Annotated Bibliography of Comprehensive

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August 7, 2017
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August 7, 2017
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Annotated Bibliography of Comprehensive


By Week Six, you are to develop an annotated bibliography with 10 sources from the literature that will serve as the foundational support for your proposal. These sources must be academically sound and credible – noting that websites with unknown authorship such as Wikipedia are not considered academically sound literature sources. In developing your list of references, you will be expected to perform a comprehensive literature search using academic search engines (such as ABI/INFORM, JSTOR, and PROQUEST) for articles that inform your topic. Our university’s Gelman Library has links for the most frequently used databases.
When doing your literature search and writing your paper, it is imperative that you comply with all guidelines regarding academic integrity and appropriate citation and referencing of materials. Plagiarism has serious consequences, including failing the course and suspension.
You will post your annotated bibliography in Week Six in the designated discussion forum in the Discussion Board.
For each of the 10 references in your annotated bibliography, you should have a one-paragraph narrative that summarizes, in your own words, the information contained in the source as it relates to your proposal. For each reference, you should also include a second paragraph that critically appraises the value of the source. Here are just a few examples of the many ways you might think critically about the resources you identify:
• In what ways did it advance your learning? Did the author provide new, unique or creative ideas or was it just more of the same old stuff?
• What was the author’s agenda? Did he or she provide a balanced perspective?
• What was the purpose of the article? Was it intended to persuade you in some way or change your way of thinking?
• Was it consistent with the other resources you read or did it provide an opposing viewpoint or contradictory information?
• How objective and credible is the information provided?
Note: The references you include in your annotated bibliography do not constitute the final reference list for your proposal. Rather, consider them to comprise a preliminary list that will be expanded upon (or modified) as you continue work on your project.

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