Reviewer in Eapp
Reviewer in Eapp
Reviewer in Eapp
ACADEMIC WRITING
Academic Writing is the process of breaking down ideas and using deductive reasoning, formal
voice and third person point-of-view.
ACADEMIC TEXT embodies the language that is used for academic discipline.
NON-ACADEMIC TEXT are writings that are informal and dedicated to a lay audience.
They are usually on general topics and use casual or colloquial language, and may contain the
writer's personal opinions.
1. Title Page – provides information regarding the title, author and type of work.
2. Abstract or Summary – provides brief account of the main content of an academic
paper.
3. Table of contents – knows niu n pu cguru. Gives an opportunity to show the idea of what
an academic paper is about in an early stage.
4. Introduction – it is a soft start and orientation to engage the context of the academic text.
5. Background – gives the necessary background information
6. Aim and Issue – provides the terms of reference of academic paper.
7. Theoretical Framework – defines the key concepts, discusses relevant theories and
models based on the literature review.
8. Method – provides the methodological of the paper.
9. Result, analysis, and discussions – involves the result of the study and its analysis and
discussion.
10. Closure – a summary or concrete conclusion about the issue and questions.
11. List of references – acknowledges the contribution of other writers and researchers in
your work.
12. Appendices – contains supplementary materials that may be helpful in providing a more
comprehensive understanding of the academic paper.
DESCRIPTIVE – features detailed description of something to give the reader a mental picture.
Signal words – as a result of, because of, thus, for this reason
Signal words – lie, in contrast, similar to, while as oppose to, whereas
PROBLEM AND SOLUTION – sets up a problems, explains the solution and then discusses
the effects of solution.
Signal Words – the problem is, the solution is, the difficulty is
THESIS STATEMENT
SUMMARIZING helps you learn to determine ideas and consolidate important details that
support them.
OUTLINING
Outline is a written plan that serves as a skeleton for the paragraphs you write. It is a summary
that gives the essential information that will be included in a paper, book, etc.
Outlining is a means of “mapping out” your essay. It is a tool that allows you to arrange and
organize your ideas as well as looking at the possible structure of your output. (The Writing
Center, 2020)
READING OUTLINE – is what you make when you are studying a paper.
Formats of Outlines:
1. Topic Outline – this is the type of outline that highlights the main ideas through the use
of words or phrases only.
2. Sentence Outline – this type of outline arranges the main ideas through the use of full
sentences. This is usually done after the topic outline is created.
also : something that summarizes or concentrates the essentials of a larger thing or several thing.
CRITIQUE is a genre of academic writing that summarizes and critically evaluates a work or
concept. Critiques can be used to carefully analyze a variety of works such as:
1. Introduction – this part includes the name of the writer or creator of the work, the name
of the work being reviewed, the date it was written or created and its purpose.
2. Body ( Summary and Critical Evaluation) – Summary includes the summary of
important points and description on how the creator portrays their work by using
techniques, styles, media, characters or symbol. Critical Evaluation gives a systematic
and detailed assessment of the different elements of work. Provide evidence from the
work itself, such as a quote or example and the evidence should be cited.
3. Conclusion – a brief paragraph that includes a statement indicating your overall
impression of the evaluated work, a summary of the key reasons, identified during critical
evaluation.
4. List of References – includes all the resources you cited in your critique paper.
REACTION PAPER
1. Introduction – gives all the background information, such as the type of the film, cast
and the director, main characters, and the setting.
2. Body – deals with the key elements as well as the comments on the acting, directing and
character development.
3. Conclusion – is the opinion of the author about whether the film is worth watching.
PURPOSE – presents the reason why the project/campaign is worth your sponsor’s time, effort
and money.
DESCRIPTION – details all the necessary information about the project. Involves the website/s
or page you are going to produce and the purpose of each and how they work unison.
SUPPORT – contains the budget needed for the project, though some concept papers do not
specify any amount requested from the sponsor.
1. Definition – usually forms the core of concept paper. Their components are being
defined, the class it belongs to, and its distinguishing characteristics.