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Critique
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A critique is a structured form of academic writing that evaluates the strengths, weaknesses, and overall effectiveness of a source, argument, or work. It appears across disciplines — from English and philosophy to social policy, business, and film studies — because the ability to assess and respond to existing ideas is fundamental to academic thinking. Courses that assign critiques push students beyond summary, asking them to engage with an author's purpose, methods, and reasoning on their own terms. Topics ranging from moral philosophy, such as arguments about moral minima, to management practices and social policy toward Aboriginal peoples in Canada all demand the same core skill: reading critically and articulating a reasoned, evidence-based judgment.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches, reflecting how broadly the critique form is applied. Some papers offer literary or philosophical analysis, evaluating arguments made by thinkers like Karl Marx and his critique of Hegel's theory of the state, or assessing moral criticisms of the market. Others take a case-study approach, examining specific institutions or films such as the documentary on Walmart's business practices or the management of Thorpe Park. Still others focus on research evaluation, critiquing quantitative articles, literature reviews, or online sources like Convention and Visitor Bureau websites.

A strong critique begins with a clearly scoped thesis that goes beyond "this is good or bad" to explain why and how. Evidence typically comes from close reading of the source itself — examining the author's stated purpose, the clarity of key terms, the logic of the argument, and the quality of supporting material. The most common pitfall is spending too much of the essay summarizing rather than evaluating, which leaves the actual critique underdeveloped.

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Paper Undergraduate
And the Fraud Continues
This paper answers the following questions on the case study: And the Fraud Continues; 1. Discuss the internal control weaknesses that existed at MCI that contributed to the commission of this fraud. 2. Identify and justify the approach you would take if you suspected fraudulent activity within an organization where you work. 3. Critique the ethical nature of Pavlo's actions in this case. 4. Apply one (1) theory related to crime causation to this case.
Paper Undergraduate
Bitzer and Vatz on Rhetoric
Lloyd Bitzer's essay "The Rhetorical Situation" attempts to argue that rhetoric naturally follows from certain "rhetorical situations" due to some inherent quality of those situations which generates rhetoric.
Paper Undergraduate
Case study of school improvement strategies
One of the main concerns the school has to come to face with is the significant gap in student achievement between white students and non-white students and by students with disabilities in general.
Research Paper Doctorate
Effect of Television on Society
Television has helped to create and perpetuate perceptions of gender and race.
Essay Doctorate
DB Post Social Web and You Explain
The definitions of what constitutes new literacy changes in concert with technology, creating tremendous tensions for stakeholders engaged in the education of youth. Practitioners and scholars in education, communication, technology, business, and government are made to construct, deconstruct, and reconstruct visions of literacy in a race to articulate a model that will endure beyond the next wave of disruptive technologies.
Essay Doctorate
Bullying in Schools: Research on Causes and Prevention
Bullying Introduction Bullying is not a new phenomenon in the social lives of school-aged children but in recent years a great deal more attention has been paid to bullying because of the apparent rise in the number of publicized incidents. Teachers, parents, school administrators, community leaders and social scientists are on the alert not just for bullies, but also for methods of prevention. This paper uses scholarly research articles to review and critique the current problems related to bullying.
Research Paper Doctorate
Peace Agreements and International Intervention
A peace treaty is an agreement between two hostile parties, usually countries or governments, which formally ends a war or armed conflict. Treaties are often ratified in territories deemed neutral in the previous…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Aligning competitive strategy with the external environment
In his article on environmental scanning and its effect on competitive strategy and organizational performance in small firms, Beal (2000) completed a thorough literature review to serve as the theoretical foundation of…
Essay Doctorate
Ricoeur's hermeneutical method: critique, strengths, and weaknesses
The context is liberation. In this short essay, the author will evaluate Ricoeur's hermeneutical method. They will go on to describe Ricoeur's method, critique its strengths and weakness and then raise questions that need to be answered for clarification. Analysis Paul Ricoeur saw layers in meaning in his hermeneutical philosophy where we examine ourselves in depth and detail. In other words, he is trying to get at the underlying reasons for human meaning. This is especially helpful in biblical hermeutics where the text is not clear. He is best known for combining phenomenological description with hermeneutic interpretation. He can not be fit into any one school, but below are some ideas that recur throughout his work. Ricoeur developed a philosophical and theoretical style that has been described as "tensive". He brought together many heterogeneous discourses and concepts to form a composite discourse in which new meanings are created. He was able to accomplish this without diminishing the specificity and difference of his constitutive terms. His work on the metaphor and the human experience of time are the best examples of this method.
Research Paper Doctorate
Gender Race and Politics in the New Nation
Race and Revolution is a voluminous examination of the revolutionary generation's early efforts to rectify the apparent contradiction of slavery and of their ultimate compromises that not only left the institution…