Format:
-
Initial Note: The
conclusion derived from your
Annotated Bibliography should serve as the starting point for your descriptions. Your introduction and any background sections should point you toward the thesis you developed in the Annotated Bibliography.
- Project
formatting:
- Document format:
Word (DOC or DOCX) only.
-
Layout: 1" margins with 1/2" paragraph indentation,
double-spaced, 12-point
Times Roman
or
Calibri font.
-
Note: On
older versions of Microsoft
Word, the default margins are 1.25" — you must
change this (from the "File" menu, select "Page Setup...").
- The top of your first page begins with a working
title followed
underneath by "Annotated Outline", your
name(s) in
alphabetical order, the
course number. Do
not use a separate title page.
- You
must explicitly mention
SIX or more of the
sources you used in your Annotated Bibliography. The purpose of this is to show me
how you will use these sources. You may (should!) mention
additional sources (gathered since your Annotated Bibliography was submitted).
All
sources you use must be properly cited in your outline. They must also be properly referenced at the end of your outline (properly alphabetized,
APA style).
- Note: You will lose 1/2 point for each reference from your bibliography, beyond half, not used in your outline.
- You must create
sections for your paper (see Project Component #3 from the Guidelines page — the page you came from to get here!). This constitutes the basic outline of your paper. Be sure to include any appropriate
sub-sections (e.g., if you have
Background section, you might have sub-sections for several election years, or sub-sections for several committees or congresses, or sub-sections for several presidential administrations or cabinet departments.
- Note: Section headings should be in
Bold type. Sub-section headings should
Italicized.
- For each section and sub-section of your outline, write a paragraph or more
describing and
summarizing that section or sub-section. Be sure to include properly cited discussions of the works that are important to these sections. In the long run, you will be glad you did this because a good annotated outline will give you a clear view of where your project is headed (and maybe more importantly, it will give you a chance to change direction where needed).
____________
Click here for a SAMPLE of what your Annotated
Outline should look like.
Helpful Links (but
don't forget that OURs requires a concluding paragraph, which is
different from the standard annotated bibliography):
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