1 / 14

NHD and C-span Projects

NHD and C-span Projects. Contract signed?. You need to have your contract signed. I want parents/guardians to know what we are doing and that you will be working on a major assignment that will be shared at the local, state, and possibly national level. What is your topic?.

kelly-weeks
Download Presentation

NHD and C-span Projects

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NHD and C-span Projects

  2. Contract signed? • You need to have your contract signed. I want parents/guardians to know what we are doing and that you will be working on a major assignment that will be shared at the local, state, and possibly national level.

  3. What is your topic? • It is time to decide on and narrow your topic. • Fill out worksheets to help organize your research and thoughts. • Check to make sure your topic fits within the theme and parameters of the contest. • Your topic focus cannot be too broad or too narrow, so ask for help.

  4. What sources have you found so far? • You need a wide variety of sources to show that you are providing a well-researched and balanced project.

  5. How do you annotate a source? • Annotating a source in MLA format

  6. How are you organizing your sources? • Livebindershttp://www.livebinders.com/welcome/home • Notecards • https://drive.google.com/a/staff.usd305.com/templates?q=bibliography&sort=hottest&view=public

  7. What types of sources should you be looking for? • Diaries • Government records (birth/death/marriage certificates, deeds, titles, licenses, passports) • Biographies • Encyclopedias • Autobiographies • Interviews with experts/scholars

  8. What types of sources should you be looking for (cont)? • Bill of sale of land, livestock, etc • Copy of a painting with narrative text • physical remains • Photographs • Interviews • Manuscripts • Newspapers/magazine articles

  9. What types of sources should you be looking for? • Letters • Music • Historical objects • Church records • Paintings • Drawings • Household items • Historic sites • Media documents

  10. How do you look for different types of sources? • Google scholar search • Ebsco host • CQ researcher • SIRS • Library data bases • Museum archives and holdings • Internet searches • Family items • City archives

  11. D.R.A.W. • D means you become active and DO something to gather information about your topic. • Go on a trip to a library or museum • Visit the actual site where your topic took place (if possible). • Search the internet for information • Find a related artifact.

  12. D.R.A.W. • R means that you should READ a variety of text materials about your topic. • Encyclopedias • Newspapers • History books • Biographies • Autobiographies • Diaries or journals • Historical documents

  13. D.R.A.W. • A means that you should ASK people about your topic. • Call the local historical society to gather information • Conduct an oral history interview • Call an actual participant in the event or a family member of a participant • Interview a college professor • Ask your relatives, friends, community members, neighbors

  14. D.R.A.W. • W means that you WATCH something that deals with your topic. • A documentary • A play • A reenactment • A news program • A movie

More Related