DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What...

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DBQ – Back to the drawing Board • What does your DBQ need to do? • What should my thesis have? • What should I do with the documents? • What should I do about outside information? • What about Contextualization / Synthesis?

Transcript of DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What...

Page 1: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

DBQ – Back to the drawing Board

• What does your DBQ need to do?• What should my thesis have?• What should I do with the documents?• What should I do about outside information?• What about Contextualization / Synthesis?

Page 2: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

What does my DBQ need to do?

• It’s a test question about 2 things:– 1. Your historical knowledge.– 2. Your ability to analyze historical documents.

• You need to show – 1. You understand the relevant history.– 2. You can apply the documents to the relevant

history. • If you do those 2 things, you’ll score well and

everything else is gravy.

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Let’s talk about the thesis…

• A separate, brief, introductory paragraph that makes it clear that – 1. You understand what the question is really

asking. (All of the parts)– 2. You have an understanding of the big ideas

that are relevant to this question. – 3. You have an answer; take a stand on the

question.

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What should I do with the documents?

• Analyze the document, don’t just describe it. • Analysis = Evidence + Context• The document is the evidence, your job is to provide the

context

• The context is how the document relates to your argument (thesis)

• Your analysis MUST include an explanation of how the document supports your thesis

• Your analysis should include: 1 of the following: Intended Audience, Purpose, Historical Context, Author’s Point of View

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What about Outside Information?

• Remember – It is a history test. You need to prove that you know some history.

• Show that you understand the big picture and can support the big picture with some specifics.

• You need at least 3 ideas / facts that could not just be taken from the provided information.

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Outside information (cont.)

• When analyzing documents, you explain how the documents relate to an important piece of outside information.

• When analyzing the speaker of documents, demonstrate that you know things about the speaker.

• Don’t just name drop / fact bomb. – Explain how the fact connects to thesis.

Page 7: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

What about Contextualization and Synthesis?

• These don’t matter if you haven’t done the other parts well. • If you do the other parts very well, these parts may have already

happened. • Remember You need to show

– 1. You understand the relevant history.– 2. You can apply the documents to the relevant history.

• Synthesis = Demonstrates understanding of the complexity of the issue. • Contextualization = Demonstrates that you understand where this

historical episode fits into the overall scope of US History – How is this episode similar / different to other things that have happened in US History.

Page 8: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

Example: The document you are given is an excerpt from the

Gettysburg Address. – Your analysis of the document includes a reference to the

House Divided speech. You address historical context by explaining why Lincoln said different things, at different times for different audiences / purposes.

– You have hit Outside Information, Context, Audience, Purpose AND contextualization

Page 9: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

What needs to be in a DBQ?

• Thesis that takes a stand. – Don’t be overly flowery– Don’t hesitate to underline your primary thesis

sentence.

• General knowledge about how the question relates to the overall time period, context

• Some specific Outside Knowledge that highlights the General Knowledge

• Demonstrated understanding of how the documents connect to the thesis

Page 10: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

DBQ Grading – New Style 7 Points

• 1 Point - Thesis • 0-4 Use of Docs• 1 Point - Broader Historical Context• 1 Point - Synthesis

Page 11: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

1 Point for Thesis

• Address all parts of the question. • Take a stand / make an argument. • Demonstrates understanding of what

question REALLY asks. • Do not JUST restate the question.

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4 Points – Use of Docs / Outside Info

• 3 Points – – Use 6 documents (all but 1)– Connect docs to thesis (analysis = evidence +

context)– For each one address one of the following – Audience, Purpose, Context, P.O.V.

• 1 More Point – Use of relevant OUTSIDE Information -

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1 Point - Contextualization

• Connects this argument, and documents to broader historical context of the time

Page 14: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

1 Point – Synthesis (Demonstrates complexity of understanding)

• Accounts for contradictory arguments • Connect to another historical period / episode

/ circumstance• Appropriately modifies the stated argument

or thesis

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DBQ 101 - Reading the Question1. Read and highlight the question:

1. Look for Question action words like agree / disagree – Why – Demonstrate – to what extent - evaluate – assess - discuss

2. Note any dates referenced in the question – What is going on at that time period? When is the date in relation to the big 12? –

3. Note any people / events / terms referenced in the question.2. Re-write the question in your own words focusing on “What is it really asking?”3. Blurb! Make a stream of consciousness list of ideas / terms / considerations that

pop into your head in relation to the question4. Go back and read the question again – does anything from your blurb list make

you re-consider what the question is all about?5. Now read the documents and ask yourself how the documents relate to the

items from your blurb / parts of the question

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1977The debate over the Alien and Sedition Acts of

1798 revealed bitter controversies on a number of issues. Discuss the issues involved and explain why these controversies developed.

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Using the documents • Remember – Analysis = Evidence + Context• YOUR JOB – Provide the context – Explain how the

evidence relates to the bigger picture• Crucial to address time / audience / purpose

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• Why do I ask you to SOAPSTone?– What does it mean to Analyze the Docs v. Describe them?– If analysis = evidence + context – then Speaker, Occasion, Audience, Purpose

are all the context…..– Who is saying something and WHEN matters.

• Example: A coach with 3 Superbowl rings makes a controversial call at the end of the game that results in a loss. V. A rookie head coach with a losing record makes the same call with the same results….

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• Contextualizing Doc References – You can assume the reader is familiar with them, but you should

not assume the reader has them memorized. – + Showing you understand why the SPEAKER is important is part

of your analysis….

You should refer to the documents in context.

Page 20: DBQ – Back to the drawing Board What does your DBQ need to do? What should my thesis have? What should I do with the documents? What should I do about.

1.1. Thomas Paine, Thomas Paine, in his pamphlet, in his pamphlet, Common SenseCommon Sense,, said: “………………….” said: “………………….”

2.2. Joe Smith, Joe Smith, a mid-Western delegate to a mid-Western delegate to the Republican convention in 1912the Republican convention in 1912, , agreed with…..agreed with…..

3.3. The The 1919cc historian, Frederick Jackson historian, Frederick Jackson TurnerTurner, felt that …………………. , felt that …………………. (Doc. E)(Doc. E)

NEVERNEVER begin with: In Document 3, begin with: In Document 3, ……

How to Reference a How to Reference a Document in Your EssayDocument in Your Essay

How to Reference a How to Reference a Document in Your EssayDocument in Your Essay

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DBQ – Document Red Flags

DBQ Document RED FLAGSOverquoting – You do not need a direct quote from the documents you use

Quotes you do use should be short and targetted. (Less than a line)

Using the documents just to describe. Not just what …. SO WHAT

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THE BIG BUT

• In most DBQs you are asked to make generalizations.

• Keep in mind that no generalization is perfect, you need to ID and address the big BUT…

• This is “Understanding the Complexity of the Issue”

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Common Mistakes • Discribing v. Analysing• IdentiFy Source’s – Context of who is saying It and why they would say that at

that time• The “why these controversies developed” part of the question• Ignoring chronology – Confuzing Ratification era Federalists v. Anti-Feduralists with Federalists v.

Dem-RepFederalists v. Antifederalists is SO 1789 …. Not appropriate in 1795

• If language is deliberately inflammatory … that matters– “Womanish attachment to France”– “Anglican, monarchical”• Hamilton document that criticized A/S is a big BUT • Slander v. Freedom of Press (do we know Zenger?)• Bipartisan v. Partisan