What information is fact? What information is opinion-What opinions are supported-How well are they supported?

Article Review 2

Focus: NCAA Bylaw concerns / or / PED’s Performance Enhancing Drugs

Find an article that analyzes the use of PED’s in sport, and follow the prompts to complete your assignment.

A review of a journal article examines a scholarly article’s strengths and weaknesses in terms of what the article is attempting to accomplish. Your review should include description, paraphrases, and your own analysis. Any analysis included should help readers to assess the article’s value without having to necessarily read the articles themselves.

To write a review properly, you first need to read the article twice, at the very least. The assignment begins even before you begin to write.

Things to Consider Before Reading:

Initial assumptions based on the title

Assumptions based on the sub-titles

Read the abstract. Initial thoughts?

Look over the References. Have you read any of the sources? Should you? What do they

indicate?

Search the Web for the author of the article. Is the author established in his/her field?

Does the author speak with authority?

Things to consider: on your First Read

The article’s audience

The author’s purpose in writing

The author’s thesis or main argument

Second Reading Exercise. Things to consider:

What information is fact? What information is opinion?

What opinions are supported? How well are they supported?

Is there a gap in information? In logic?

Can you find instances of bias?

Is the author successfully persuasive?

The Writing Process

Outline. Write out your main argument in full. Your topic should be the argument you are making about the article, typically an answer as to whether or not the article is successful at what it sets out to accomplish and whether the article is valuable. The thesis should be a succinct summation of your opinion on the article.

The review begins with a complete citation of the article at the top of the page in whatever style is stipulated by an instructor.

The first paragraph should contain:

A topic statement. An opinion about the article is backed up with evidence and well-reasoned analysis.

The author of the article’s purpose in writing

Background information on the author

A brief overview of other, relevant scholarship

The body of the review should contain:

Points of argument to support your thesis

A logical development of ideas

Quotes and paraphrases from the article as pieces of evidence

The final paragraph should contain:

A restatement of your thesis

A summary of your review

Sources:

“Article Review.” Sydney. The University of Sydney, 2017. Web. 20 June. 2017

Trent University. Writing Academic Reviews. Ontario: The Trent University Academic Skills Centre, 2010. Trent. Web. 20 June. 2017