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OpenStudy (anonymous):

Can anyone give me some tips on how to write a critical essay

OpenStudy (anonymous):

- Learn your paper topic as soon as possible to help plan your research. - Find research information from a wide variety of sources including journal articles, books, encyclopedias, and news sources. Gather more information than you expect to actually reference when writing your paper, but don't gather too much this can distract from the main point and you will end up putting it in your essay simply for the reason you researched it. Do not use wikipedia for everything, and do not copy and paste peoples replies; no matter what website you got it from, plagiarism will be found out. - Skim through your sources to separate the interesting research from the irrelevant material. Interesting research can be from books, york notes, and published critical essays on your specific topic. otherwise don't research things that aren't relevant ie. researching witches when your question is on monarchy - Reread the relevant material thoroughly and critically. Highlight, underline, or otherwise mark any journal articles or books you own. Use different color post-it notes to direct your attention to critical details from library books. Summarize or otherwise annotate each source after you've read it. Note a few important details and the source's main argument for future reference. - Brainstorm a thesis by reviewing your notes and research. You may choose to write out a rough thesis statement or you may instead opt to ask a critical question that your paper will answer. - Sketch out a rough introduction, recognizing that you may want to edit or rewrite your introduction later. - Develop a rough outline based on your research notes. Identify two or three major sections for the body of your paper. These sections should consist of the most important portions of your argument. Use your notes and research to fill in the details of your sections. You may copy and paste critical details or arguments into your outline. - Identify the relationship between your paper's sections and briefly describe it in the margins of your outline. - Use this relationship to sketch a rough conclusion. - Set aside your paper for a few days before revising your draft. - Give yourself sufficient time to do a substantive revision that clarifies any confusing logic or arguments. - Complete your paper by carefully proofreading a printed version of your final draft. Use your imagination and make the introduction interesting for the reader. Write a clear thesis statement and use up-to-date sources rich with facts.

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