Ways to Respond to and Evaluate a Text

by admin on May 26, 2009

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In college, it is common for professors to assign written response papers along with the required reading for the course.  It is important to first read for critical understanding of the text, making marginal notes, and marking important passages.  Beyond that, though, one may question the professor’s purpose in assigning a response paper and how best to proceed with the required writing. 

First of all, know that, although a response paper may be intended to demonstrate that you have read the required text(s), the professor is most likely concerned with more than simple reading comprehension.  He or she is concerned with your thinking.  Therefore, you must not only read to comprehend, but also read to respond and evaluate, adding unique thought and analysis prompted by the original text, extending the author’s thoughts with your own. 

To state it simply, your professor has provided you with the opportunity to read and understand part of the current academic conversation and now wants you to join that academic conversation.  To join this conversation, you must be unique, you must do more than summarize the original text, and you must spend time thinking.  There’s no easy way around thinking in college. 

The following list will help you shape the thinking that you will produce in response to college-level texts.  For all of these suggestions, you should always connect back to the original text(s) with in-text citations, quotes and paraphrasing when appropriate (but be careful not to over-quote or over-paraphrase – you want this paper to be based on the original text, but also a reflection of your own thinking).  This list is by no means comprehensive, but it is a good place to start! 

Ways to Respond to a Text: 

With a Question: 

  • Pose a related question to the author and explain how the author might answer it
  • Generate a question that the text prompts of you and answer it
  • Generate a question that the text prompts of you, and use additional research to extend the author’s ideas

With Comparison/Contrast:

  • Compare an author’s claim to the claim(s) made in a different text or by a different author
  • Show how an author’s perspective or claim is different from something else or someone else’s idea

With Analysis: 

  • Explain an emotional response to the piece you had and analyze what made you have this reaction:  was it something about yourself, culture, or society?
  • Explain why you had a hard time connecting with a text or an author’s claim
  • If responding to an older text or a different cultural text, explain how the author’s claim might function or malfunction in today’s society or your culture
  • Explain how this text could be seen differently through another person’s or another theory’s perspective
  • Explain how a controversy or other historical situation may have given rise to the author’s essay
  • Expose how your own bias or assumptions may interfere with your reading experience

With Extended Thought:

  • Extend one of the author’s ideas into a broader context discussion.  In other words, what is this idea a part of?
  • Pose an observation or realization this text sparks in you
  • Pose an important word or concept and explain how the author might define it
  • Examine a similar or parallel issue that this text is related to

Ways to Evaluate a Text: 

By Arguing for or Against an Idea Offered by the Author:

  • If you turned the subject of this text into a question on which people would vote, how would you vote – and why?
  • State one of the author’s claims and bring in additional outside reasons and evidence (personal or researched) for or against this claim
  • Explain your subtly different definition of a term or perspective of a claim, and why this difference, while subtle, is important
  • Expose an author’s assumption or bias and explain why this assumption or bias weakens or strengthens his/her idea

By Arguing for or Against the Way an Author Presents Ideas:

  • Evidence:  Do facts and examples fairly represent the available data on the topic?  Are the author’s facts and examples current, accurate?
  • Logic:  Has the author adhered to standards of logic?  Has the author avoided, for instance, fallacies such as personal attacks and faulty generalizations?
  • Development:  Does each part of the presentation seem well-developed, satisfying to you in the extent of its treatment?  Is each main point adequately illustrated and supported with evidence?
  • Fairness:  If the issue being discussed in controversial, has the author seriously considered and responded to his opponents’ viewpoints?
  • Definitions:  Have terms important to the discussion been clearly defined – and if not, has lack of definition confused matters?
  • Audience:  Is the essay appropriate for its audience – does it convince who it’s intended to convince?

In closing, what other tips do you have for writing a professor-approved response paper?  Which of the above response methods do you find to be the most appropriate and useful?

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{ 1 trackback }

Ways to Respond to and Evaluate a Text » The Write Network
July 6, 2009 at 5:49 pm

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Valery Springer September 22, 2009 at 9:01 am

This information has been very helpful. Thank you.

matt April 17, 2010 at 4:40 pm

ur piece is super,keep it up.plz,do send new contributions to my box above

sts April 25, 2010 at 2:17 pm

Excellent article i am sure that i will come back here soon

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