• Reading List 
  •   The reading list is a bibliography or worked cited page of sources you researched. It contains the MLA citations for these sources. There will be two version of this list you will turn in. The first is a regular reading list. This is just a list of the MLA citations for your sources. The second version will be an annotated reading list. This version will be the same as the 1st version except the annotated reading list will contain three parts:   
  • 1. MLA citation 
  • 2. Summary of the text (2-4 sentences) 
  • 3. Analysis or response to the text (2-4 sentences)   
  • Requirements: • Eight total sources• Four scholarly (academic) sources• MLA format  We will discuss how to cite in MLA in in-class, but please refer to Purdue OWL if you have questions. You can also get the MLA citation from the Flipper library website. BE CAREFUL THOUGH! The citations aren’t always perfect. You should double check them.   
  •  Example entry:  Lamottt, Anne. “Shitty First Drafts.” Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. Anchor Books, 1995. Print.