|
Academic
Resources >
Academic Support
Center
Writing a Critical Review
You have been assigned a critical reading review. Why? What
does that entail? How is it organized? What are the specific
requirements?
Why has a critical reading review been assigned?
Summarizing is an essential skill for building a scholarly
and critical understanding of new material. Given that scholarship
means “a thorough understanding of concrete fact,”
critical thinking carries the difference, added value, responsibility,,
and weight of exploring beyond the facts into the ideas that
drive or create them. Therefore, a critical summary is one
that demonstrates a scholarly understanding of the information,
understands the theories and ideas driving the text, and synthesizes
the two.
Your instructors would be remiss if they did not teach you
to follow a line of thought through to its end. As seminary
students, you are neither vessels to be filled with information
nor theocrats here to confirm what you already know. You are
here to equip yourself to sometimes care for, sometimes lead,
and sometimes teach others. You are here to learn new ideas
and to question old assumptions. You can certainly develop
your own spirituality in the years you are here—that
is one of the wonderful functions of the seminary community
at large—but your professors hope that you will use
the special environment of the scholarly classroom to practice
reflective learning that will help you later in your larger
mission. that’s why “reflection” and “responses”
aren’t supposed to be particularly testimonial in nature.
They might be described as personal, meaning something only
you could think, but they should be purposeful as well, however
it is you conceive of that greater purpose.
What does a critical review entail?
Think of it this way, exegesis is a scholarly skill and theology
is the critical synthesis of your scholastic study leading
to an organized body of thought that has practical applications
to your professional or pastoral obligations. Thus, a critical
review is more like theology than exegesis—you look
beyond the words on the page.
The key word here is critical, meaning evaluating and analyzing.
You are to “take apart” the book, not just summarize
it. You should provide an analysis of your own understanding,
not just a reiteration of the author’s ideas. You should
identify critical issues raised by the text, look at how the
ideas are expressed, and comment on the significance of what
is said.
How is a critical review organized?
1. The first paragraph should give the author’s name
and the title of the book. Additionally, the first paragraph
should include the main issues presented in the book, and,
if you can determine, the author’s purpose for writing.
2. The middle part of the paper (approximately ¾ of
the review) should critically analyze the text.
There are many areas that you should/could cover in this
section
A. You should have some information about the author’s
background and credibility.
B. Since this reading has been assigned for this specific
class, you should incorporate a brief statement saying how
the issues discussed in the text relate to your course.
C. The body of the review should also discuss the main topics
addressed in the reading and how these relate to the practice
of family therapy. Do you have new insights because of this
reading?
D. This section should also evaluate whether or not the author
is successful. Does the author give enough evidence to support
the thesis? Is the evidence convincing, controversial, or
one-sided?
E. What are the pastoral counseling, educational, and/or theological
implications of this work?
F. Is this work so significant that it has/will change thinking
and praxis in your profession?
3. The conclusion should state your overall evaluation and
bring the paper to a logical close. You have already evaluated
specific aspects of the reading, now evaluate the work as
a whole. Does the author achieve the stated purpose? What
impact has this work had on you, as a scholar, pastoral counselor,
and Christian educator?
|