I need a Annotated Bibliography of my SWOT. Instructions in attachments
Thank you for your Discussion entry, SWOT, Mr. Vaughn You should now determine the priorities for correction in your community based on your SWOT. Then, you should look for locations that once had comparable problems but were able to find a solution. The citation plus description of the process used to solve the problem or otherwise minimize the amount of problem caused should be the subject of your annotations. Once you have found best practices for addressing the Weaknesses, move on to the Threats and find solutions to cite. From there move on to Opportunities and look for best practices for exploiting those opportunities. And, then if you still don’t have 25 references, move on to looking for best practices for making those Strengths, the good traits characteristic of your community, better by finding out what has worked elsewhere to make a good community Great. Please know that none of the references in the Annotated Bibliography should be about your jurisdiction, only best practices from elsewhere. Points will be deducted for posted assignments having less than 25 annotations.
The goal as you develop your Annotated Bibliography is for you to find solutions to the problems/challenges that have been proven to work in other jurisdictions. Therefore, the range of materials you will need to examine will include all relevant/verifiable sources that discuss what has worked. That includes press information, transcripts of meetings, professional reports (i.e., Army Corp of Engineers, etc.) where expertise has communicated strategies for addressing the challenges you are examining. Such constitutes “reports” and “credible web-based material” Re Guidance #4. To the degree that peer-reviewed journal articles actually reveal solutions, please feel free to cite. Identify documented action that has worked elsewhere. Remember, the information you are collecting must be about locations that had once experienced and then overcame similar challenges. Consequently, your task is to identify what works — cases where decision-makers were able to successfully address issues that currently plague your jurisdiction. That means that your Annotated Bibliography (AB) is to constitute a collection of potential options that have proven to work in locations other than your jurisdiction. The AB should make no reference to strategies already in place in your jurisdiction. You want to find out what has worked for other jurisdictions so that you can bring that information to your local officials in order to expand local options for action.
You should determine the priorities for correction in your community based on your SWOT.
Then, you should look for locations that once had comparable problems but
were able to find a solution. The citation plus description of the process
used to solve the problem or otherwise minimize the amount of problem
caused should be the subject of your annotations. Once you have found
best practices for addressing the Weaknesses, move on to
the Threats and find solutions to cite. From there move on to Opportunities
and look for best practices for exploiting those opportunities. And, then
if you still don’t have 25 references, move on to looking for best practices
for making those Strengths, the good traits characteristic of your community, better by
finding out what has worked elsewhere to make a good community Great.
Please Note: None of the references in the Annotated Bibliography
should be about your jurisdiction. The Annotated Bibliography should
only record best practices from elsewhere that may prove useful for your jurisdiction!
Any credible reference that reflects best practice will be accepted. So, you are not limited to peer
reviewed journals, Saints. Professional association publications that
address best practices as well as other possible sources will be accepted.
Points will be deducted for posted Annotated Bibliography entries
having less than 25 annotations.