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Students must find a book relevant to the material covered in class and submit it for approval for the instructor. After reading the book you must complete the book review and turn it in by the due date.
 
Guidelines on Book Critique:
1. Purpose
  Why was the book written? To:
 

inform? For example: sequence of historical events, results of lengthy study or experiment

 

persuade? For example: to change point of view, outlook, beliefs, or behavior

 

entertain? For example: most fiction, humor, gossip

 

teach how to do something? For example: resumes, cover letters, business plans, needlework, woodwork

 

give an overview? For example: textbooks, encyclopedias

2. Publisher: Who published the book ?
  A university press?
  Commercial publisher?
  Professional or Trade Association, Institution, or Research Center?
  Government (US, state, local)?
  Vanity (self-published)?
  University theses and dissertations are considered published by the university that granted the degree to the student who wrote it.
3. Organization and Content: Examine the table of contents and/or headings to determine if the book is organized in a logical and understandable manner. Do the contents indicate that the book contains the information you need? Is there added material such as appendices?
   

4. Date of Publication: Some topics, such as those in the health sciences, require current information. Other subjects, such as geology, value older material as well as current. Know the time needs of your topic and examine the timeliness of the book; is it:

  up-to-date,
  out-of-date, or
  timeless?
5. Authority/author: Is the author an expert in this field? Where is the author employed? What else has he/she written? Has he/she won awards or honors?
6. Bibliography: Scholarly works always contain a bibliography of the resources that were consulted. The references in this list should be in sufficient quantity and be appropriate for the content. Look for:
  if a bibliography exists,
  if the bibliography is short or long,
  if the bibliography is selective or comprehensive,
  if the references are primary sources (ex. journal articles) or only secondary sources (ex. encyclopedias),
  if the references are contemporary to the book or much older, and
  if the citation style is clear and consistent.
7. Usefulness: Is the book relevant to the current research project? A well-researched, well-written, etc. book is not going to be helpful if it does not address the topic at hand. Ask, "is this book useful to me"? If it is useful, does it:
  support an argument
  refute an argument
  give examples (survey results, primary research findings, case studies, incidents)
  provide "wrong" information that can be challenged or disagreed with productively
8. Coverage: Does the book cover the topic comprehensively, partially or is it an overview?

9. Audience: For what type of reader is the author writing? Is the level of the book appropriate for your needs? Is the book for:
  general readers,
  students (high school, college, graduate),
  specialists or professionals,
  researchers or scholars?
10. Illustrations: Are charts, graphs, maps, photographs, etc. used to illustrate concepts? Are the illustrations relevant? Are they clear and professional-looking?
   

Directions/ Expectations:

 

 Book Critique Breakdown

Sample of Book Critique