Order ID | 53563633773 |
Type | Essay |
Writer Level | Masters |
Style | APA |
Sources/References | 4 |
Perfect Number of Pages to Order | 5-10 Pages |
Annotated Bibliography Instructions
Assignment Instructions & Marking Schedule
Hi writer, please write an Annotated Bibliography (4000-word limit +/- 10%)
Included are:
Assignment scenario • The purpose of the annotated bibliography is to produce a report that will be a compendium of resources on Music and Dance (mostly Jazz music and tap dance &/or general dance movement). The annotated bibliography will include sources from chapters in books, and journal articles.
I have selected and attached seven journal articles and three book chapter references to be commented on (word count – 400 words each approx.).
Submit ten (10) Annotated Bibliographical references surveying the major literature published on Music (Jazz for the most part) and Dance (word count – 400 words each approx.).
Take a critical position mentioning both positive and negative aspects of the reference (it may have more of one than the other), and connecting the relevance of music &/or tap dance. The annotation should make sense to an informed reader and is more general than an abstract (which requires more detail about research design, statistical procedures, etc.).
ANNOTATION FORM
Topic: Feeling Movement – Music & Dance
Form No: of 10 (e.g.: 1 of 10)
NOTE: Leave the Form No. until all annotations are completed. Once annotations are finished, arrange by author’s last name and then number in sequence, also showing the total number of annotations. You will have 7 annotations so the first will be ‘1 of 7’, the second ‘2 of 7 and so on].
Reference: Do a full and correct APA reference for your publication, whether it be a journal article or book chapter.
Annotation:
[NOTE: In own words: approx. 300-400 words. Single space. This is not an abstract. Remember…to include a critique!
ANNOTATION FORM EXAMPLE:
Topic: Developments in Counselling Form
No: 1 of 5
Reference: Fiet, S.S., & Lloyd, A.P. (1990). A profession in search of professionals. Counsellor Education and Supervision, 29 (4), 216-219.
Annotation: (In own words): The authors argue that counselling has developed to the point where it meets the long-standing criteria for being called a profession. They identify, from the literature, three main characteristics of a profession: specialized training; ethical standards; and a strong identity with the field as a profession or vocation. An assessment of counselling in relation to these characteristics leads them to proclaim: “Counselling is a profession” (p. 218).
Having come to this conclusion, they move on to a related question: the extent to which people who call themselves counsellors act as professionals. They focus on being licensed and/or certificated (with implications for identifying with a code of ethics) and continuing education issues and consider that many counsellors fall short in these elements of professionalism. They conclude: “The genuine counselling profession is much smaller than is the general field of counselling that surrounds it” (p. 218).
They see this as the next major issue to be addressed with regard to the counselling profession. An interesting paper – though not as comprehensive as that of Ritchie in relation to judgment about counselling being a profession.