Critical Reading Questions

Research Guides

Critical Reading Questions

Use the following questions to help guide your reading of what are sometimes complicated arguments; even when the argument seems straightforward, these questions can help to get at the different nuances in the language and rhetorical style.  This in an important step in helping to clarify just what the argument is about, what position the author takes, how this position engages in a larger debate, and why this position and the debate in general are significant.  Equally important is the attention you give to your own position on the topic.  As you respond to these questions, think about what kinds of assumptions you bring to the argument and what kinds of questions you are left with.  Your response to the argument should be guided as much by your understanding of its content and structure, as by your own engagement with the issues and problems it raises in relation to your own understanding of the topic.

1.      What question is posed by the author?

2.      Thesis/position/argument

3.      Context

4.      Evidence

5.      Counter arguments

6.      Effectiveness

 

Critical Readings Questions were created by Becky Reed, Director of the UWB Writing Center

 

See also:

Basic Criteria for Evaluating Information

Tips for reading scholarly sources

Distinguishing Scholarly Journals from other Periodicals

Evaluating Information found on the Internet (from Johns Hopkins University)

 

Research Guides