How to Give Good Feedback

Giving and receiving feedback is often a big part of learning how to write, but we're rarely ever taught how to give feedback. In this video, we look at a couple of viewer comments and talk about what makes for helpful and worthless feedback.
0:00 Introduction
2:04 Not-So-Good Feedback
7:16 Much Better Feedback
11:40 Conclusion

Пікірлер: 21

  • @ElliotBrownJingles
    @ElliotBrownJingles10 ай бұрын

    I have always found the information contained in these videos to be useful and engaging enough that I haven't noticed the music. The toaster - whose decal, brand, and colour may be of interest to some - has been consistently dispensing crispy toast. As a musician I had to learn early on that criticism often comes from people who don't appreciate what you are trying to do in the first place. I remember being alerted to this when someone explained to me that they had finally met someone who could play the blues better than I could. The part of this criticism that was news to me was that I was a blues player. If I had ever played any blues it was by accident and yet here was somebody judging my entire back catalogue from the perspective a blues critic. Now I make sure the critic understands what I am trying to do before I take his words to heart. Therefore, if I am right in assuming that the objective of this channel is to pass on helpful information about classical rhetoric to those wishing to improve their writing, the toaster, in a simple and effective manner, has performed its function.

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the kind--and wise words. I think that's a great perspective, especially when it comes to criticism in public spheres: in a controlled classroom or writing group setting, you'd hope that your "critics" can appreciate what you're trying to do, but anything goes in the wild--and most of the fauna have totally unrelated motives that skew the way they present feedback. But we carry on, toasting toast and playing the blues like nobody else 😆

  • @johnparnham5945
    @johnparnham59459 ай бұрын

    This is an excellent video. The attitudes put forward are constructive and helpful. This advice, if adhered to, should be known to all beta readers and critique partners, teachers and anyone who is asked to give feedback. Well done Professor Bashford.

  • @Aritul
    @AritulКүн бұрын

    This was a really helpful video because it gave me a clear idea of how to critique my tutor's work. I realized that I was focusing more on my preferences than on things that she could improve to make the work better.

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    Күн бұрын

    Glad to hear it!

  • @hilmimohammed7941
    @hilmimohammed79419 ай бұрын

    1. Be concise and don't include excess jargon or complaints and lamentations about wider society. 2. Speak in a likeable tone and offer a compliment so the creator is more likely to listen and consider your feedback. Don't have a go or attack the creator. 3. Use light-toned phrases like: may I suggest, I think it would be better if.. because etc 4. Don't ask the creator to tailor to your personal tastes so that only you'd like it e.g., music, genres 5. Explain why you think the feedback is worth considering, or the implications of the issue for you. 6. Say why you think it will be beneficial for the creator and the viewers. Great work Andrew, Keep up your good work.

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    9 ай бұрын

    Thanks--for the summary and kind words!

  • @weareone1575
    @weareone15759 ай бұрын

    So interestingly I have a friend who I often share my music with. I find his feedback to be generally quite helpful. Usually its technical, specific and involves things that are actionable. Occasionally he will comment on how he doesn’t like the aesthetic (too poppy or whatever). While sometimes this frustrates me because, as you said, it isn’t that productive towards achieving the vision, other times I find this kind of feedback to be helpful as well. I actually find that I agree with him and his pointing it out helps me realize that. Sometimes I am trying consciously to make something poppy, but other times I just fall into it, and these comments can help me realize that I’m not pushing myself hard enough to create the aesthetic vision I really want. I think the fact that he makes the effort to clearly state that it doesn’t align with his own aesthetic preference can be useful information, especially when it is made in a way that is explicitly distinct from technical considerations around craft.

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, that's a great insight--if the reviewer and the creator are both aware that they're working with aesthetic preference (instead of absolute truth), then it can be a helpful discussion, especially when it's attuned, like in your example, to pushing your aesthetic ideal and not falling into what's easy or familiar. Thanks!

  • @timi3630
    @timi363010 ай бұрын

    Dont let em get to ya Andrew. Love your vids.

