Scott Kaufman
WR 39B
January 23, 2001

Peer Review Exercise

I. Argument 
     1.  Read the first paragraph and identify the thesis statement/conclusion.
            i.	Is this an arguable thesis?  If so, go to ii.   If not, how would you
                revise is to make it arguable?
           ii.	If this were your essay, how would you argue this thesis?  What kind
                of analysis and/or  evidence would you use to support it?
     2.  Finish reading the essay.  Identify the premises.  Do  they support the 
           thesis/conclusion?  Considering what  you wrote for 1.ii., what additional
           premises can you think of that would strengthen the essay?  Or, the turn
           it around, would the removal of ambiguous and/or irrelevant  premises
           strengthen the argument?

II. Organization
     1.  Introduction
            i.	Is the thesis sentence found in the introduction?  
           ii.	Does the introduction grab your attention?  Does it make you want  
                to read the essay?  (Remember,  I have to read 23 of these, so getting
                and holding my attention is important.)  If so, how? If not,  think about 
                the rest of the essay and propose an   introduction that might.
     2.  Body Paragraphs
            i.	Are there strong transitions between paragraphs,  or does the essay
                seem to consist of independent blocks of analysis?  If the former, how
                do these strong transitions work?  If the latter,consider  how these body 
                paragraphs function as premises for  the essay's argument and suggest 
                ways in which they could be related to each other.
           ii.	Are the paragraphs themselves coherent arguments?  That is, do they
                have topic sentences that function as conclusions for the paragraph's argument? 
                If so, run the premise/conclusion drill on a sample paragraph.   If not, determine 
                what the paragraph is attempting to argue and generate a topic sentence.
     3.  Conclusion
             i.	Does it accurately represent the essay's argument?   That is, has the author 
                effectively proven what they promised they would prove in their introduction?
            ii.	Does it acknowledge the limitations of an argument  based on only 2 essays, or 
                does it claim to be the last word on the subject matter? If the former, does 
                it suggest some possible alternative interpretation (and if it doesn't, you should)? 
                If the latter, make 2 counter-arguments that you feel the writer of the essay
                should be made aware of.

III. Language
      1.  Is the paper riddled with spelling/grammar errors? 
      2.  Are there contractions?  (There shouldn't be.)
      3.  How readable is this essay?  Could you understand what  the author was trying 
           to say, or was their meaning obscured by language errors?
      4.  Is the tone of the essay academic or conversational?   That is, did it  sound like you  
           were reading the writing of a sophisticated author?  Or did it sound like the author 
           was just talking to you?

BACK       NEXT

 
Class Handouts

Handout two

Handout five

Teaching (Main)