JohnWitman
New member
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2026
- Messages
- 6
I've now written five paper critiques for my engineering class and finally feel like I know what I'm doing. For anyone just starting, here's a detailed breakdown of the questions to answer, based on the format I found and what my professor actually looks for .
1. What I liked (but go deeper than "good paper"):
What my professor actually grades on:
1. What I liked (but go deeper than "good paper"):
- Is the problem worth solving? Why?
- Is the idea novel or an interesting combination of existing ideas?
- Is the evaluation convincing? What evidence stands out?
- What's the most interesting point made?
- What's controversial or debatable?
- For practical work: Is this really going to work? Who would actually use it? What would it take to make it real?
- What flaws do you perceive? Methodological issues? Weak evidence?
- Are there assumptions that don't hold?
- Is the scope too narrow? Too broad?
- Are there claims not supported by data?
- Important: Don't just say "it's bad." Explain WHY something doesn't work.
- What future directions do the authors suggest?
- BUT ALSO: What ideas did YOU come up with while reading?
- Can the same problem have a different solution?
- Can the same solution apply to a different problem?
- Would a bigger evaluation be appropriate?
- Sometimes your critiques of the current work lead directly to ideas for future work .
- What questions are you left with?
- What would you ask in a class discussion?
- What's confusing or difficult to understand?
- Pro tip: Listing several questions forces you to think more deeply. The more you list, the more you engage .
- What do you most want to get out of discussion?
- What points would be most valuable to debate with colleagues and the professor?
- What's your take-away message?
- Sum up the main implication from YOUR perspective.
- This is useful for quick review and forces you to identify the core of the work .
What my professor actually grades on:
- Depth of analysis (not summary)
- Evidence of critical thinking
- Specific, constructive feedback
- Connection to broader field
- Quality of questions raised