Annotated Bibliography.

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DISCUSSIONOFTHEANNOTATEDBIBLIOGRAPHY.docx

DISCUSSION OF THE ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. What is an annotated bibliography definition?

An annotated bibliography provides a short paragraph of description/criticism/evaluation of each of your sources.

2. What does it mean to annotate?

To annotate is to add notes or comments to a text or something similar to provide explanation or criticism about a particular part of it. Such notes or comments are called annotations. Annotation can also refer to the act of annotating.

3. What is an annotated bibliography example?

An annotated bibliography is a list of citations to books, articles, and documents. Each citation is followed by a brief (usually about 150 words) descriptive and evaluative paragraph, the annotation. The purpose of the annotation is to inform the reader of the relevance, accuracy, and quality of the sources cited.

4. How do you write an annotation?

An annotation is a brief note following each citation listed on an annotated bibliography. The goal is to briefly summarize the source and/or explain why it is important for a topic. They are typically a single concise paragraph, but might be longer if you are summarizing and evaluating.

5. What are the two parts of an annotated bibliography?

An annotated bibliography entry consists of two components: the Citation and the Annotation.

6. Why do we annotate?

Annotating helps build a better understanding of texts and stories. When you annotate, you're forced to evaluate what a story is saying, creating a clear image. Annotating makes the reading more meaningful, and it helps you remember key information.

7. What goes in an annotated bibliography APA?

You will want to include:

1. The purpose of the work.

2. A summary of its content.

3. Information about the author(s)

4. For what type of audience the work is written.

5. Its relevance to the topic.

6. Any special or unique features about the material.