User:Dguduru/sandbox
This is a user sandbox of Dguduru. You can use it for testing or practicing edits. This is not the sandbox where you should draft your assigned article for a dashboard.wikiedu.org course. To find the right sandbox for your assignment, visit your Dashboard course page and follow the Sandbox Draft link for your assigned article in the My Articles section. |
This is my mock article. Its going to be dope
Important Notice
[edit]- That was just a practice. There is nothing important here.
However it is important to know that too much water can kill you. Over hydrating can cause water intoxication, leading to death.[1]
References
[edit]- [Too Much Water]Strange but true drinking too much water can kill. Retrieved 2/26/2016.
Queer Object Annotated Bibliography
[edit]Margalit Fox, 2014, "Nancy Garden Dies at 76; Wrote Young-Adult Novel of Lesbians", The New York Times, April 8, sec. N.Y. / Region.[http://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/01/books/nancy-garden-dies-at-76-wrote-young-adult-novel-of-lesbians.html]
Nancy Garden, the author of my queer object, "Annie on My Mind", is described in this news article. The author goes into detail about Garden's life, and talks about the different books she has written. The main emphasis is on the homosexual literature Garden has put out, specifically "Annie on My Mind", and on how this literature was very influential to this day. This is a reliable source, within Wikipedia's description, since it is a secondary source published in a well respected news outlet. Also it's relevance is sound, since Nancy Garden is the author of the queer object I am researching.
Nancy Garden, 2011, "Annie on My Mind", Nancy Garden Author, Teacher, Speaker, April 8. [http://www.nancygarden.com/books/teens.html]
This information is on Nancy Garden's official website. Here we have a description of my queer object in her own words. It is quite a bare bones description of the book and the adversity it has faced in public libraries and school, but since it is written in Garden's own words it becomes a primary source perfect for reference. However since Wikipedia recommends against using only primary source information, I will only include the information in this source if it can be confirmed with secondary sources like my first news article. In addition, it is critically related to my object, considering it is the author talking about the very object itself, "Annie on My Mind".
Roger Sutton, 2013, "A Second Look: Annie on My Mind", The Horn Book, April 8. [http://www.hbook.com/2013/03/choosing-books/horn-book-magazine/a-second-look-annie-on-my-mind/]
A large amount of substantial information is given in this article on "Annie on My Mind". In addition to talking about the book itself, the author divulges into related events revolving around the release of the book. He also speaks of the effects it had on the LGBTQ community, as well as how they main characters of the book would probably react to the way things have advanced today. This article gives a lot of information that I need in order to substantiate my claims on the positive effects my object had on the queer community. It is also within the standards of Wiki sources, given that is a tertiary source written by an accredited author and doesn't exert bias.