Talk:Resource-Constrained Critical Path Method

From apppm
Revision as of 14:13, 24 February 2019 by Gustav Josephsen (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Feedback on Abstract:

Text clarity Good
Language Good
Description of the tool/theory/concept Good
Purpose explanation Good
Title of the Wiki Good
Relevance to curriculum Relevant
References Good


Feedback 1 | Reviewer name: Gustav Josephsen s154318

Question 1 · TEXT

Quality of the summary:

Does the summary make the key focus, insights and/or contribution of the article clear?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 1

The summary is short and clear and introduces the reader to the topic quickly and structured. Abstract should reflect the entire article, so maybe include some of the key points/learnings in the abstract.

Question 2 · TEXT

Structure and logic of the article:

Is the argument clear?

Is there a logical flow to the article?

Does one part build upon the other?

Is the article consistent in its argument and free of contradictions?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 2

The logic through the article is very well written and goes thorough through the different aspect of CPM. Some of the parts e.g. “How to use the Critical Path Method” is a bit confusing structurally. There is a lot of images, formulas and calculation in one long thread. It’s easy understandable, but you just lose the overview during the reading.

Question 3 · TEXT

Grammar and style:

Is the writing free of grammatical and spelling errors?

Is the language precise without unnecessary fill words?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 3

The use of language is academic and emphasizes the points made in the text. Easy to read. Few to no mistakes. No real improvements.

Question 4 · TEXT

Figures and tables:

Are figures and tables clear?

Do they summarize the key points of the article in a meaningful way?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 4

The table used visualizes the topic well and is easy to understand. I assume that the tables and models are self-made, but maybe include that or refer to the source where from you have your inspiration, so the reader knows you are the author :).

Question 5 · TEXT

Interest and relevance:

Is the article of high practical and / or academic relevance?

Is it made clear in the article why / how it is relevant?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 5

The article is highly relevant to project management, and the article underlines why the function of a CPM can be useful for an organization. Only improvement could be a clear connection between CPM and ‘project, program and portfolio management’, in order to meet with the curriculum.

Question 6 · TEXT

Depth of treatment:

Is the article interesting for a practitioner or academic to read?

Does it make a significant contribution beyond a cursory web search?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 6

The topic is relevant and really goes into the depth of CPM. Only the part where project management is described may not be directly relevant to the topic. It is linked to the topic, but project management may not be included in the article.

Question 7 · TEXT

Annotated bibliography:

Does the article properly cite and acknowledge previous work?

Does it briefly summarize the key references at the end of the article?

Is it based on empirical data instead of opinion?

What would you suggest to improve?

Answer 7

Spot on, no improvements. The bibliography is very thoroughly constructed.

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox