- Paragraph 1- Informative annotations sometimes read like straight summaries of the source material, but they often spend a little more time summarizing relevant information about the author or the work itself. (Approximately 50 words)
- Paragraph 2- Evaluative annotations don't just summarize. In addition to tackling the points addressed in summary annotations, evaluative annotations:
- evaluate the source or author critically (biases, lack of evidence, objective, etc.).
- show how the work may or may not be useful for a particular field of study or audience.
- explain how researching this material assisted your own project
Student examples:
Brazil: http://fulpisearch.blogspot.com/2012/03/research-articles.html
Caitlyn: http://cdesantisisearch.blogspot.com/2012/04/summaries-of-three-articles-along-with.html
Jessie: http://dumasisearch.blogspot.com/2012/03/research-article-summaries.html
Click the links below for professional examples.
OWL Purdue http://owl.english.purdue.edu/media/pdf/20090309032047_614.pdf
UNC Writing Center http://writingcenter.unc.edu/resources/handouts-demos/specific-writing-assignments/mla-examples
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