Latest comment: 1 year ago1 comment1 person in discussion
Hi @Giovannihbartlett, your chapter is looking great so far, is well-written, and it looks like you've made solid progress. I have made a large amount of primarily minor edits throughout, and I suggest that you continue to proofread and consider your use of first-person writing.
Although I like the breadth achieved and connection to real life in the case study examples you are using with Ted, I am not sure if the formatting works for a wiki page. It comes off a little jarring to have a section dedicated to Ted, as even though it is rich in applied theory, it splits your paragraphs between theory and narrative. Personally, I prefer the interwoven case study style that is planned for Motivation and emotion/Book/2023/Psychedelic treatment of anxiety. This is because using focus boxes make it clear to the reader what is fact (i.e. psych theory) and what is fiction (even if it is relevant). As a result, a reader can choose where to direct their attention more easily. It would also mean that you would not be dedicating as much of your page space to a case study. This could just be my opinion, but it might be useful to note! --U3213682 (discuss • contribs) 07:56, 27 September 2023 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 1 year ago1 comment1 person in discussion
The topic development submission has been reviewed according to the marking criteria. Written feedback is provided below, plus there is a general feedback page. Please also check the chapter's page history for editing changes made whilst reviewing this chapter plan. Responses to this feedback can be made by starting a new section below and/or contacting the reviewer. Topic development marks are available via UCLearn. Note that marks are based on what was available before the due date.
Promising development of key points for each section, with relevant citations
Avoid providing too much background information. Briefly summarise general concepts and provide internal wiki links to relevant book chapters and/or Wikipedia pages for further information. Then focus most of the content of this on directly answering the core question(s) posed by the chapter sub-title.
The most important material starts with Implications of Testosterone on Dominance - this is 2/3rds of the way through the chapter. So abbreviate everything beforehand and significantly expand this section.
Applications could be removed as a heading and these applications could be turned into case studies which are embedded in earlier sections
Criticisms heading should be removed and criticisms embedded elsewhere where relevant and summarised in the Conclusion
None summarised on user page with direct link(s) to evidence – this was covered in Tutorial 03. Looking ahead to the book chapter submission, see how to earn marks for social contributions.
Latest comment: 1 year ago1 comment1 person in discussion
This chapter has been reviewed according to the marking criteria. Written feedback is provided below, plus there is a general feedback page. Please also check the chapter's page history to check for editing changes made whilst reviewing through the chapter. Chapter marks will be available via UCLearn along with social contribution marks and feedback. Keep an eye on Announcements.
Overall, this is an excellent chapter. It successfully uses psychological theory and research to address a practical, real-world phenomenon or problem.
The chapter provides fascinating depth of theory and research. It lacks, however, in the quality of written expression with regard to grammar. Iron out this bug and this chapter demonstrates potential to write at a high professional academic standard.
Excellent use of academic, peer-reviewed citations to support claims
Move non-peer reviewed links into the external links sectiohttps://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/67/WikEd_logo.pngn
Well over the maximum word count. The content beyond 4,000 words has been ignored for marking purposes.
For additional feedback, see the following comments and these copyedits
Overall, the quality of written expression ranges from poor to excellent (overall, reasonably good)
Use 3rd person perspective (e.g., "it") rather than 1st (e.g., "we") or 2nd person (e.g., "you") perspective[1] in the main text, although 1st or 2nd person perspective can work well for case studies or feature boxes
Use double (not single) quotation marks "to introduce a word or phrase used as an ironic comment, as slang, or as an invented or coined expression" (APA 7th ed., 2020, p. 159)
Figures
Figures are well captioned; check and correct sequential numbering
Refer to each Figure at least once within the main text (e.g., see Figure 1)
Move non-peer-reviewed sources to the external links section
References use very good wiki style
Ideally, the formatting should be consistent for each reference
Very good use of embedded in-text interwiki links to Wikipedia articles. Adding more interwiki links for the first mention of key words and technical concepts would make the text even more interactive. See example.
No use of embedded in-text links to related book chapters. Embedding in-text links to related book chapters helps to integrate this chapter into the broader book project.
Very good use of image(s)
No use of table(s)
Very good use of feature box(es)
Excellent use of case studies or examples
No use of quiz(zes) and/or reflection question(s)
Very good use of interwiki links in the "See also" section
Latest comment: 1 year ago1 comment1 person in discussion
The accompanying multimedia presentation has been marked according to the marking criteria. Marks are available via the unit's UCLearn site. Written feedback is provided below, plus see the general feedback page. Responses to this feedback can be made by starting a new section below. If you would like further clarification about the marking or feedback, contact the unit convener.
The main areas for potential improvement are more directly addressing the relationship between T and D, providing a stronger review of theory and especially research, improving the Overview and Conclusion, and improving the meta-data and licensing
The presentation could be improved by displaying and narrating a slide with the same title and sub-title as the book chapter to help the viewer understand the purpose of the presentation
Engaging introduction to hook audience interest; make it more clear how it illustrates the relationship between T and D
Establish a clearer context for the presentation (it is not about TDS)
Consider asking focus questions that lead to take-away messages. This will help to focus and discipline the presentation.
Consider improving articulation to enhance the clarity of speech
The narration could benefit from further practice
Audio recording quality was very good
Review microphone set-up to achieve higher recording quality. Probably an on-board microphone was used (e.g., keyboard and/or mouse clicks were audible). Consider using an external microphone.
The narrated content is reasonably well matched to the target topic but lacked synthesis of the best psychological research about this topic
The chapter title is used, but the sub-title (or a shortened version of it) is not used, as the name of the presentation. The sub-title (or an abbreviation of the sub-title that fits within the 100 character limit) would help to clearly convey the purpose of the presentation.
Provide an informative description to help viewers decide whether they want to watch