Peer review
Complete your peer review exercise below, providing as much constructive criticism as possible. The more detailed suggestions you provide, the more useful it will be to your classmate. Make sure you consider each of the following aspects: LeadGuiding questions:
ContentGuiding questions:
Tone and BalanceGuiding questions:
Sources and ReferencesGuiding questions:
OrganizationGuiding questions:
Images and MediaGuiding questions: If your peer added images or media
For New Articles OnlyIf the draft you're reviewing is for a new article, consider the following in addition to the above.
Overall impressionsGuiding questions:
Examples of good feedbackA good article evaluation can take a number of forms. The most essential things are to clearly identify the biggest shortcomings, and provide specific guidance on how the article can be improved.
Additional Resources |
General info
edit- Whose work are you reviewing?
Hush Munnin
- Link to draft you're reviewing
- User:Hush Muninn/Khepri
- Link to the current version of the article (if it exists)
- Khepri
Evaluate the drafted changes
editLead: Clear and concise. Does not take too much away from the rest of the article and does not say too much that the other sections sound repetitive.
Clarity: Section structure flows well. Starting with etymology makes sense, and sets up the rest of the sections really well. Could appearance be included in the lead?
Coverage: Lots of well-articulated information. Makes the article feel very full and engaging. Could Khepri's role in the Amduat be a sub-section of religion? Could the word origin in the etymology section come before his appearance in Egyptian literature/stories?
Neutrality: No heavy-leaning messages. All the information remains neautral and unspeculating, and is sources quite neatly and appropriately.
Sources: Good amount of new sources included into the article. Well-balanced of citations and references to sources. Wide coverage of topics, none that point to being unnecssary/inaccurate.