Reaction Paper 1
Reaction Paper 1
As part of the requirements of the course you are asked to prepare a 2 to 3 pages of reaction paper on
each of the sessions you went through the trimester. In this reaction paper, you are expected to do two
things: summarize the material and detail your reaction to it. The following pages explain both parts of a
report.
From session, identify the author and title of the work and include in parentheses the publisher and
publication date.
Condense the content of the session by highlighting its main points and key supporting points (Refer
to the session content).
Summarize the session so that the reader gets a general sense of all key aspects of the session.
Do not discuss in great detail any single aspect of the session, and do not neglect to mention other
equally important points.
Also, keep the summary objective and factual. Do not include in the first part of the paper your
personal reaction to the work; your subjective impression will form the basis of the second part of
your paper.
Focus on any or all of the following questions. Check with your instructor to see if s/he wants you to
emphasize specific points.
How are the session topics related to ideas and concerns discussed in the course for which you are
preparing the paper? For example, what points made in the course textbook, class discussions, or
lectures are treated more fully in the session?
How are the session topics related to problems in our present-day world?
How is the session topics related to your life, experiences, feelings and ideas? For instance, what
emotions did the session topics arouse in you?
Did the session topics increase your understanding of a particular issue? Did it change your
perspective in any way?
Evaluate the merit of the session topics: the importance of its points, its accuracy, completeness,
organization, and so on.
You should also indicate here whether or not you would recommend the session topics to others, and
why.
Here are some important elements to consider as you prepare a reaction paper:
Apply the four basic standards of effective writing (unity, support, coherence, and clear, error-free
sentences) when writing the report.
Make sure each major paragraph presents and then develops a single main point. For example, in the
sample report that follows, the first paragraph summarizes the book, and the three paragraphs that
follow detail three separate reactions of the student writer to the book. The student then closes the
report with a short concluding paragraph.
Support any general points you make or attitudes you express with specific reasons and details.
Statements such as "I agree with many ideas in this session" or "I found the session very interesting"
are meaningless without specific evidence that shows why you feel as you do. Look at the sample
report closely to see how the main point or topic sentence of each paragraph is developed by specific
supporting evidence.
Organize your material. Follow the basic plan of organization explained above: a summary of one or
more paragraphs, a reaction of two or more paragraphs, and a conclusion. Also, use transitions to
make the relationships among ideas in the paper clear.
Edit the paper carefully for errors in grammar, mechanics, punctuation, word use, and spelling.
Cite paraphrased or quoted material from the session you are writing about, or from any other
sessions, by using the appropriate documentation style. If you are unsure what documentation style
is required or recommended, ask your instructor.
You may use quotations in the summary and reaction parts of the paper, but do not rely on them too
much. Use them only to emphasize key ideas.
Publishing information can be incorporated parenthetically or at the bottom of the page in a footnote.
Consult with your instructor to determine what publishing information is necessary and where it
should be placed.
Here is a report written by a student in an introductory psychology course. Look at the paper closely to
see how it follows the guidelines for report writing described above.
Part 1: Summary
1: Summary
Dr. Viktor Frankl's book Man's Search for Meaning (New York:
Topic sentence for summary paragraph
Washington Square Press, 1966) is both an autobiographical
and loneliness that lead to apathy and despair. This need for
himself and other prisoners who were faced with the horrors of
within him even if he knew his wife was dead. Frankl's comrades
also had reasons to live that gave them strength. One had a
child waiting for him; another was a scientist who was working
and bear their fate with courage. He says that the words of
only for the prisoners but for all people. He has since had great
Part 2: Reaction One of my reactions to the book was the relationship I saw
Topic sentence for first reaction between the “Capos” and ideas about anxiety, standards, and
Topic sentence for second reaction I think that Frankl’s idea that meaning is the most important
People buy popular books that may help them become better
partners in bed, but that may not make them more sensitive to
cars, expensive clothes, and the like, they try to forget that their
Topic sentence for third reaction I have also found that Frankl’s idea that suffering can have
have a friend named Jim who was always poor and did not have
much as for her own children. What Jim did have, though, was
school, and then worked and went to school at the same time.
The fact that his life was hard seemed to make him bear down
neighborhood who for all the years I've known him has done
the past his problems must have become too much for him, and
to fight his troubles like Jim, but he didn't, and now he is a sad
persons who care about why they are alive, and who want to