Your name
Course & time [ex: HIST1111 –
Date
Model
for Annotated List [My Comments in
Boldface]
“Title Of Your First Google Page.” Comment on its contents and qualities. A short paragraph will do.[1] Place the footnote at the end of the comment. To enter a footnote, place your cursor where you want the number to appear, then go to the “insert” menu on the toolbar at the top of the page. It may show a “footnotes” commend, or it may show “reference” which will, in turn, give you access to footnotes. This probably will open a menu for footnote preferences. Select notes at the bottom of the page, numbering 1,2,3.... Just follow the prompts; the process is pretty simple . If you move any text that includes the footnote number, the software will automatically relocate the related note and adjust the numbering, if it is necessary.
“Title
Of Your Second Google Page” Comments as
above..[2]
Comments should emphasize content, but
you also may wish to take note of a well- or poorly-designed site presentation.
“Title”. Comment. [3] Follow
this pattern. Until you have completed all of the pertinent web sites on your
Google list.
“Title,” “Title,” “Title,” of several pages that were not pertinent to your topic. Comment briefly[4]. Explain that they were completely off the topic, dead links, or whatever. You can handle the m as a group. Individual comments—unless you want to make them—are not necessary.
Citation of a published source. Follow a standard citation style. Some simplified forms are demonstrated in the notes below. Comment on the printed source.[5]
Title of a second published source. Same as above.[6]
Paragraph
evaluating the internet as a resource for researching your particular topic. There is no “right” answer for this. Some people find good sources, some do not.
[1] http://a-s.clayton.edu/kemp/SYLLABUS/1111/1111campus/1111writing1.htm The
easiest way to do this is to go to the web page, click in the address window at
the top of the page to select the contents of the window, then copy the address
and paste it into your document. You can easily copy/paste this address to
another place in the document, if you decide to move it.
[2]http://a-s.clayton.edu/kemp/Special%20topics/internet_worksheeet.htm
. For
these examples, I will use the addresses
of some helpful web pages that you may want to see.
[3] http://a-s.clayton.edu/humanities/criteria/default.html.
This is a big site, mostly from the CCSU
English department.
[4]http://a-s.clayton.edu/kemp/Special%20topics/writing_essays.htm
http://a-s.clayton.edu/kemp/Special%20topics/format_checklist.htm
http://a-s.clayton.edu/kemp/Special%20topics/criteria.htm
http://a-s.clayton.edu/kemp/Special%20topics/about_plagiarism.htm
For this
assignment, because these addresses are so long, please put each address on a
new line [hit <enter>] if you have a series of them in one footnote.
[5] Author’s name. Title of Book. Place published: Publisher, copyright date.
[6] Author’s Name. “Title Of
The Article” Title of Publication.
Vol.: issue number [if available, Date of Publication, pages used. --OR--
Author’s Name. “Chapter Title of a Book”.
Title of Book. Place Published: Publisher, copyright. Observe the punctuation,
use of italics, etc. and copy the pattern.
If you have any uncertainty