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @user-dy5nl6fh5d
    @user-dy5nl6fh5d10 ай бұрын

    I would like to read some of your poems.

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    10 ай бұрын

    Me too 😆 I keep meaning to send things out for publication, but there's always something more urgent to do... Here's to not procrastinating lol!

  • @user-dy5nl6fh5d

    @user-dy5nl6fh5d

    10 ай бұрын

    Would you tell us how important or not is publishing our poems, thanks again. @@WritingwithAndrew

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    10 ай бұрын

    @@user-dy5nl6fh5d I think it really depends on how important it is to you, and there's a lot of value in a personal writing practice even if you never publish. In fact, one of my favorite poets, Gerard Manley Hopkins, never published anything--his work was only published by a friend after he died

  • @mikesmithz
    @mikesmithz10 ай бұрын

    The only feedback I have for you is pretty worthless as you have already made the change I wanted you to make. I watch each of your videos at least 2 times, the first time I view it normally on my tablet, the second time I play it as I drift off to sleep. I find I absorb more information if I'm receiving it whilst in-between being asleep and awake. Any way, the second time I play your videos the screen is off so I'm just listening to the audio....and the plinking plonky sound you used to have on your videos every time the skull spoke used to drive me insane! The sound was very distracting and it got to the point where I was focusing more on waiting for the plinky sound than on the words you spoke. Mercifully you have changed the sound to a far less distracting audio clip so it no longer bothers me. I imagine blind people would have been very distracted by that sound as they would have no idea why you kept randomly playing it. Any way, problem solved so I suppose this is garbage feedback lol. 😂

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    10 ай бұрын

    Total trash, but thanks anyway 😂 (Honestly, though, good to know the change is a change for the better!)

  • @thebchopob485
    @thebchopob48510 ай бұрын

    disagree entirely. good feedback engages me and expresses honest opinions succinctly. The first comment, if it were directed at me, would engage me since there's so much emotion in it. it might even make me angry, but if I don't take it personally, I can see that the video was completely ruined by the music for this viewer, thus effectively and succinctly communicating the importance of the issue. The second comment communicates the same information with more words and less emotion. This is the kinda feedback that I either 1. skip due to its fluff, or 2. read and then forget, because the commenter didn't properly express the importance of his feedback. I felt no emotion reading it, and it comes off as being a nitpick rather than a video-ruining issue. Obviously people are very prone to take criticism personally, so I can see why people value politeness in feedback. However, I genuinely wonder if polite or harsh criticism is more effective from a critic's standpoint. On the one hand, polite criticism is more likely to be ignored and forgotten. On the other, harsh criticism is likely to offend one's ego and cause a rejection of the feedback altogether (though it is less likely to be forgotten so perhaps a seed is planted).

  • @WritingwithAndrew

    @WritingwithAndrew

    10 ай бұрын

    "This response is foolish: it misses the point and dismisses the presenter's years of practical experience, pedagogical observations, and scholarly training, relying instead on a wrongheaded assumption that 'harsh' equals 'honest.' Disagreeing outright speaks more to hubris than to a genuine understanding of the ideas discussed here." It's not something I would ever say, but do you mean something like that? Don't misunderstand--tone is not the only issue. Make the second comment angrier and it's still more useful because it provides more useful information. The first comment is an expression of discontent; the second, an attempt to improve the work. In fact, just yesterday, I saw a video teaching visual artists how to make constructive critiques, and it covered very similar ground. It's not about protecting feelings (though protecting feelings isn't cheap!)--it's about giving creators actionable data they can use to refine their craft, and, independent of tone, the first comment I discussed is fundamentally deficient in that regard.

  • @noracola5285

    @noracola5285

    7 ай бұрын

    I'm more acclimated to toxicity too but I find it more instrumental in evaluating the relative utility of someone's opinions than actually improving my work.

  • @concertautist4474
    @concertautist44746 ай бұрын

    The demonic chanting is distracting. Particularly as I listen to these videos rather than watch them.