a presentation by erin trauth, angela tartaglia, richard ellman, melissa jones, and andrea dennin...

18
A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program Keepin’ it Real: How to Write Effective Comments for Peer Reviews

Upload: heath-hillin

Post on 01-Apr-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Keepin’ it Real: How to Write Effective Comments

for Peer Reviews

Page 2: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Why is it important to provide effective comments during peer review?

To start, peer review has many benefits, including: The ability to get feedback on your writing before the instructor sees it The ability to see your own strengths and weaknesses after reading and

responding to another paper A greater sense of audience – it is not just your instructor reading your

work! The chance to learn new information from your peers about the subject

you may also be writing on The opportunity for feedback, feedback, and more feedback!

The essence of the peer review is your comments – without strong, specific comments, the peer review can often be useless!

Page 3: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Something to consider…In a national survey of 560 teachers of writing and 715 of

their students, Sarah W. Freedman (1985, The Role of Response in Acquisition of Written Language,

Berkeley: California UP) found that many teachers grieved over the use of peer review groups because

they had difficulty getting students to respond effectively to one another's writing. Vague comments

proliferate.

The students, too, complained about the writing responses, saying that their peers rarely offered

substantial help with their writing. The result is that such vague comments rarely translate into effective

revisions, and this is unfortunate because when students receive concrete suggestions for revisions, they do revise with the suggestions in mind (Nina D.

Ziv, 1983, "Peer Groups in the Composition Classroom: A Case Study," Conference on College Composition and

Communication, Detroit, March 17-19).

Page 4: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Think About It:

Imagine you have spent hours on a project for this class, and you are counting on getting a good grade on the final draft. While working

on a draft, you see that you have some problems in your writing, but you are not

quite sure how to fix them. Who is one of your best resources?

Page 5: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Your peers!

Now, imagine you are anticipating getting some really great, specific feedback from your peer reviewer. You go to class, switch papers, wait

eagerly for your peer to help edit your work, and alas, you get your paper back. What did he

write?

Not to fear! Help is on the way!

Page 6: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

“I liked it.”

“It was really good.”

“I didn’t like your thesis.”

Does this feedback help you fix your writing problems?

Probably not.

It is not specific enough.

Page 7: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

As a peer reviewer, you can't just say, "I liked it," or "I didn't like it." Instead, you want to give the writer information that will really help to improve what the writer has written.

What is important to remember is that while you should not be harsh or personal, you should be honest. Saying something works when it really does not will not help anyone.

Page 8: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

There are, in general, three types of peer review comments:

- Vague Comments- General, but Useful Comments- Specific, Directive Comments

In order to make effective comments on a peer review, you want to make SPECIFIC, DIRECTIVE comments.

Specific, Directive Comment

General, but Useful

Comment

Vague Comment

Most Effectiv

e

Least Effectiv

e

Page 9: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Vague Comments:Comments that are full of generalities, providing little

or no specific direction for revision and/or comments that simply praise or disagree with the writing

Example:“Try to revise the whole second page” or “I liked it” or

“I do not really like this part”

Think about it: what do comments like this really tell a person about their paper that will help them REVISE?

Nothing.

Page 10: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

General, but Useful CommentsComments that are too general but may provide some

direction for revision

Example: “I don’t like your introduction. Maybe describe the topic of public writing better.”

A general, but useful comment is slightly better than a vague comment because it narrows what works (or does not work) to a specific area of the paper, as well as offering a specific suggestion. We can take this a step further, however, by providing a specific, directive comment.

Note that this comment points

to a specific place in the paper (the

introduction)

Note that this comment offers a

suggestion for improvement

Page 11: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

A Specific, Directive CommentComments that not only point out a specific problem area

of the paper, but also offer the writer a reason why the change is needed and a specific direction for revision.

Example: “I do not think the introduction fully describes the topic of public writing in a way all readers will understand, which is necessary if you are going to fully analyze the topic in the next few paragraphs . Maybe you could use a quote that really defines public writing from a source, or you could expand on your first two sentences (which I have underlined in your paper).”

