Write a Critical Review
contact the library" />
These guides, templates, and videos are designed to help academic writers at various stages of their writing process, including the pre-writing and revising stages.
Get assistance
The library offers a range of helpful services. All of our appointments are free of charge and confidential.
A critical review is a description and evaluation of a source, usually a journal article or book. It moves beyond a summary to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the source and to comment on the quality of the source as a whole.
- Do not be confused by the term “critical”: it does not mean that you only look at the negative aspects of what the researcher has done. You should address both the positive and negative aspects.
Some instructors will use these words to refer to a critical review:
- Critical analysis
- Article or book report
- Article or book review
What should my first steps be in writing a critical review?
- Read the article or book carefully
- Briefly summarize the main point and key details of the source
- Analyze and evaluate the quality of the research by indicating the source’s strengths and weaknesses in the following areas:
- Originality (e.g. Does the study address a clear gap in the previously existing literature or in the field of study?)
- Reliability (e.g. Is the article or book peer reviewed? Is it free of author bias?)
- Validity (e.g. Is the study repeatable? Are the research results generalizable?)
- Relevance (e.g. Is the research well connected or related to other research in the field? Does it make a useful or timely contribution?)
- Presentation (e.g. Is the article or book well organized? Does the writing logically flow between sections, paragraphs, and sentences?