PTSD IN SOLDIERS

What is it?

Simply, an annotated bibliography is an article summary. However, annotated bibliographies provide you with a wealth of information.

1. As you continue in your program, you will continue to conduct research. By doing annotations, you can easily group the research by topic/theme/etc.

2. By doing annotations, you can quickly find research that you may need for an assignment throughout your entire graduate program.

3. By doing annotations, you can begin to identify areas of interest, as well as lack of interest, to focus on for your final thesis paper.

4. By doing annotations, you can also begin to identify areas that are missing (i.e., gaps in the research) or under-researched.

An annotated bibliography is like a reference list “with benefits.” That is, you will format the resource reference in proper APA style. Then, below the reference you will write a summary of the resource. It is important to note that a reference list is ONLY needed with an annotated bibliography if you use resources in your summary that are different from the article being summarized.
An annotated bibliography is similar to a reference list, but it has additional features. You will format the resource reference in accordance with the APA style manual. Below the reference, you will write a brief synopsis of the resource you are referencing. In particular, it is vital to note that a reference list is only required with an annotated bibliography if the materials you utilise in your summary are distinct from those used in the article under consideration.

The following items should be incorporated into the summary from the Week 2 Article Analysis assignment:

What did the author(s) hope to discover (e.g., goals, objectives, purpose, hypothesis, research questions) was the focus of their research. Which results or discoveries did the author(s) truly come up with (e.g., findings, conclusions)?
The summary should draw upon the points used in the Week 2 Article Analysis assignment:

· What did the author(s) hope to find (e.g., goals, objective, purpose, hypothesis, research questions)? What did the author(s) actually find (e.g., results, discoveries)?

· What investigative method(s) (e.g., qualitative research study, quantitative research study, review of research) did the author(s) use?

· How were data compiled, analyzed, and interpreted (e.g., methodology)?

· As presented by the author(s) (e.g., discussion, conclusion), what do the results mean? What are the implications of the results?

· What limitations were identified?

In short, the summary should be comprehensive enough that anyone should be able to read it and understand the “point” of the research.

Requirements

You are to identify a topic of choice that is germane to your graduate program. Having identified one topic, you are then to find 5 scholarly research articles; these research articles should be current (i.e., within the past 5 years). You will write annotations for these 5 articles.

The annotated bibliography should be submi

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