Article Reviews - Software Methodology
Article reviews have multiple purposes:
- Improve understanding of the readings by
summarizing key points,
- Develop a critical understanding of materials
by making subjective judgments about articles, and writing your subjective
questions/impressions of the article,
- Demonstrate that you have read the article.
Each paper review should be typewritten and include:
- The title, and first author’s name
- The main point that the article seemed to make
(2-4 sentences)
- One to three short paragraphs
concerning the content of the article, containing either:
- A question about the article, such as one
that you or someone reading the paper for the first time might have to
stop and study, look elsewhere, or reread to find an answer. Questions
should be accompanied by an elaboration of the question, and/or a
discussion of its relevance.
- A comment on the article, such as discussion
of application, classification, comparison and/or evaluation of method or
methods.
- What you liked, disliked, found interesting
or found unclear in the article (and a description of why).
- How long it took you to read the article
- Two subjective numerical ratings on a 1-to-6
scale (1 low, 6 high):
- How important is the material covered in the
article?
- How well-written was the article?
- Clear, concise writing is a valuable skill.
Try to distill the essence of your ideas into short, compact reviews.
Also, see “How to Read an
Engineering Research Paper” by Bill Griswold for additional ideas.
Paper evaluations will be graded according to the following scale:
·
Check: what was expected
·
Check minus: marginal
·
Check plus: outstanding.
Papers may be considered marginal for any of the following reasons:
- Substantial grammar or spelling errors
- Not typewritten
- Review fails to demonstrate that article was
fully read and understood
- Questions about the article are not
accompanied by a discussion of the relevance of the question, or the
question is trivial or non-germane
- Discussion of
likes/dislikes/interesting/confusion in the article without an
accompanying description of why you had that impression
Papers may be considered outstanding for the following reasons:
- Inclusion of, and
references to, information from other relevant sources.
- In depth and/or exceptionally well thought out
discussion of the subject matter.
Since every article review clearly states the title and author of the
article at the beginning of the review, it is not necessary to cite quotations from the article under review (you must quote all
quotations, however). Quotations from other articles must be cited.