INTRODUCTION
1. Introduce the subject of your critique – the
reading under analysis. Make sure to name the
work being reviewed, as well as the date when
it was created, as well as the name of the
creator.
2. Describe the main argument or purpose of
the work.
3. Explain the context in which the work was
created. This can be a social or political context.
Review the background facts or issues that
must be understood before the point of the
reading can be appreciated: significance,
design, appeal, and so on.
You may also discuss the place of the work in a
creative or academic tradition, or the
relationship between the work and creator’s life
experience.
4. Review the assumptions in the reading that
must be understood before you take a position.
5. Make an umbrella statement that can give the
reader a sign as to what your evaluation is going
to be. For instance, it may indicate whether it is
positive, negative, or a mixed evaluation. In
doing this, make your position statement clear:
what is your evaluation? On what basis are you
making it, given what you have stated in #3 and
#4?
BODY
6. The critical evaluation section
What different elements of the work were
evaluated?
7. Was the critique writer able to provide evidence
from the work itself? Give examples.
CONCLUSION
8. State your conclusions, reminding the reader
of the points you have made and your reasons
for making them.