An Annotated Bibliography is a list of potential sources for your research topic, where each citation is accompanied by an annotation--a statement describing and evaluating each item, and how it relates to your topic.
Multiple Components Required:
- Full citation, formatted in the specified style (APA, MLA, Chicago, etc.)
A paragraph that summarizes the main points.
A paragraph that evaluates the accuracy and quality of the source.
A paragraph that explains how the information is useful or relevant to your topic.
This article talks about point a, point b, and point c. It summarizes the goal, problem, and solution relating to a specific project.
This article is peer-reviewed, showing it is a quality source and accurate because it was reviewed by other experts in the same field of study. If it is not peer-reviewed, discuss how you determined the author or sources was credible. Help can be found on the Evaluating Sources tab.
This article is useful and supports my thesis statement by showing evidence for my first supporting argument. My first supporting argument is... The supporting evidence in this article is... This paragraph should be 3-5 sentences long on average.
An Annotated Bibliography is NOT:
The Online Writing Lab (or OWL) at Purdue University has some excellent online information about such bibliographies. See Purdue Owl: Annotated Bibliography. You can use this site to get an overview of what an annotated bibliography is and how to write one yourself.
The Writing Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has a great handout with information on Annotated Bibliographies. See Annotated Bibliographies at UNC Chapel Hill.
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