Difference between revisions of "Category:Primary Reference"

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Throughout the SEBoK, Primary References are identified.
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A primary reference has been identified by the author team as a "key" reference, which is critically important to understanding a given subject.  Each article of the [[SEBoK Table of Contents|SEBoK]]  defines a set of 10 or fewer primary references.  The general concept for primary references is that if a SEBoK user were to read both the article on a subject along with the defined Primary References, he or she would have a firm grasp on the principle concepts relate to that subject.
  
A primary reference has been identified as the author team as a "key" reference, which is critically important to understanding a given topic.  Each article will define a set of 5-10 primary referencesThe general concept is that if a SEBoK user were to read the article on a topic along with the defined Primary References, he or she would have a firm grasp on the principle concepts relate to that article.
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Each primary reference article contains the complete bibliographic information for that reference and a listing of all of the articles that list that source as a primary referenceWhere possible, authors have provided an annotation, explaining how that reference specifically addresses a specific knowledge area or topic of the SEBoK. To provide feedback on a primary reference, please use the DISQUS feature for that primary reference.
  
The BKCASE project follows the ''Chicago Manual of Style'' (15th ed.) format for references and utilizes parenthetical citations. Guidance on formatting your references can be found in the BKCASE Reference Guidance.
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'''Note: The reference list is sorted alphabetically by title; "a", "an", and "the" ''are'' included in the alphabetization (i.e. "A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK)" would be listed under "A").'''
 
 
For each primary reference identified, authors must provide the following:
 
*Full bibliographic reference
 
*1-2 paragraph annotation (short description of the value of the material)
 

Latest revision as of 18:13, 26 April 2013

A primary reference has been identified by the author team as a "key" reference, which is critically important to understanding a given subject. Each article of the SEBoK defines a set of 10 or fewer primary references. The general concept for primary references is that if a SEBoK user were to read both the article on a subject along with the defined Primary References, he or she would have a firm grasp on the principle concepts relate to that subject.

Each primary reference article contains the complete bibliographic information for that reference and a listing of all of the articles that list that source as a primary reference. Where possible, authors have provided an annotation, explaining how that reference specifically addresses a specific knowledge area or topic of the SEBoK. To provide feedback on a primary reference, please use the DISQUS feature for that primary reference.

Note: The reference list is sorted alphabetically by title; "a", "an", and "the" are included in the alphabetization (i.e. "A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK)" would be listed under "A").

Pages in category "Primary Reference"

The following 275 pages are in this category, out of 275 total.

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