Article and discussion question

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  http://www.sheknows.com/parenting/articles/836245/things-your-kids-can-learn-at-the-farmers-market

Article Critique (one to one and one half pages)

The critique should communicate your understanding of the article’s main points and offer an analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. Moreover, the critique should comment on the article’s usefulness to student.

Article critiques typically adhere to the following structure:

  1. Introduction: provides an overview of the article’s purpose and main argument and offers the writer’s thesis regarding the article’s strengths and weaknesses.
  2. Summary paragraph: briefly reviews the article’s key points.
  3. Assessment paragraphs: Analyze the article’s strengths and weaknesses. In discussing strengths, the writer can point to the article’s inclusion of pertinent historical context, persuasive interpretations, thorough explication of evidence, or conclusions that apply to scenes not covered in the article. In critiquing weaknesses, the writer can examine the article’s ineffective use of evidence, inaccuracy, and unconvincing points of the article, failure to explore ideas within the scope of the main argument or disregard of ideas that contradict or would better support the article’s thesis.
  4. Conclusion: presents commentary on the article’s overall usefulness. The writer should address the extent to which the article helps students to understand the course content.

(Note: Remember to justify your analysis of strengths and weaknesses with evidence from the article. In assessing strengths, you may paraphrase compelling points or explain how the author’s ideas illuminate a particular aspect of the article. In evaluating weaknesses, you may offer contrary interpretations of the article, point to illogical passages or inaccuracies in the article, explain how the author’s evidence does not sufficiently support his or her point.

Article Critique Format and Rubric (Each Must be a separate paragraph)

Introduction                 5

Summary                     5

Assessment                 5

Conclusion                  5

Each Section should be separated.


Discussion Questions (200 words each)


 What if. . .a parent, rushing to go to work, told you that the child vomited before coming to school? The parent is not concerned because he or she feels it was related to roughhousing with a sibling right after eating breakfast. How might you handle this situation? Would you allow the child to stay?


2.  What if …you had a toddler in your program with lactose intolerance whose family was inconsistent in restricting lactose. This was causing this child to have periodic bouts of diarrhea that were affecting potty training. How would you discuss this subject with the parents? 


3.  What if…other teachers in your school offered candy as a reward to children who are keeping on task? What type of nonfood methods might you suggest to as an alternative to motivate students? 

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