create a complete Annotated Bibliography for 3 academic scholarly sources, which include your introduction and thesis, publication details, and the annotation (see below for examples of each component).
Scholarship means that the author has a Ph.D. or other terminal degree, the work appears in a multi-volumed, peer-reviewed journal, and has ample references at the end.
Good annotations
capture publication details, offer a student introduction and thesis, and a detailed reading of the source, covering the following:
Offers the student's introduction and thesis to the best extent s/he knows it at this point in time,
Summarizes key points, and identifies key terms (using quotation marks, and citing a page in parentheses);
Locates controversies or "problems" raised by the articles;
States whether the student agrees or disagrees and gives reasons;
Locates one or two quotations to be used in the final research project; and
Evaluates the ways in which this article is important and has helped the student to focus his/her understanding.