18 Page Sociology Paper Topic: Gender Discrimination Against Women In The Workplace
4/10/2021 Sample ASA Annotation - Annotated Bibliography - LibGuides at Eastern Nazarene College
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ENC Learning Commons / Annotated Bibliography / Sample ASA Annotation
Annotated Bibliography URL: https://libguides.enc.edu/writing_basics/annotatedbib
Definition and Descriptions
Evaluation Tools
Parts of an Annotation
Sample Annotations
Sample APA Annotation
Sample ASA Annotation
Sample Chicago Annotation
Sample MLA Annotation
American Sociological Association (ASA) Annotations
Creating an annotated bibliography
in ASA style
The Publication Manual of the American
Sociological Association is kept behind the IRC
Desk on the Ground Floor.
General guidelines
Some annotations are merely descriptive,
summarizing the authors' qualifications,
research methods, and arguments. Your
professor might also ask you to identify the
authors' theoretical frameworks.
Many annotations evaluate the quality of
scholarship in a book or article. You might want
to consider the logic of authors' arguments, and
the quality of their evidence. Your findings can
be positive, negative, or mixed.
Your professor might also want you to explain
why the source is relevant to your
assignment. Some instructors require you to
identify the authors' theoretical models as
well.
More Sample Annotations
The Memorial
University of
Newfoundland
presents these
examples of both descriptive and critical annotations.
Cornell University
Library offers these
examples of both APA and MLA format descriptive bibliographies.
Search this Guide Search
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Sample Page: ASA-formatted
annotated bibliography
Battle, Ken. 2007. “Child poverty: The evolution and
impact of child benefits.” Pp. 21-44 in A Question
of Commitment: Children's Rights in Canada, edited
by K. Covell and R. B. Howe. Waterloo, ON:
Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
Ken Battle draws on his research as an extensively-
published policy analyst, and a close study of some
government documents, to explain child benefits in
Canada. He outlines some fundamental assumptions
supporting the belief that all society members should
contribute to the upbringing of children. His comparison of
Canadian child poverty rates to those in other countries
provides a useful wake-up to anyone assuming Canadian
society is doing a good job of protecting children from
want. He pays particular attention to the National Child
Benefit (NCB), arguing that it did not deserve the criticism
it received from politicians and journalists. He outlines the
NCB’s development, costs, and benefits, including its dollar
contribution to a typical recipient’s income. He laments
that the Conservative government scaled back the program
in favour of the Universal Child Care Benefit (UCCB), and
clearly explains why it is inferior. However, Battle relies
too heavily on his own work; he is the sole or primary
author of almost half the sources in his bibliography. He
could make this work stronger by drawing from the
perspectives of others' analyses. However, Battle does offer
a valuable source for this essay, because the chapter
provides a concise overview of government-funded
assistance currently available to parents. This offers context
for analyzing the scope and financial reality of child
poverty in Canada.
Kerr, Don and Roderic Beaujot. 2003. “Child Poverty and
Family Structure in Canada, 1981-1997.” Journal of
Comparative Family Studies 34(3):321-335.
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Sociology professors Kerr and Beaujot analyze the
demographics of impoverished families. Drawing on data
from Canada’s annual Survey of Consumer Finances, the
authors consider whether each family had one or two
parents, the age of single parents, and the number of
children in each household. They analyze child poverty
rates in light of both these demographic factors and larger
economic issues. Kerr and Beaujot use this data to argue
that
Rules! rules! rules!
The Publication Manual of the American
Sociological Association (1997) states the
following formatting rules, but check your
course outline in case your professor has other
requirements!
All text should be double-spaced.
Reference list entries must have a
hanging indent (to do this in Microsoft
Word 2003, click Format, then Paragraph,
then Special, and choose Hanging).
There should be 1 1/4 inch margins on
each page.
Use 12 point Times Roman font, or a
similar serif font.
Start counting pages on the first page of
text, but numbers should only appear
from the second page onward (as 2,
etc.).
Each paragraph should be indented.
The reference list is alphabetical by
authors' last names.
When a work has more than one author, the
name of the first author is inverted (Lastname,
Firstname). The names of additional authors
are not inverted.
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Subjects: Business/Legal, Citations, Communications, How To.... Tags: bibliographies, citations, research