This assignment help will assist you with your annotated bibliography assessment.
It's important to understand your assessment before you start. Please refer to your Course Outline and LearnOnline site for detailed information about the assessment requirements.
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An annotated bibliography is a summary of sources (e.g. journal articles, books or book chapters) addressing a research topic. |
Each source is listed as a separate entry including:
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Taking time to plan your search will save you time and help you find information more efficiently.
Essay question: "History teaches us that old media never dies... What dies are simply the tools we use to access media content—the 8-track, the Beta-Tape. These are what media scholars call delivery technologies.” (Henry Jenkins 2006, 13). Despite Jenkins's observation from 2006, we can also see how digital media has changed how, where, and by whom stories can be told. How have new media, technologies and practices impacted contemporary digital mediascapes? Drawing on the concepts discussed in the first part of this semester, use a case study of your choosing in your response. |
This assignment question has many different concepts that you need to research. You need to conduct separate searches for each of these concepts.
For example new media, impact and digital media have been taken from the above essay question to create a search strategy.
Try creating a table similar to the one below to brainstorm and keep track of alternative keywords and spellings for the key concepts in your assignment question.
Concept 1 new media |
Concept 2 impact |
Concept 3 digital media |
Internet social media virtual reality cybermedia |
effect influence consequences results repercussions |
digital story-telling digital storytelling digital landscape digital communication digital narratives |
Tip: As you search you may find more alternative words to include in your table.
Watch the Plan your search video
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Once you have identified your keywords and found alternative keywords, you need to connect these to put your search together.
Boolean | What it does | Example |
AND |
|
social media AND impact AND digital media |
OR |
|
digital media OR digital story-telling OR digital communication |
Remember to use "quotation marks" to keep phrases together and brackets () to keep alternative keywords together. Have a look at the example below:
("social media" OR Facebook) AND impact AND ("digital media" OR "digital story-telling" OR "digital communication") |
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Knowing where to search is just as important as knowing how to search. The following video will help you to understand why and when to use different search tools.
Video Length: 2 minutes 14 seconds
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Take a look at the following search examples to get you started:
“participatory culture”AND remix AND TikTok |
The Library Collection is a good place to start your search for scholarly material. You can use it to find eBooks, journal articles, reports, videos and more.
Select the image below to view the full example search.
Tip: Use filters on the left side of the results page to narrow results, e.g. filter by: peer reviewed, book chapters or publication date.
Want to know more?
Watch this short video about using the Library Collection (1:48)
Practise using the Library Collection with our Interactive Tutorial (15min)
Browse Library journals by topic using BrowZine
Databases are online collections of resources including articles, papers, book chapters and reports. Databases have advanced search options, helping to focus your search and find more relevant, scholarly references quickly.
Find videos and case studies
Find scholarly sources
Example ProQuest Social Sciences Premium collection search
Select the image below to view the full example search.
Tip: Select Anywhere except full text next to each search line for more precise results.
Want to know more?
Example Google Scholar search
Select the image below to view the full example search.
Tip: As you search the Library Collection, add, remove or introduce new concepts and synonyms (similar words) you discover to include in your searches for Google Scholar.
Want to know more?
Visit the library's Searching for your Literature Review guide for videos and tips.
Practise using Google Scholar with our Interactive Tutorial (10min)
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Once you've found some sources to use in your assignments, it's important to evaluate them for accuracy, credibility and relevance to your needs.
When evaluating information you can use the CRAAP test:
Currency | How current does the information need to be? Do you need to use information published in the last five years or are older, seminal works fine to use? |
Relevance | Does the information found answer your question? Do you understand the content and is it at the right level for your purpose? |
Authority | What are the author's qualifications? Are they linked to a particular organisation such as a university, research institute or government department? |
Accuracy | Is evidence given for the research undertaken? Can you verify the information presented by using other sources? Is there a bibliography or reference list given? |
Purpose | Is it trying to communicate research, persuade you or sell you something? Is it expressing an opinion, or is it balanced and objective? |
The following resources offer more information and tips on undertaking this key step:.
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Once you've selected and evaluated your sources, check out the video below to learn how to put an annotated bibliography together.
Use the UniSA Study Help links below to help you write and reference your assignment: