DBQ D ocument B ased Q uestion 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Writing the Thesis Statement and DBQ Essay
Advertisements

Writing a DBQ.
AP World History Writing the DBQ Essay.
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
“How to Guide for Document Based Question Essays”
How to Write a Social Studies Essay
Chapter 4: Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence
Helpful Hints for Writing a DBQ
Five Parts Instructions/Directions Topic/Historical Context Task Documents Essay.
How do you appropriately write a thematic essay?.
DBQs What do I do?. Understand the Question Read the historical context carefully to understand what it’s all about. Read the DBQ question. In almost.
College Composition I: Unit 5 Seminar. Unit 5 Work  Unit 5 work due Tonight:  Reading  Seminar  Discussion  Project.
Your job will be to examine who or what the document is about, when and where it takes place and how the information that is being presented can be.
Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence
Mass Media English I Dr. Ruba Asbahi. Copyright 2008 PresentationFx.com | Redistribution Prohibited | Image © 2008 clix/sxc.hu | This text section may.
Homework G-1 due tomorrow Thematic Essay due Wednesday, November 25.
Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence and the Supporting Details of a Paragraph.
DBQ D ocument B ased Q uestion. Preview the DBQ 1.Read the Historical Context section. It gives a basic introduction to the DBQ. 2.Read the Task section.
AP World History Writing the Thesis Statement and DBQ Essay.
1/5 Topic: Immigration DBQ Aim: How do you write a DBQ? Do Now: Take a copy of the hand out and if you did not turn in a progress report before the break.
Let’s All Learn How to Write a DBQ What is a DBQ? Your job will be to examine who or what the document is about, when and where it takes place and how.
1. Introductory 2. Body Paragraph 1 3. Body Paragraph 2 4. Body Paragraph 3 5. Conclusion.
PowerPoint Presentation For Writing DBQs
Let’s All Learn How to Write a DBQ
Comparison Essay Structural Elements.
insightful, critical interpretation of a literary work
How to Write a Constructed and Visual Response for the EOC
Components of a DBQ Essay
Legislative Branch Essay Preparation
World War I World History
Please use this rubric as you work to make sure you have all the required parts of the essay. Name_____________________________ DBQ Essay Rubric/score.
Let’s All Learn How to Write a DBQ
DBQ Essay Outline Paragraph 1: Introduction Paragraph 2: Body including cited documents Paragraph 3: 2nd Body (next topic) including cited documents Paragraph.
PURPOSE OF THE INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH
Understanding Document-Based Questions
Writing a Thematic Essay
Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence
Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence
Let’s Give it A Try….
The three essays, thesis writing, and the WDBQ specifics…
English 1201 How to Write An Essay.
APUSH Writing Lab Students will display proper APUSH essay analysis and writing techniques via group-based study sessions. Objectives: Students will present.
General Rules and Reminders
Helpful Hints for Writing a DBQ
DBQs; document based question
Writing the Document Based Question (DBQ) Essay
Ms. Genovese Social Studies
Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence
Essay writing Key skills.
What does a Thesis Look Like?
Session 12 Writer’s Workshop
The Art of the DBQ Writing a Successful Essay.
General Rules and Reminders
Semester 1—DBQ ESSAY: NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION
General Rules and Reminders
5 Paragraph Essay Format
The Steps for Writing a DBQ
Identifying the Stated Main Idea Sentence
Review of Essay Structure
DBQ writing What to do with your DBQ?.
American Revolution DBQ Project
WRITING THE BODY.
The Document-Based Question
How do I incorporate the essential elements into my APUSH DBQs?
Writing the Thesis Statement and DBQ Essay
Talking About Writing Notes
How to Write a Character Analysis
Informative essay #1 By mr. faulkner.
Title Introduction Body Conclusion Preview of the essay
Aim: How do I ACE the SAQ (Short Answer Question)?
Presentation transcript:

DBQ D ocument B ased Q uestion 1

Preview the DBQ Read the Historical Context section. It gives a basic introduction to the DBQ. Read the Task section. It states the questions that must be answered. Number the Questions that must be answered in the essay. Circle the number of Documents needed to be included in the essay. 2

Scaffolding Questions (Documents) Steps to Writing a DBQ Scaffolding Questions (Documents) Outline Essay 3

Parts of the D.B.Q. Essay Question - This is the actual question that must be answered in essay format by using the documents and outside information. It contains separate smaller tasks that make it easier to answer. Scaffolding questions - These are questions related to the documents. Answering them helps students understand the primary sources related to the essay question. Every document will have at least one scaffolding question. Outline- This is the general framework for organizing the essay.

Scaffolding Questions All scaffolding questions must be answered first in order to help give insight into the essay question Carefully look at each scaffolding question. If it is some sort of text, read it carefully more than once. 5

Tips on Creating an Outline The outline is a blueprint for you essay. The outline should be a short description. Do not add too many details. 3. Follow standard outline form. 6

How to Organize Your Outline/Essay In your outline/essay, each task question gets its own body paragraph. (Min of 2) In your outline, each new paragraph has a new Roman Numeral. In your outline/essay, you should combine documents that have similar themes into one body paragraph. In your outline/essay, each body paragraph gets its own topic sentence to introduce the main idea of the paragraph. Every document should come with TOD! 7

Essay Writing in Social Studies All social studies essays have a minimum of four paragraphs. Most have more. These include an introduction, a body (made up of two or more paragraphs), and a conclusion.

Never use first person First person can be recognized by the words I, me, myself and mine. Be careful! There is also first person plural. This can be recognized by the words us, we, our, and ours. For example the phrase “I am going to write about …” must never appear in any essay Never use second person either Second person can be recognized by the words you, your and yours. For example the phrase “You will read about…” must never appear in any essay. Always write in third person unless your teacher tells you to do otherwise Third person can be recognized by the words he, she, him, her, his, hers, they, them, their, theirs and it. Example: “He believed that the North needed to enter the war in order to keep the Union together.” Using a person’s name is also writing in third person.

Examples: w/o (without), b/c (because). Also keep in mind that the final product of a D.B.Q. is a formal essay and so there should be no abbreviations. While it is fine to write “The U.S. Constitution…” It is not acceptable to use ‘text messaging’ types of spelling or shortened versions of other words. Examples: w/o (without), b/c (because). Although two or more documents should be discussed in a paragraph (as indicated in the outline), never discuss more than one document in a sentence.

The Essay Question Look at the tasks of the essay question. Determine how many parts it has. This will indicate how many paragraphs should be in the body of your essay. If the question requires three tasks, it is likely that there will be at least three paragraphs in the body.

If the essay question were the following: Explain some of the hardships that were faced by the settlers moving westward in the 1840’s. Be sure to include: Conditions related to the wagon trains Climate related difficulties Encounters with the American Indians It is likely that there will be three paragraphs in the body of the essay.

The Statement of Theme At this point it will be necessary to write a statement of theme. A statement of theme is a compound sentence that takes in all the major ideas of the essay. It appears anywhere in the first paragraph. Make sure that the statement of theme incorporates the concepts contained in the essay question. What appears in your introduction can be explored in the rest of the essay.

Using the example from the earlier slide a statement of theme might look like this: People moving west on the frontier in the 1840’s experienced many challenges that included difficulties with the wagons, weather, and the American Indians.

A sample outline might also look like this: Introduction A. Paraphrase historical context B. Task I C. Task II Body Task I- Topic Sentence\ 1. Example (outside information) 2. Document Support (if available) 3. Example (outside information) 4. Document Support (if available) B. Task II- Topic Sentence III. Conclusion A. Restate the main ideas of the essay B. General statement