Annotated Bibliography?
2 months ago
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AnnotatedBibliographyinstructions.pdf
AnnotatedBibliographyinstructions.pdf
This week, you will submit an annotated bibliography.
Your annotated bibliography consists of four annotated sources; two for each side of the debatable topic. For each source, include:
● An APA style formatted entry for each source ● A summary: What is the main message of this source? ● Evaluation: Why is this a credible source? Why is this author credible? ● Relevance: How will this source contribute to your research? ● Quote: Write down a quote from this source that you plan to use in your
informative paper. ●
Informative Paper Annotated Bibliography
Criteri a
Ratings Pts
This criterio n is linked to a Learni ng Outco me Conten t
22.5 to >20.02 ptsExceeds ExpectationsFour appropriate sources are identified. Sources are highly relevant to the topic and add greatly to research potential. The writer makes minimal (if any) errors in APA style format. 20.02 to >17.78 ptsMeets ExpectationsFour appropriate sources are identified. Sources are relevant to the topic. The writer makes some errors in APA style format. 17.78 to >16.2 ptsApproaches ExpectationsFour sources are identified. One or more sources may not be relevant to the topic. The writer makes numerous errors in APA style format. 16.2 to >0 ptsDoes Not Meet ExpectationsFewer than four sources are identified. One or more sources are not relevant to the topic. APA style formatting is missing.
22.5 pts
This criterio n is linked to a Learni ng Outco me Annota tions
22.5 to >20.02 ptsExceeds ExpectationsAll main/critical points of the research study are included for each annotation. Annotations succinctly and comprehensively describe the source material. 20.02 to >17.78 ptsMeets ExpectationsMain/critical points of the source material are included but may be lacking in detail for each annotation. Most annotations are succinct and generally describe the source material. 17.78 to >16.2 ptsApproaches ExpectationsMain/critical points of the chosen sources lack detail. Some annotations generally describe the source material. 16.2 to >0 ptsDoes Not Meet ExpectationsMain/critical points of sources are absent or significantly lacking in detail. Some annotations may be missing.
22.5 pts
This criterio n is linked to a Learni ng Outco me Evaluat ion
22.5 to >20.02 ptsExceeds ExpectationsAn evaluation of each source clearly explains why the it was chosen and thoroughly identifies the relevance to the topic. 20.02 to >17.78 ptsMeets ExpectationsEvaluation generally explains why the sources were chosen and identifies their degree of relevance to the topic. 17.78 to >16.2 ptsApproaches ExpectationsEvaluation may fail to explain why sources were chosen or identify their degree of relevance to the topic. 16.2 to >0 ptsDoes Not Meet ExpectationsEvaluation neglects to explain why the sources were chosen or to identify their degree of relevance to the topic.
22.5 pts
This criterio n is linked to a Learni ng Outco me Quote
7.5 to >6.68 ptsExceeds ExpectationsA highly appropriate quote is identified for each source. 6.68 to >5.93 ptsMeets ExpectationsAn appropriate quote is identified for each source. 5.93 to >5.4 ptsApproaches ExpectationsQuotes are identified for each source. 5.4 to >0 ptsDoes Not Meet ExpectationsQuotes are missing for chosen sources.
7.5 pts
APA Quick Guide
References
* Some of the examples below are made up and others come from real sources. Scholarly Journal Article with a Data Object Identifier (DOI) Number: Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year of publication). Title of article: Capital letter also for
subtitle. Title of Journal, volume number(issue number), page range.
https://doi.org/000000/000000
Smith, J. A., Brown, R. W., & Rogers, M. (2012). How to create an APA reference
page. Writing Studio Journal, 22(1), 63-72. https://doi.org/10.1002/jia2.25146
Scholarly Journal Article without a Data Object Identifier (DOI) Number: Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Year of publication). Title of article: Capital letter also for
subtitle. Title of Journal, volume number(issue number), page range.
