Writing An Annotated Bibliography: 1. Purposes
Writing An Annotated Bibliography: 1. Purposes
Writing An Annotated Bibliography: 1. Purposes
An annotated bibliography provides a brief overview of the available research on a topic. Each information source is
accompanied by a citation and is followed by a brief paragraph. In the paragraph there will be a short summary of
the research source and an evaluative comment on the source’s value and usefulness to the research project.
When you write an annotated bibliography, you will need to consider:
1. Purposes
2. Format
3. Writing style
4. Examples
1. Purposes
The task of compiling an annotated bibliography helps the researcher think about the relevance and quality of the
material on a topic. Does the information meet the requirements of the topic? Is the information from a reliable and
academically respected source?
2. Format
An annotated bibliography is formatted as a bibliography. The format should follow this order:
Source 1. Citation details (set out in the same style as a reference list item using APA6)
2. A short statement that explains the main focus or purpose of the work
Summary 3. A short summary of the theory, research findings or argument (e.g. intended audience, subjects
covered, major arguments supported, research methods, conclusions reached, special features)
4. Consideration of the usefulness and/or limitations of the text for your research (e.g. reliability of the
text, credibility of the author, poor features, left-out content, weaknesses in argument)
Evaluation 5. An evaluative comment on the work that may take into account how this work will fit into your
research on a topic (e.g. critical comment, critical reflection that describes the usefulness or relevance
of the information for your writing task).
3. Writing style
An annotated bibliography is a piece of formal academic writing and follows the general rules for all academic
writing:
Arrange in alphabetical order
Write in a SINGLE paragraph (usually about 150-200 words)
Write in full sentences using academic writing style
Use transition words (e.g. furthermore, moreover, however, therefore ...)
Be concise – mention only significant details in your summary
Use examples from other annotated bibliographies to guide and check your writing style
Do NOT repeat information (e.g. the title) that is already in your citation
Do NOT cross reference i.e. use any in-text references as you are only writing about a single text.
Adapted from University of New England (2019). Teaching and Learning Support (TaLS) – Fact Sheets. Retrieved from http://www.une.edu.au/current- 1
students/resources/academic-skills/fact-sheets
SNPG801_Autumn 2019 [annotated bibliography]
WRITING AN ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
When you compose your annotated bibliography, you will need to consider each part of the
bibliography. Sentence starters can help you to focus your thoughts on these questions.
McFarlane, J.K. (1973). Standards of care—what do we mean by care? Nursing Mirror. 143(23), 40–42.
2
The article examines the meaning of the word ‘care’ within a nursing context.
The responsibility of nurses to provide care is legitimised in numerous
documents, and the author goes on to identify key concepts related to nursing
care. In particular, these concepts include assisting, helping and giving a
service; offering this service to people who need help with daily living activities
3 and to others who are affected by health deviations or illness of some kind.
Moreover, the nurse’s caring role is legitimised by the patients. Finally, the
article concludes by relating how these concepts are put into operation by using
the steps of the nursing process—assessing, planning, implementing and 4
evaluating the patient’s need for nursing care. The main limitation of the article
is that all of the research was exclusively conducted in large city hospitals.
Therefore, while the article is useful for an analysis of nursing care, the
limitations of its research base will require some adaption to meet the needs of
5
this assignment that requires a commentary on services in both city and country
area hospitals. (172 words)
The start of each is underlined and shown by the arrow. The words in bold are transition words that will help you to connect your ideas in between sentences.
Adapted from University of New England (2019). Teaching and Learning Support (TaLS) – Fact Sheets. Retrieved from http://www.une.edu.au/current- 2
students/resources/academic-skills/fact-sheets
SNPG801_Autumn 2019 [annotated bibliography]