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What is an Annotated Bibliography? •Breaking it down: • Annotation: a summary or evaluation • Bibliography: a list of sources used in research1 •Annotated Bibliography: a short description, explanation, and/or evaluation of each source used in a research paper2,3 1. Geoff Stacks, Erin Karper, Dana Bisignani, and Allen Brizee, “Annotated Bibliographies,” Purdue Online Writing Lab, last modified March 10, 2013, https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/614/1/ 2. Ibid. 3. “Annotated Bibliographies,” The Writing Center at UNC-Chapel Hill, accessed April 9, 2016, http://writingcenter.unc.edu/handouts/annotated- bibliographies/ What does it consist of? •An annotation of a source should have at least some of these key elements: • Summary • Evaluation • Reflection4 •Which of these elements you include depends on the source and the assignment requirements; some annotations may only require a summary, for example5 123rf.com 4. Stacks, et al., “Annotated Bibliographies” 5. Ibid. SUMMARIZE The summary should focus on explaining the source through covering: • Main topics or arguments • Its purpose or application • Methods of data collection or investigation • Main conclusions6 6. Deborah Knott, “Writing an Annotated Bibliography,” Writing at the University of Toronto, accessed April 12, 2016, http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/advice/specific-types-of-writing/annotated-bibliography EVALUATE The next step you might include is an evaluation or critique of the source. Here, you can assess its: • Usefulness and originality • Methods and conclusions • Reliability and objectivity • Goal or purpose • Limitations7,8 123rf.com 7. Knott, “Writing an Annotated Bibliography” 8. “Annotated Bibliographies,” The Writing Center at UNC-Chapel Hill REFLECT It can also be important to reflect on a source’s relation to your own research. You may include: • How its ideas connect to your topic • How it influenced your thoughts and perceptions • How it helped shape your argument • How useful it was to your topic • How you utilized it in your writing • How it connects to your other sources9,10 9. Stacks, et al., “Annotated Bibliographies” 10. “Writing Annotated Bibliographies,” Temple University Writing Center, accessed April 12, 2016, http://www.temple.edu/writingctr/support-for-writers/documents/WritingAnnotatedBibliographies.pdf
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