User talk:C4gw/sandbox

=C4 Milestone 2: Annotated Bibliography of Theta Criterion=

Administrative Communication
-C4gw (talk)  — Preceding unsigned comment added by C4gw (talk • contribs) 08:39, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
 * Sorry. On further inquiry, this shouldn't be the right place. Please go here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Theta_criterion


 * TA: books are fine as a source for citation.

— Preceding unsigned comment added by C4gw (talk • contribs) 05:39, 1 October 2014 (UTC)
 * APA style citation
 * TA: “Read abstract, section intro, and conclusion! The idea is when you do research on any topic, you broadly review/browse papers and select your references from maybe ten, 20, 50, etc. papers. Also try search function if pdf allows. This is a broad overview of the papers you need; it’s also common when you start editing you might find the references you picked up are not useful anymore and you need others. When RM grades Milestone 2, she will guide you on this.”

1. Compile an evaluative annotated bibliography of research that is relevant to your Wikipedia article. The bibliography should include at least 10 peer-reviewed articles, with 2 each from the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, and 2010-2014. For each article that you select, you should do the following:
 * Description:

(i) summarize the main arguments (2-3 sentences)

(ii) indicate the value and significance of the work relative to the topic of your Wikipedia project (2-3 sentences)

(iii) identify the point of view or perspective from which the work is written (1-2 sentences)

(iv) identify any possible shortcomings or bias in the work (1-2 sentences)

(v) give your own impression of the work (1-2 sentences)

2. Post the bibliography to the talk page of the article that your group is working on. Begin reading the sources.

3. Submit a pdf version of your bibliography to Connect. At the top of the page:

(i) identify your group number and topic;

(ii) list the group members alphabetically, along with their UBC student numbers.

Useful links:

http://help.library.ubc.ca/planning-your-research/how-to-write-an-annotated-bibliography

http://wiki.ubc.ca/Library:How_to_Write_an_Annotated_Bibliography