Blog 3B
Allie Winter
English 1010
Professor Marchant
September 18, 2015
The process of peer-review is the process in which people in your classes review your paper before you submit it for the final time. The process includes constructive criticism and feedback from someone other than yourself. When writing and reviewing a paper on your own you sometimes look over the mistakes you may have made, but this is where peer-review plays a big part in your paper. It allows the reader to get a new set of eyes on their paper so they can make it the best paper it can be and so that will hopefully give them a good grade on the paper.
When peer-reviews happen, the person reviewing has a chance to tell the writer what works with their paper and what doesn't work with their paper. This allows the writer to change things and make them better so that when they give it to the teacher for their final grade, it will most likely be their best work.
This is a vital process because without it your paper will probably not be your best work and the teacher will probably give you a bad grade on it. It allows the writer to get more eyes on the paper before the final submission. It also helps the person reviewing the paper because they might find stuff that is wrong in your paper, and go back and look at their paper and have the same thing wrong. It is basically a win-win situation when you look at it!
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