1. Identify the conclusion and the premises, put argument in standard form, decide if the argument is deductive or non-deductive, determine whether the argument succeeds logically, if the argument succeeds logically assess whether the premises are true. For premises that are backed up by a sub argument, repeat all the steps for the sub arguments, and make a final judgment if the Argument is good or bad
2. Evidence is relevant because it backs up your claim. It is sufficient because it provides researched evidence and shows that it is supporting your argument.
3. Name the fallacy, define the fallacy and show how the definition fits the example in question.