Question detail
When writing critically, which of the following should be avoided?
Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.
At a glance
MCQ
Type
practice
Style
Topic
Formulate enquiry and argument
Question
- A. Using evidence to support claims
- B. Including personal biases without justification
- C. Analyzing different viewpoints
- D. Citing sources accurately
Answer
The correct answer is Including personal biases without justification.
Explanation
The correct option is Including personal biases without justification. Including personal biases without justification is correct because it directly matches the approved learning objective to write critically about geographical questions and issues. This belongs to Formulate enquiry and argument within Formulate enquiry and argument, so the answer must stay focused on the geographical process, evidence, place, or impact named by the curriculum. The other options are weaker because they move away from Formulate enquiry and argument, reverse the geographical relationship, or make a broader claim than the objective supports.
Common mistake
Misidentifying the critical stance
Students often write a descriptive paragraph and label it as a critical analysis, failing to evaluate evidence and consider alternative viewpoints.
To write critically, first describe the evidence, then assess its reliability, highlight biases, compare competing explanations, and conclude with a reasoned judgment that acknowledges uncertainty.
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