User:Gavinjarman/Evaluate an Article

Which article are you evaluating?
Betatetravirus

Why you have chosen this article to evaluate?
Chosen at random from C-Class Microbiology Articles.

Lead Section
The introductory sentence is clear and concise about the topic to be discussed. The lead does not describe the major sections that it will be discussing. The lead section includes information that is not explained in further detail later. The lead is overall concise without too many details.

Content
All information in the article is relevant to the topic. All information is up-to-date but brief in detail. Details missing for species assigned to this genus. Content does not include equity gaps or misrepresent marginalized groups.

Tone and Balance
The article is neutral and does not make any biased claims. The article is not persuasive of any viewpoints or positions.

Sources and References
All facts are cited by secondary sources from reliable databases and organizations. Links to sources are up-to-date and functional. Sources provide information cited in the article. There are not many sources, but the article is brief enough not to need more. I am sure more information is available on the topic but not present. There are only two neutral, unbiased sources in the article.

Organization and Quality
The article is well-written, clear, and concise. The article has no spelling or grammatical errors. The article is broken down into three major sections.

Images and Media
The article contains no images to show us the virus.

Talk Page Discussion
The article is part of two projects: WikiProject Viruses and WikiProject Microbiology. The article is rated as C-class and of Low-importance. The topic is discussed in general not specifically.

Overall Impressions
The article's topic seems bare and hardly addressed, but at the same time, its strength is its conciseness. The topic could be discussed in further detail with the addition of relevant source material assuming there is more information to present. The article is underdeveloped probably because of the prevalence of the topic in human life.