Evaluation Essay
Format for your evaluation paper
Basic guidelines
Your paper must be in MLA format
It should be at least four pages long plus a Works Cited page.
The writing should be in Standard American English, well-structured, easy to follow, free from personal references and unnecessary wordiness.
You choose a person, place, thing, event, or phenomenon and then argue that it is a good or bad instantiation of the category in which you place it.
Your introduction should
· Present the subject of your evaluation: “the person, place, thing, event, or phenomenon that you are evaluating” (Ramage et al. 371).
· Show why evaluating X is problematic or controversial
· Present your evaluation claim and your criteria
Your audience
· Intelligent readers
Your purpose
· Persuade your audience to see the value (or lack of value) of X.
Each body paragraph should
· State a criterion and defend it if necessary
· Show that X meets or does not meet the criterion
Treatment of alternative or opposing views
· Summarize objections to your criteria or your match
· Respond to these objections
Each reference to a source should
· Introduce the source using an attributive tag (Ramage et al. 555)
· Quote or summarize the important information from that source
· Explain the significance of the information from the source
· Include a correct MLA in-text citation which is also referenced in the final Works Cited page
Your conclusion should
· Sum up your evaluation.
A final note
This paper is not about you. It is about the issue. Therefore, the following words and phrases do not belong in your essay: I me, myself, we, us, in my opinion, I think, I believe. Your paper is also not about your reader, and you do not know your reader personally; therefore, the following words do not belong in your essay either: you, your, you’re, yourself.
*Figure 14.3 which illustrates the framework for an evaluation argument is on page 374 of your text.