A journal article critique ( any one of the three choices as given in the instructions space)

A journal article critique ( any one of the three choices as given in" rel="nofollow">in the in" rel="nofollow">instructions space) Order Description ANY ONE OF THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES. *Taylor, A. K., & Kowalski, P. (2012). Students’ misconceptions in" rel="nofollow">in psychology: How you ask matters . . . sometimes. Journal of the Scholarship of Teachin" rel="nofollow">ing and Learnin" rel="nofollow">ing, 12(3), 62-77. ERIC Number: EJ992117 *Vokey, J. R., & Read, J. D. (1985). Sublimin" rel="nofollow">inal messages: Between the devil and the media. American Psychologist, 40(11), 1231-1239. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.40.11.1231. * Benjamin" rel="nofollow">in, L. T. (2000). The psychology laboratory at the turn of the 20th century. American Psychologist, 55(3), 318-321. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.55.3.318 PLEASE USE , WHERE EVER POSSIBLE, 1-2 MORE EXTRA SOURCES TO SUPPORT YOUR VIEWS FROM OTHER RELATED ARTICLES. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- TEMPLATE OF THE PAPER *Title page *Body of the Text (new pages) NOTE: Your report must be in" rel="nofollow">in narrative form (not question-answer, question-answer). I. Research Question or Problem Ask yourself, “Is the question or problem clearly stated?” State the question or problem in" rel="nofollow">in your own words. II. Introduction The in" rel="nofollow">introduction of a research article presents an overview of the problem studied in" rel="nofollow">in the research. Ask yourself, “Is there a review of the literature related to the problem or question?” “How many references are cited?” Review and summarize the research (e.g., theories and previous research) in" rel="nofollow">in your own words. Cite all sources. III. Methodology The methods section of a research article should be detailed enough to permit another researcher to attempt to replicate the study. Ask yourself, “Does the researcher explain" rel="nofollow">in the methods used in" rel="nofollow">in the study?” “Who or what was the population studied?” “How were they selected?” “What did the participants do for the study?” “What in" rel="nofollow">instruments were used to gather data?” Paraphrase the methodology in" rel="nofollow">in your own words and cite from the article usin" rel="nofollow">ing APA Style. NOTE: Paraphrasin" rel="nofollow">ing in" rel="nofollow">involves restatin" rel="nofollow">ing another writer's text, explanation, argument, or narrative in" rel="nofollow">in your own words. Paraphrased material may be similar in" rel="nofollow">in length to the origin" rel="nofollow">inal text, but is substantially different in" rel="nofollow">in wordin" rel="nofollow">ing and sentence structure. A paraphrase is considered an in" rel="nofollow">indirect quote, so it does not require quotation marks. However, it must be attributed/cited to the origin" rel="nofollow">inal source. For purposes of this assignment, in" rel="nofollow">include page numbers, or, where applicable, paragraph citations. IV. Results The results section of a research article reports the raw data and statistical analysis obtain" rel="nofollow">ined in" rel="nofollow">in the study. Ask yourself, “Are the results clearly stated and understandable?” “Did the results answer the question or clarify the hypothesis?” “Are there tables or graphs?” Paraphrase the results in" rel="nofollow">in your own words and cite from the article usin" rel="nofollow">ing APA Style. V. Discussion/Conclusions The discussion section of a research article in" rel="nofollow">includes the conclusions drawn by the author(s). Ask yourself, “Are the results discussed?” “Are there suggestions for practical implications?” “Are there recommendations for further research?” Write your answers to these questions in" rel="nofollow">in your own words andcite from the article usin" rel="nofollow">ing APA Style. VI. References The reference section of a research article lists the bibliographic references for any studies cited. Ask yourself, “Were the references selected related to the author's research?” “Were the references cited within" rel="nofollow">in the body of the text?” “Were the references from the same source or were there a variety of sources?” “Were the references current or out-dated?” VII. Personal Reaction The personal reaction section is in" rel="nofollow">included here to enable you to critically analyze the knowledge you gain" rel="nofollow">ined about the topic research ed, about methodology, about APA Style, and about the meanin" rel="nofollow">ingfulness of the research. Ask yourself, “Was it well written and organized?”“What did I learn from readin" rel="nofollow">ing the article?”“What further questions did it generate?” "What are some of the limitations of the article?" State your reactions in" rel="nofollow">in your own words. NOTE: You may use Roman numerals (as above) or Arabic number (as in" rel="nofollow">in the sample critique). Your headin" rel="nofollow">ings should be identical to those in" rel="nofollow">in this template. Reference(s) (headin" rel="nofollow">ing is centred on a new page) Name(s) of the author(s) (i.e., last name and in" rel="nofollow">initials). Copyright/publishin" rel="nofollow">ing date. Title of article. Journal name, volume number, issue number (as applicable), page numbers, and doi.(If the doi is not available, please provide the URL). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Instructions-- 625-700 words (excludin" rel="nofollow">ing title page and reference pages), double-spaced, and word-processed, usin" rel="nofollow">ing standard Times New Roman 12-poin" rel="nofollow">int font, and 1-in" rel="nofollow">inch margin" rel="nofollow">ins all around. The paper must adhere to APA style (6th ed). you are required to format your assignments and cite your sources accordin" rel="nofollow">ing to APA Style. Note that dutiful citation of quotes and paraphrased in" rel="nofollow">information does not mean you can write a critique/paper by strin" rel="nofollow">ingin" rel="nofollow">ing together a series of direct quotes. While some direct quotin" rel="nofollow">ing is acceptable, you should always try to summarize or describe someone else's ideas in" rel="nofollow">in your own words (i.e., paraphrase). For the written assignments in" rel="nofollow">in this course, you must provide full citation in" rel="nofollow">information, in" rel="nofollow">includin" rel="nofollow">ing the page number/s (or paragraph number/s in" rel="nofollow">in the case of HTML documents) for all direct quotes and paraphrases. Where available, please use the PDF version of the referenced/cited article. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------