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APPARTS

APPARTS . A quick and dirty method for analyzing primary source documents . Objectives . To define the different components of APPARTS To practice the skill of APPARTSing To consider how this activity might be useful in your own classroom. Common Core State Standards .

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APPARTS

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  1. APPARTS A quick and dirty method for analyzing primary source documents

  2. Objectives • To define the different components of APPARTS • To practice the skill of APPARTSing • To consider how this activity might be useful in your own classroom

  3. Common Core State Standards • CC Reading Standards: • Cite strong and thorough textual evidence to support analysis of what the text says explicitly as well as inferences drawn from the text… • …Provide an objective summary of the text. 7. Delineate and evaluate the reasoning in seminal U.S. texts, including the application of constitutional principals and use of legal reasoning and the premise, purposes, and arguments in works of public advocacy.

  4. Introduction and Acknowledgements • Activity borrowed from Matthew Ellington • About me 

  5. Supplies • You will need either a piece of paper and a pen or a word doc.

  6. What do you notice? What do you see?

  7. What do you notice? What do you see?

  8. What do you notice? What do you see?

  9. What do you notice? What do you see?

  10. Analysis Questions • Who created these woodcuts? How do you know? • What is their point of view? How do you know? • Where and when was this source produced? How might this effect the meaning of the source? • What do you know that would help you further understand the primary source? • For whom were the woodcuts created? How might this affect the reliability of the source? • Why were these woodcuts produced at the time they were produced? • What point is the Document trying to convey? • What inferences can you draw from this document? And ask yourself ‘so what’ in relation to that.

  11. APPARTS ! • Congratulations you just figured out how to analyze primary sources

  12. APPARTS • A = author – who is the speaker? • P = Place and time – When was this written/said. What else was going on? • P = Prior Knowledge – What else was going on? What other events are connected to this? • A = Audience – who is the intended audience? Who is being spoken to? • R = Reason – What is the purpose? Why was this said/written? • T = The Main Idea – Summarize the author’s point. What is this about? • S = Significance – Why is this important? What impact did it have?

  13. Let’s try it again • Read through the two lists • In your table group, APPARTS the documents

  14. 1993 DBQ • Individually, using your notes from APPARTSing the two lists, create a thesis statement that addresses the following prompt: • Although New England and the Chesapeake region were both settled by people of English origin, by 1700 the regions had evolved into two distinct societies. Why did this difference in development occur?

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