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Title: Thesis, Outline and Annotative Bibliography


1
Thesis, Outline and Annotative Bibliography
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Rules for Writing a Thesis Statement
  • It must be a complete sentence.
  • It can NOT be a questions
  • It should be provable with facts, anecdotes,
    stories, etc.
  • It needs to present you and your ideas.
  • Do NOT generalize.
  • Do NOT use first or second person pronouns.
  • Do NOT use clichés.
  • ex The best things since sliced bread.

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Step 1- Formulate your thesis.
  • Your thesis is a formal, exact statement of what
    your paper will be about. It will most likely
    evolve as you consider the information you have.
    Think about what you are trying to present and
    emphasize in your paper.

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  • Examples of Thesis Statements
  • TOPIC The Battle of Gettysburg
  • THESIS The Battle of Gettysburg changed the
    momentum of the Civil War.
  • TOPIC Mike Piazza
  • THESIS With his leadership skills, offensive
    output, and work ethic, Mike Piazza excels as the
    best Major League catcher in the history of
    baseball.

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Step 2- Develop your outline.
  • An outline is important because you will
    organize the notes from your sources based on the
    ideas in the working outline. The outline will
    map the body paragraphs of your paper. The
    introduction and conclusion will NOT be part of
    the outline.

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Model Outline (Double space all)
  • Thesis last sentence of introduction
  • I. First point
  • A. Supporting information to develop or
    expand on the point
  • 1. Fact to develop A
  • 2. Fact to develop B
  • B. Supporting Information
  • 1. Fact to develop A
  • 2. Fact to develop B
  • II. Second Point

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Annotative Bibliography
  • An annotated bibliography is a list of citations
    to books, articles, and documents. Each citation
    is followed by a brief descriptive and evaluative
    paragraph, the annotation. The purpose of the
    annotation is to inform the reader of the
    relevance, accuracy, and quality of the sources
    cited.

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Annotation Answers
  1. What is the main subject of the source?
  2. Who is the main audience for the source?
  3. Give a brief summary of the information.
  4. What special features can you point out about
    this source? Examples would be photographs,
    charts/tables of data, link to relate source,
    etc.

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Annotative Bibliography Example
  • Waite, Linda J., Frances Kobrin Goldscheider, and
    Christina Witsberger. "Nonfamily Living and the
    Erosion of Traditional Family Orientations Among
    Young Adults." American Sociological Review 51.4
    (1986) 541-554. Print.
  • The authors, researchers at the Rand Corporation
    and Brown University, use data from the National
    Longitudinal Surveys of Young Women and Young Men
    to test their hypothesis that nonfamily living by
    young adults alters their attitudes, values,
    plans, and expectations, moving them away from
    their belief in traditional sex roles. They find
    their hypothesis strongly supported in young
    females, while the effects were fewer in studies
    of young males. Increasing the time away from
    parents before marrying increased individualism,
    self-sufficiency, and changes in attitudes about
    families. In contrast, an earlier study by
    Williams cited below shows no significant gender
    differences in sex role attitudes as a result of
    nonfamily living.

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Another Example
  • Lamott, Anne. Bird by Bird Some Instructions on
    Writing and Life. New York Anchor Books, 1995.
    Print.
  • Lamott's book offers honest advice on the nature
    of a writing life, complete with its insecurities
    and failures. Taking a humorous approach to the
    realities of being a writer, the chapters in
    Lamott's book are wry and anecdotal and offer
    advice on everything from plot development to
    jealousy, from perfectionism to struggling with
    one's own internal critic. In the process, Lamott
    includes writing exercises designed to be both
    productive and fun.
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