User:Jdempse1/sandbox

Jdempse1 (talk) 18:44, 4 March 2015 (UTC)

 Annotations 

1. "Julie Agoos." Brooklyn College. Brooklyn College Academics, n.d. Web. 04 Mar. 2015.

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This website is from a faculty page at Brooklyn College, which is one of the places that Julie Agoos worked as a professor of English. Not only does it delve a little deeper into analyzing and naming awards for few of her works, it also contains a compilation of Julie Agoos’ scholarly achievements and professional accomplishments. Both of these topics are either not intensely covered in her current Wikipedia page or are not mentioned at all. This website will be beneficial in giving Julie Agoos the recognition for all of her work on a very public scale, Wikipedia. The source also meets Wikipedia standards because it is a secondary source, published on a college website.

2. "Julie Agoos." Find The Data. N.p., n.d. Web. 04 Mar. 2015.

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This online article gives facts about Julie Agoos’ salary and employment. The information is also compared to other executive employees’ salaries in New York as well as other professors in the Brooklyn College Division of CUNY. There is currently no information on her Wikipedia page about her pay rate or position so this source provides this information about the listed topics, becoming an interesting addition to her page. This is also a reliable source under Wikipedia standards because it is a secondary source, published in a news outlet.

3. "Language and Space in Julie Agoos Poetics." Monday Morning Spotlight. Brooklyn College, 6 Oct. 2008. Web. 04 Mar. 2015.

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This is an online article published by a Brooklyn College newspaper that discusses why it is that Agoos writes poetry and why specifically she became involved at Brooklyn College. For her, poems begin with a sense of rhythm even before there are words. The article contains multiple quotes from Julie Agoos during a conducted interview that may be an interesting contribution to her Wikipedia page as a primary source. The article also talks about her personal opinion about her specific works and why she wrote them as well as her future plans to continue her lifelong dedication to poetry and her students. The source also meets Wikipedia standards because it is secondary source, published by a news outlet, but also contains some primary source quotes from Julie Agoos herself.