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How To Write Critical Bibliography

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Guide to Writing a Critical Bibliography

Contents
1.
2.
3.
4.
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Definition of a Critical Bibliography


Purpose
Characteristics
Identifying Perspective and Bias
Questions to Ask About:
o Fundamentals
o Methodology
o Application

1. Definition:
A critical bibliography (also called an annotated bibliography)

is a set of individual entries, generally of a page or less. Each entry identifies, briefly
summarizes, and critically evaluates a study, article, or book.
has an overall introduction to state the scope of your coverage and formulate the
question, problem, or concept your chosen material illuminates.
has an overall conclusion to sum up your conclusions about your chosen material.

2. Purpose:
The purpose of a critical bibliography is to provide the reader with the following information
about a set of studies, articles, or books:

The full bibliographic information in proper APA reference style (unless another
style is asked for)
A summary of the contents. In the case of a primary research study, the reader
wants to know:
o the purpose
o type of study
o methodology
o results
critical evaluation of the strengths, weaknesses, usefulness, and implications of
the material for a specified enquiry or field or course of study.

3. Characteristics:
An entry in a critical bibliography must be

precise
self-contained, and
informative

A critical bibliography is primarily a test of your critical appraisal skills: can you analyze the
central concepts and arguments of the material, as well as summarize its content,

and provide a concise evaluation of its relevance and usefulness? Readers who have no
prior knowledge of the material must come away from your review with a clear sense of the
contents and relevance of the article or book you've examined on their behalf.

4. Identifying Perspective and Bias:


There is no such thing as a totally objective writer. Everyone who writes has a particular
angle from which they approach their topic. Perhaps it's

a particular theoretical framework or model (e.g., a feminist model applied to


issues of gender inequity in medical research), or
a rhetorical purpose (e.g., a desire to persuade members of the general public to
improve their health behaviours), or
a practical perspective based on professional experience (e.g., the belief that one
approach to pain management is more effective than another), or
a bias that negatively affects your evaluation of the material (e.g., if the writer
believes the world is flat, can you trust her description of the solar system?).

As you write, you will need to be conscious of at least two frames of reference:
1. the framework and perspective of the author of the book or article. In the case of
an edited book, there is another level: the framework and perspective of the books
editor
2. your own framework and perspective, your reason for writing the critical
bibliography

5. Questions to Ask About:


Fundamentals

who is the audience this book or paper is written for?


what are the issues being addressed? Are they clearly formulated? Is the significance
(scope, severity, relevance) discussed?
what and how useful is the organization of the material?
is the material well or poorly written?
what is the author's perspective or bias?
what is the author's research perspective?
what is the author's theoretical framework? (e.g., psychoanalytic, cognitivebehavioral, feminist)
what is the relationship between the theoretical and research frameworks?

Methodology

how does the rhetoric/language address the particular audience of the book or
article?
what are the strengths and weaknesses of the arguments?
what kinds of evidence are used to support the arguments, and how is evidence
used? Are there alternative ways of arguing from the same material?
how would you counter or support the arguments?

in quantitative and qualitative research studies, how good is the fit between the
research design and the conceptualization of the problem? between the hypothesis
and the conclusions? what are the strengths and weaknesses of the study design
(classic considerations of population, intervention, and outcome)?

Application

what is the most effective application of the material?


what further issues are raised as a result of the book or article?
how does the book or article relate to the overall concerns of your course or field or
research question?
in what ways is the material useful for the theory or practice of your field?

2007, Dena Bain Taylor, PhD, University of Toronto


Toronto, Canada. All rights reserved

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