Critical reading

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WSI NSE 11A – WEEK 6 WSI NSE 11A – WEEK 6 FALL 2014 FALL 2014 LEE SLINGER LEE SLINGER RYERSON UNIVERSITY RYERSON UNIVERSITY

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Critical reading. WSI NSE 11A – WEEK 6 FALL 2014 LEE SLINGER RYERSON UNIVERSITY. Outline. Evaluation and Analysis Critique versus Criticism What to evaluate Evaluating Evidence Reflection and Connection. Critical Reading. 3 Forms of Critical Thinking about Readings - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Critical reading

Page 1: Critical reading

WSI NSE 11A – WEEK 6WSI NSE 11A – WEEK 6FALL 2014FALL 2014

LEE SLINGERLEE SLINGERRYERSON UNIVERSITYRYERSON UNIVERSITY

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• Evaluation and Analysis- Critique versus Criticism- What to evaluate- Evaluating Evidence

• Reflection and Connection

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3 Forms of Critical Thinking about Readings

1.Summary and Description2.Evaluation and Analysis3.Reflection and Connections

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What is the difference between to critique and to

criticize?

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In pairs, make a list in response to the following question.

You will get a point for any response that is applicable but that others do not come up with.

You have 1 minute.

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Clark, C. M., & Springer, P. J. (2007). Thoughts on incivility: Student and faculty perceptions of uncivil behavior in nursing education. Nursing Education Perspectives, 28(2), 93-97.

Available on the WSI blog:

wsiryerson.wordpress.com/nursing

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1. Survey2. Ask Questions3. Note sub/headings

4. Marginal Notes5. Highlighting6. Vocabulary7. References

8. Fill in your notes

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Credibility of Author

Who is the author? What is their relationship to their

subject?

Writing Tip: Consider expressing some of your evaluation/analysis as as a phrase within another sentence.

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Intended Audience

To whom is the author speaking? Are you part of the intended audience? What assumptions has the author made

about her/his audience?

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Value and Significance

How has the article added to our understanding of its topic?

Why is this an important article to read?

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Biases and omissions

What was missing? What was needed?

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Strengths and Weaknesses

Be academic and respectful. Indicate why something was a strength or

weakness. For weaknesses, indicate how the weakness

might be fixed.

Writing Tip: Try for a relatively even ratio of strengths to weaknesses. If the overall tone is positive, give, perhaps, one more strengths, or vice versa. But present both sides.

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Supported by evidence

Were the author’s claims supported by evidence

Was the type of evidence useful in explaining their main points?

Archive, Proof, and Argument: From their archive, can they prove their argument?

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Supported by evidence

- Is this the way you would have studied this issue? Why or why not?

- Evaluate the quantity of evidence and its source.

- Are there other sources that might give different points of view?

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Guidelines for Evaluating Evidence:

1. Is the evidence representative? 2. Is the evidence relevant? 3. Is the evidence accurate? 4. Is the evidence qualified (i.e. all

vs. some; always vs. usually)?

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Clark and Springer Evidence Activity:

In groups of 2 or 3, 1. Consider their argument and their

evidence. 2. Take a position as to whether their

evidence, or their use of it, was appropriate.

3. Support your position with at least 2 points and one counterpoint.

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- How might this article help you as a nurse

- What did you learn that was new? - Why might this be helpful to nursing

students? Nurses in Toronto? Nurses today?

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- Be specific. • If something was helpful/interesting, explain (in

detail) why that is the case.• If this is one of several tasks you are asked to

perform (say, in addition to evaluating) limit yourself.

• Try and present your thoughts logically.

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- “Logic is a formal system of analysis that helps writers invent, demonstrate, and prove their arguments.”

[http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/659/01/]

- To write logically, a writer must: • lay out each premise clearly• provide evidence for each premise• draw a clear connection to the conclusion [http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/659/4/]

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- Your priority is to include all the necessary information. A logical flow in your writing will strengthen how that information is presented.

- Group like ideas together.

- Have an explanation (in your own mind) about why one sentence comes after the next.

- Use transition words within the paragraph to demonstrate who ideas relate to each other. [But, do not overuse transition words… ]