure add interest to the essay and emphasize key ideas?
GRAMMAR
- Are there any grammar errors (fragments, fused sentences, comma splices, vague pronoun references, subject-verb or pronoun-antecedent agreement, verb tense shifts)? Are there spelling or punctuation errors? Mark any grammar, spelling, or punctuation errors, use of contractions that you found in the draft.
RESEARCH AND DOCUMENTATION
- Is specific information parenthetically cited in correct MLA style?
- Is the works cited in correct MLA style?
- Is there evidence of the number of required sources and are the sources credible?
END NOTES
Please make one or two additional suggestions to help the writer with revisions.