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8.7: Keeping Track of Your Sources and Writing an Annotated Bibliography

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    20071
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    Keeping Track of Your Sources

    Through the process of research, it is easy to get lost in a sea of information. Here are some tips and tools that you can use throughout the stages of your research process to keep sources organized.

    Always keep a working digital  bibliography of the sources that you are considering or using. If you construct your Works Cited as you go along, you will save yourself a lot of time.

    As you find articles, keep them! Here are some ways that you can store articles that you find:

    1. Create a Google Doc or a Word file to keep track of the sources that you want to read. Copy and paste the full citation (many databases, like Academic Search Complete, create a Works Cited reference for you). Or, if you are using a source that you found via google, copy and paste the URL of the source (it will need to be cited properly by author name, article title, source, etc. if you use it in a paper).
    2. Import sources that you may want to use to Zotero, a free software tool that you can download to store, cite and organize potential sources.
    3. If you are searching in Academic Search Complete, Create a “Folder” in Academic Search Complete to save the articles that look interesting
    4. Emailing hyperlinks of web sources to yourself often seems like the easiest idea. However, be aware that if you email URLs of articles that you find in the library’s research databases, they will not open if you are not logged in to CSU’s library. Instead, email the citation (with article title, author name) to yourself so that you can go back and find the article later.
    5. Print. If you find an article that you are fairly sure will be useful, go ahead and print it out. You may want to have a folder dedicated to your research project where you keep print outs of all the articles you plan to use. You will end up saving yourself time if you add the Works Cited info in with all of your other sources.

    Components of an Annotated Bibliography

    An annotation often offers a summary of a source that you intend to use for a research project as well as some assessment of the source’s relevance to your project or quality and credibility. Here are the key components of a typical annotation:

    Works Cited Reference

    You will provide the full bibliographic reference for the source: author, title, source title, and other required information depending on the type of source. This will be formatted just as it would be in a typical Works Cited.

    Summary of the source

    • After the works cited reference, begin to discuss the source. Begin with a summary of the source.
    • At the very beginning of your summary, mention the title of the text you are summarizing, the name of the author, and the central point or argument of the text. Describe the key sections of the text and their corresponding main points. Try to avoid focusing on details; a summary covers the essential points.
    • Use signal phrases to refer to the author(s)
    • Always maintain a neutral tone and use the third-person point of view and present tense (i.e. Tompkins asserts…).
    • Keep the focus of the summary on the text, not on what you think of it, and try to put as most of the summary as you can in your own words. If you must use exact phrases from the source that you are summarizing, you must quote and cite them.
    • Check the Annotated Bibliography assignment sheet for additional content requirements. Instructors often require more than a simple summary of each source. Do you need to go beyond summarizing each source? Do you need to evaluate the source’s credibility or relevance? Do you need to offer an explanation of how you plan to integrate the source in your paper? Do you need to point out similarities or differences with other sources in the annotated bibliography? Any (or all) of those things may be required in an annotated bibliography, depending on how or if your instructor has designed this assignment as part of a larger research project. 

    Formatting

    Annotated bibliographies require formatting, which is different depending on what type of style guide you must adhere to: MLA, APA, CMS, etc. Be sure to check the formatting and style guidelines (resources abound online, including visual models) for your annotated bibliography assignment.

    The Annotated Bibliography Samples page on the Purdue OWL offers examples of general formatting guidelines for both an MLA and an APA Annotated Bibliography.

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    8.7 Keeping Track of Your Sources and Writing an Annotated Bibliography by Melanie Gagich & Emilie Zickel is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.


    8.7: Keeping Track of Your Sources and Writing an Annotated Bibliography is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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