Introduce the source concisely (aim for about 50 words).
Include the full name of the speaker(s), provide their most relevant credentials, and describe their rhetorical situation (genre, audience, and purpose).
Post a link to each source (I’m looking for 2 sources). Below the link for that source, write the author of the source, title of the source, and location of the source. (For example, his might look like: “Waking up Tomorrow” by John Jones in NYTimes, or “Fundamental Skills for Nurses” by Jana Pickett in Journal for Medicine.)
Include a brief summary for each source that highlights the most important things you learned about your topic from that source.
Then discuss how this source answers your questions and/or enhances your understanding in some way.
What aspect(s) of the problem/issue/topic does this source seem to focus on most? What kinds of information does this source not discuss?
What new, surprising, or unexpected information came up in this source?
Discuss their angle of vision, perspective, or agenda. Mention any biases that might impact the credibility of the source and discuss what aspect(s) of the problem/issue/topic does this source seem to focus on most? What kinds of information does this source not discuss?
Include one or two quotes that you find especially useful to your understanding of your topic. (Be careful to include quotes that ADD something, rather than repeat something you already know about your topic).
Sources:
https://www.jmir.org/2018/6/e219/
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1740144522000638
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