Note that this comment points out a specific spot for improvement (the

introduction) and states what exactly is wrong with it

Note that this comment offers two suggestions for improvement, and that

the peer reviewer underlined the sentences that the writer could work on

Note that this comment tells the writer why the change is needed

Page 12: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Pop Quiz!In the following pairs, determine which of the

two choices is the most effective comment:A. “This is disorganized!” B. "This section discusses both animal-

rearing conditions and experimental methods, but the two are mixed together, making it difficult to focus on your points. Could you separate each into its own paragraph?”

C. “How are these references relevant?”D. “The background and references given in

paragraph 2 don't seem directly relevant to your thesis. I think we need references that give facts on the dangers of public writing specifically rather than references that explain the extensive history of blogging and its positive effects.”

E. “Your thesis is unclear.”F. “I am having trouble understanding your

thesis. The thesis needs to be clear so that the reader is sure of the position you are going to take in the rest of the paper. Could you state specifically the stance this paper will take on gun control?”

Page 13: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

Now, let’s look at a few comments taken from real peer reviews and analyze their effectiveness.

Remember, the best peer review comments

include a specific statement of where an improvement needs to be made, why it should be changed and one-two suggestions for

the writer in fixing the weakness!

Page 14: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

For the peer review comment below, analyze whether or not the comment is effective in helping the writer. What

type of comment is it (vague, general but useful, or specific –directive)? If it is effective, what makes it so? If it is not, what is the comment missing? What could the

peer reviewer add to make the comment more effective?

Activity adopted from Gloria A. Neubert and Sally J. McNelis, Peer Response: Teaching Specific Revision Suggestions, The English

Journal, 1990.

“I like your topic sentence, but it does not mix well with the rest of the paragraph.”

Page 15: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

For the peer review comment below, analyze whether or not the comment is effective in helping the writer. What

type of comment is it (vague, general but useful, or specific –directive)? If it is effective, what makes it so? If it is not, what is the comment missing? What could the

peer reviewer add to make the comment more effective?

“Maybe you should fix your conclusion.”

Page 16: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

For the peer review comment below, analyze whether or not the comment is effective in helping the writer. What

type of comment is it (vague, general but useful, or specific –directive)? If it is effective, what makes it so? If it is not, what is the comment missing? What could the

peer reviewer add to make the comment more effective?

“Your thesis statement needs to be more specific in regard to the advertisements you will be talking about in the paper, because it is important that the reader knows what to expect in the following paragraphs.”

Page 17: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

For the peer review comment below, analyze whether or not the comment is effective in helping the writer. What

type of comment is it (vague, general but useful, or specific –directive)? If it is effective, what makes it so? If it is not, what is the comment missing? What could the

peer reviewer add to make the comment more effective?

“I feel like your conclusion is not descriptive enough yet, and this paper should leave the reader with something to remember about San Diego if it is truly a travel ethnography. Maybe you could end with a quote from the musician you talked about in your last paragraph, or maybe use more of the second-person narrative you used in your introduction. I think something like that would be more descriptive and more memorable.”

Page 18: A Presentation by Erin Trauth, Angela Tartaglia, Richard Ellman, Melissa Jones, and Andrea Dennin for the University of South Florida FYC Program

In order to be an effective peer reviewer, remember to:

Read the writer’s essay carefully – just skimming the paper is not enough to really help the writer.

Be positive. Point out strengths as well as weaknesses, and be sensitive in how you phrase your criticism (“Could you clarify this section?” rather than “Your organization is a mess.”)

Be honest. Don’t say something works when it doesn’t. You’re not helping the writer if you avoid mentioning a problem.

Be specific. Rather than simply saying a paragraph is “confusing,” for example, try to point to a specific phrase that confuses you and, if possible, explain why that phrase is problematic.

Focus on one or two major areas for revision – it is not your job to completely edit the paper, but instead to focus on major flaws and offer suggestions