<p>Running head: ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY 1</p><p>Title in Full</p><p>Your Name</p><p>University Name</p><p>Author’s note: Program Name</p><p>Number and Name of Course</p><p>Instructor's Name</p><p>Date of Submission (e.g., October 12, 2011) ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY 2</p><p>Author, I. M. A. (Date of publication with the year first). Title of the source. Retrieved </p><p> from http://website.com</p><p>The annotations can be anywhere from one to three paragraphs, depending on your </p><p> assignment. Please read your assignment to determine the appropriate format for your </p><p> annotations. The first paragraph will be a summary of the source. If you include a second </p><p> paragraph, that will be an evaluation and analysis of the methods. If you include a third </p><p> paragraph, it will be an explanation of how the source will relate to your final project. </p><p>Purdue Online Writing Lab. (n.d.) Annotated bibliography samples. Retrieved from </p><p> http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/614/03/</p><p>The Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL), provides three sample annotations from three </p><p> different citation styles on the annotated bibliography samples page. The length and </p><p> depth of annotations will differ depending on the assignment. Students should read the </p><p> assignment to determine if they should be summarizing, analyzing, or relating it to their </p><p> project. </p>
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