Peer Review Instructions
Instructions In PDF
On a clean sheet of paper write Reader: (then fill out your name); then Writer, and leave a blank space.
Read and provide detailed answers to the following questions.
To keep on the positive side, try the following to answer the questions: "Try ______," "Consider ______," or "How about _________"
- How does the intro draw you in and make you want (or not want) to read the rest of the essay?
- Reference to "real-life"?
- Larger issue (growing up, love, truth, etc.) surrounding the story?
- Personal example?
- Is the story title and author's name mentioned?
- Do you need to define any terms? (adulthood, heritage, fool, truth)
- Suggestions for new introduction?
- Copy out the thesis and division statement.
- Take out the questions from the assignment sheet. Which words in the thesis connect it to the question? Explain.
- How could the divisions be made clearer or more specific?
- Body paragraphs – answer the following questions for each paragraph
- How could the topic sentence be made clearer? Which word in it connects back to the thesis statement? Which word to a division?
- Is a definition or general explanation needed to frame the paragraph? In other words, what information would a reader need to understand the argument the writer is about to make? (i.e. def. of gender role reversal; how a kind person isn't a fool; how touch enables a person to open up; the connection between communication and a strong marriage)
- Where is more context/information needed to introduce a quote? (who's talking; when does the quote take place; what should the reader focus on in the quote)
- Where is more detail (quotes, descriptions) from the literary work needed? Could a quote be shortened?
- Knowing that the explanation should connect/explain how the examples prove the topic sentence, where do you need to "see" more of the writer's argument? Consider where a "real-life" example or analogy would help?
- Where could the writer explain how the actual words (their verb tense, connotations, image patterns, tone, etc.) of the quote back up the argument of the paragraph?
- Where do you lose the train of the writer's thinking?
- Where could the writer break into a new paragraph (with more development)
- Conclusion
- Does conclusion refer back to the introduction?
- Does it connect with an issue currently in the news?
- Is it the old, tired, dry, "repeat your main points" conclusion?
- Suggestions for new conclusion?
© David Bordelon |