User:Rlochma/sandbox

From Dr. Hildebrandt: This looks great, Riley. Keep it up!

SA #17


 * 1) The stub i chose was about neurologist Helen Bronte-Stewart. I chose this one because I think neuroscience is really interesting and wanted to learn about a neurologist so I chose a random person. Link- Helen Bronte-Stewart
 * 2) I know this is a stub because the article only has 2 sections, it is very short and it is missing a lot of information.
 * 3) This stub is missing a lot of information. It needs to have more information in the section about her personal life because it currently only has one sentence. It also needs to include more about her education and career because that section could contain a lot more information. I also think it should include what exactly she studies in neuroscience.
 * 4) There are references listed and the links to them did still work. All except for one of the links had to do with Stanford University.
 * 5) When comparing this stub to another well developed article they both contain her education and parts about her career. The parts that the stub is missing are, her clinical focus, her research, and more about her personal life.

SA #18


 * 1) Kitty Calavita. Link- Kitty Calavita
 * 2) Shangyang (rainbird). Link- Shangyang (rainbird)
 * 3) Manika greece. Link- Manika, Greece

SA #19


 * 1) Stub: Shangyang (rainbird)
 * 2) The guide that connects to the topic of my stub would be history. The guide for history says to avoid newspaper articles from the time period you are writing about, diaries or letters from people personally involved, or archival sources. Instead you should be using books written by historians, peer reviewed journal articles, or reputable newspaper articles synthesizing the history of a topic.
 * 3) The stub I chose is missing a lot of information. Right now the article only includes a brief description of the Shangyang. It needs the history of it and information about the Q, a more detailed description of it, more facts about it, etc.
 * 4) I was not able to find an article that was directly related to the Shangyang bird so I chose one that had to do with the traditional chinese culture.  https://web-p-ebscohost-com.libproxy.siue.edu/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=27&sid=e12dd5c1-61de-4d18-81ac-3826179e857e%40redis

SA #20

“Episode 119: One-Foot Bird.” Chinese Mythology Podcast, 21 Jan. 2019, https://chinesemythologypodcast.com/2019/01/21/episode-119-one-foot-bird/.

About: Shangyang (Rainbird). https://dbpedia.org/page/Shangyang_(rainbird). Accessed 23 June 2022.

themonsterblogofmonsters. “The Monster Blog of Monsters.” The Monster Blog of Monsters, https://themonsterblogofmonsters.tumblr.com/post/177919712143/shangyang-magical-birds-image-source-read. Accessed 23 June 2022.

SA #21

“Kitty Calavita.” AAPSS, 8 Aug. 2016, https://www.aapss.org/fellow/kitty-calavita/.

Calavita, Kitty 1944– | Encyclopedia.Com. https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/educational-magazines/calavita-kitty-1944. Accessed 24 June 2022.

SA #22

* Kitty Calavita

Kitty Calavita