A few years ago I had an English teacher that encouraged "The Oreo Method"; it compares effective constructive criticism to an Oreo cookie.
The filling in the middle was the constructive criticism, but before and after that, you offer positive feedback for the writer.
Pretty self explanatory:
1. Provide one piece of positive feedback first and linger on it for a couple sentences; let them know how important that "thing" is and, in a way, praise them for doing it. This primes them to accept your feedback cause they know how thoroughly you've read and analyzed their work.
2. Offer any and all of the constructive criticism you have; stay subtle and be concise with all your feedback.
3. Offer more positive feedback, as many good things as you can come up with.
By submerging the constructive criticism between positive feedback, you keep their hopes up while still thoroughly conveying weak spots in their work.
I hope this kinda made sense; it's a very self explanatory idea so I had trouble elaborating on it.
Answer:
Contents index glossary hearings world word side bars pictures and captions in labeled diagram
Explanation:
Answer:
He merely wanted to salvage something and was convinced that there was an innocent soul inside the burning hut. The Captain shot Eddie in the leg to keep him from running further into the hut and burning to death. ... Eddie then learns that the Captain had died that evening trying to help with their escape.
Explanation:
hope i helped
No, Romeo and Juliet is written from the third person omniscient point of view. Sorry if this was wrong! Have a great day :)
Answer: On the Road is a novel by Jack Kerouac based on the travels of Kerouac and his friends across the United States. and he lives his life against a backdrop of jazz, poetry, and drug use.
Explanation: