Each student in SOC 345 has the
option of writing two "Critiques" over the course of the semester.
ASSIGNMENT: Each critique is
based on one of the
optional readings which appear under one of the topics on the reading
list. You may not do more than one critique on a given topic (i.e. that are due
on the same date). Topic G, Arbitration Variations, is the last topic on which
critiques may be written. Please choose the articles you critique carefully.
Some articles on the reading list are quite brief (only two pages or so) and
will not provide enough material for a good critique. Every student choosing
the critique writing option must complete at least one critque
by March 22 (i.e. must write at least one critique on a topic with due date of
March 20 or earlier). Students choosing the critique option must write two
critiques over the course of the semester.
STYLE: Critiques must be typed,
double-spaced, with a 1 1/2 inch margin on the left side. Please use arial 12 point font. Two to three pages is the prescribed
length with an additional blank page attached at the back and a title page at
the front that includes the title of the article being critiqued but DOES NOT
include your name. Critiques which exceed this length will not be accepted.
Quotations, ideas which are not your own, and facts which are not common
knowledge must be given full citations (including page numbers) so that the
reader can distinguish between the thoughts of the student and the thoughts of the
author the student is critiquing. Please see the format and style section of
the course home page and make sure that your work conforms to that style.
Papers with improper citations will be returned to the student for correction
with a 20% reduction in grade. Critiques must be submitted on paper and also
e-mailed to the instructor as an attachment in Microsoft Word format. That
attachment should have a name consisting of your last name, your first initial,
a dash, then 345crit followed by a number which reflects
the number of the critique assignment. Thus if I were doing the fourth critique
assignment (the one on mediation), the file would be named donnc-345crit4.
CONTENT: Each critique must
discuss four issues. First, what is the central hypothesis of the article or
what is the principal question which it examines? Second, what methodology does
the author use to test the hypothesis or examine the issue? For this purpose,
using graphs is not a methodology, it is a means of presentation. Nor is using
data a methodology. The methodology consists of how the data are analyzed.
Third, do you agree with the author's conclusions and why or why not? Fourth,
identify a different (preferably better) way to test the same hypothesis or
answer the same question? For purposes of this issue, increasing the sample
size or getting a more recent sample do not constitute an alternative method
of answering the question. On the last two points, you must explain the reasons
for your conclusions.
EVALUATION: Critiques are
evaluated on the basis of their style, their coverage of the topic, and their
use of logic and creativity in fashioning an answer. Creativity is particularly
important. The critiques will not be "right" or "wrong."
They only show more (or less) understanding of the reading being critiqued,
they are more (or less) logical and they are more (or less) original. See the
critique rubric for more information on how critiques will be evaluated.
DUE DATES: Critiques are due AT
THE BEGINNING OF CLASS on the appropriate date, which is approximately one week
after we finish dealing with that topic in class. The due dates will be listed
on the course home page. LATE CRITIQUES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED UNDER ANY
CIRCUMSTANCES. If you are uncertain as to when a particular set of critiques
will be due, check with the instructor. At least one critique must be submitted
by March 20.
EXAMPLES: There are two links
here to critiques submitted in previous semesters. This first
critique received a grade of "C." The second
critque, which was better written and showed both
a more thoughtful analysis and a more thoughtful alternative methodology,
received an "A."
Topic |
Critique Due Date |
B. Origin and Nature of Conflict |
February 10 |
C. Interpersonal Communication |
February 24
|
D. Negotiation and Problem Solving |
March
18
|
E. Mediation |
April
8
|
F. Arbitration |
April
20
|
G. Arbitration Variations |
April
27
|