http://journalhomepage.com/full/url
Smith, J. A., Brown, R. W., & Rogers, M. (2012). How to create an APA reference
page: Examples for guidance. Writing Studio Journal, 22(1), 63-72.
https://www.ebscohost.org/stable/26537363
Website Article with Author(s):
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of publication). Title of article: Capital letter
also for
subtitle. Site Name. http://www.something.org-or-.gov-or-.edu/full/url
Smith, J. A., Brown, R. W., & Rogers, M. (2012, October 27). How to create an APA
reference page. Writing Studio.
http://writingstudio.edu/apa/how-to-create-an-apa-reference-page
* If there is no date provided, write n.d. in place of the year.
Website Article with a Group/Organization Author (like a university, official organization, government agency, or corporation):
Name of Organization or Corporation (Date of publication). Title of article: Capital
letter also for subtitle. http://www.something.org-or-.gov-or-.edu/full/url
National Institute of Mental Health (2016, February 12). Schizophrenia.
http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/schizophrenia/index.shtml
* If there is no date provided, write n.d. in place of the year. Book: Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of publication). Title of book: Capital letter also for
subtitle. Publisher.
Smith, J. A., Brown, R. W., & Rogers, M. (2012). Mastering APA style: Format, references,
and
citations. Cambridge University Press.
In-Text Citations
* Note: When incorporating secondary source material into an academic paper,
most of it should be paraphrased rather than quoted. Be choosy about when you
quote word-for-word from a source. A paraphrase is a restatement of someone
else’s ideas in your own words. Simply substituting a few words in the original
for synonyms will not do. When paraphrasing, make sure that the language and
sentence structure are truly your own.
FORMAT RULES
· For paraphrases, include the author(s) last name(s) and the year of
publication. For quotes, also add the page number. If no page number is
available, add the paragraph number. The word page is abbreviated as
“p.” The word paragraph is abbreviated as “para.”
· For a personal communication, such as an interview you conducted
or information you took from AI, include the name of the communicator
(such as the name of the interviewee or OpenAI), the phrase “personal
communication,” and the full date you obtained the information.
· For sources with 2 authors, always name both. For sources with 3
or more authors, use only the first author listed, followed by “et al.”
meaning “and others.”
· You may introduce the author(s) last name(s) either as a part of
your sentence or in parentheses at the end of the sentence.
· EVERY sentence that takes information from a source MUST
include a citation, even if you are paraphrasing the information.
EXAMPLES Paraphrase (1 or 2 authors): Blah blah blah (Smith & Brown, 2012).
According to Smith and Brown (2012), blah blah blah.
Smith and Brown (2012) suggest that blah blah blah.
Paraphrase (3 or more authors):
Blah blah blah (Gomez et al., 2018).
According to Gomez et al. (2018), blah blah blah.
Gomez et al. (2018) suggest that blah blah blah.
Paraphrase (personal communication):
Blah blah blah (OpenAI, personal communication, May 16, 2023).
When asked to explain the risk factors for type 2 diabetes mellitus, Open AI’s ChatGPT’s
response included blah blah blah (personal communication, May 16, 2023).
Direct Quote (1 or 2 authors):
A recent study finds that “blah blah blah” (Smith & Rogers, 2012, p. 23).
Smith and Rogers (2012) state, “blah blah blah” (p. 23).
According to Smith and Rogers (2012), “blah blah blah” (p. 23).
Direct Quote (3 or more authors):
A recent study finds that “blah blah blah” (Gomez et al., 2015, p. 17).
Gomez et al. (2015) state, “blah blah blah” (p. 17).
According to Gomez et al. (2015), “blah blah blah” (p. 17).
Direct Quote (personal communication):
“Blah blah blah” (OpenAI, personal communication, May 16, 2023).
When asked to explain the risk factors for type 2 diabetes mellitus, Open AI’s ChatGPT’s
response included “blah blah blah” (personal communication, May 16, 2023).