Bibliography

Martin Tucker Wednesday, 06 May 2020 08:38

An annotated bibliography is a list of links to books, articles, and documents. Each link that you meet is accompanied by a small paragraph that describes it. This is an annotation. Correctly compiled and prepared annotated bibliography informs readers about the accuracy and quality of quoted sources. (The difference between a simple bibliography and a bibliography with annotations is that the simple one contains only a list of sources, not a summary or evaluation.) Writing an annotated bibliography will help you find useful materials for your research project.

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2 parts: quoting annotations

Steps

1)Search and record quotes from books, magazines or other materials that you can use to write your topic. Your quotes will be displayed in the list of materials used by you. This is necessary for you in order to support your statements and ideas by referring to authoritative sources. Links are usually:

-Science books

-Scientific articles (in a newspaper or magazine, for example)

-Scientific Abstracts

-Internet sites

-Pictures or video

2) When referring to a book, magazine, or other document, use the appropriate (or designated) style. If you are doing work for a training course, check with your teacher what style he prefers. If you don’t know which style you should use, then you can use the most common types of citation: the Modern Language Association (MLA) provides a guide for the liberal arts or the American Psychological Association (APA) - for the social sciences.And there are other popular styles for publications:

-Chicago (English) or Turabian Style (English Turabian Style), for the publisher

-United Printing, for publishers

-Board of Scientific Editors, for exact sciences

3) Make sure the citation is formatted according to the style used. List the author (s); use only the full names of the books and articles to which you are sending; write the full names of the publishers; indicate the date of publication or the latest version of the material, if the source is a web page. A properly cited MLA source will look something like this:

4) Make the links in order. After all, you need some kind of system in the work, after all. Structured spelling of links will help readers to more easily perceive them, as well as look for sources if they have any questions. Check if your teacher prefers any particular method; maybe he uses one of the following methods to organize links:

-Alphabetical

-Chronological (either by publication date or by the time period of the subject of discussion, for example, era, decade, etc.)

-By subtopic

-By format (articles, books, media, websites, etc.)

-By language