Policemen of the World ~ Thesis and Outline

Title: Policemen of the World ~ Thesis and Outline
 
Introduction and thesis statement on the significance of the current role of the US military, as exemplified in the two (2) real-life international incidents that you have researched.
YOU FILL IN THE HIGHLIGHTED PARTS (BUT DON’T LEAVE THE HIGHLIGHTING, PLEASE).
 
“Title”
 

  1. Introduction and Thesis Statement (Introduction is optional for the Week 7 Assignment)

 

  1. International events involving the US military
  2. International Event Involving the US Military (2012-2018) # 1:

 

  1. Name and date international event # 1
  2. Name of the post-Civil War foreign policy that event # 1 can be traced back to.

 

  1. International Event Involving the US Military (2012-2018) # 2:

 

  1. Name and date the event # 2.
  2. Name of the post-Civil War foreign policy that event # 2 can be traced back to.

III. Aspects of US history since 1865 that have led to the US rise as a world super power policeman

  1. Aspect of US History # 1 that has led to the US rise as world police (1865-2018)

 

  1. Aspect of US History # 2 that has led to the US rise as world police (1865-2018)

 

  1. Aspect of US History # 3 that has led to the US rise as world police (1865-2018)
  2. International incidents since World War II where America has taken on a policing role AND the driving forces that fueled international policy decisions involving the international incidents (Consider treaties, exit strategies, elections, wars, etc.).

 

  1. A. America as World Police: International Incident # 1 (1945-2018)

 

  1. Name and date of international incident # 1
  2. Name of driving force that fueled the international policy decisions related to international incident # 1

 

  1. America as World Police: International Incident # 2 (1945-2018)
  2. Name and date of international incident # 2
  3. Name of driving force that fueled the international policy decisions related to international incident # 2
  4. America as World Police: International Incident # 3 (1945-2018)
  5. Name and date of international incident # 3
  6. Name of driving force that fueled the international policy decisions related to international incident # 3
  7. Conclusion

 

  1. References (3-5 in APA format)

 
 
 
 

Drowsiness Detection Using EEG, Heart Rate Variability, and Eye Movements

Drowsiness Detection Using EEG, Heart Rate Variability, and Eye Movements
Outline
INTRODUCTION

  • This segment delves into giving a sufficient background information of the topic study, purpose of study and objectives of the study.
  • Drowsiness is a systemic aspect that comes about as a characteristic of reduced or low metabolic activities of the body [1].
  • Ideally, experts postulate that drowsiness is an almost involuntary outcome of the body caused by a combination of neurological, metabolic and systemic factors.
  • Drowsiness can result at any point in time depending on the articulation of neurological, metabolic and systemic processes. According to well-documented studies, drowsiness characterizes as mild sleep or a state of in and out of sleep [2].
  • The focus of the study will be to appraise Drowsiness Detection Using EEG, Heart Rate Variability, and Eye Movements

Background Information

  • This segment will cover a concise and precise preamble of facts and information related to the research topic
  • A justification of the research study will be provided and supported using key facts such as statistics, retrospective and perspective studies and evidence-based research

Problem Statement

  • A brief statement of the research problem or focus will be provided to elaborate the objectives of the study
  • Set objectives are provided to mitigate or bridge in the problem gap identified.

BODY

  • This segment will include the literature review, analysis from studies and research and relevant discussions
  • It is prudent to appreciate the fact that several demerits associate with drowsiness.
  • Notably, the occurrence of drowsiness during life activities such as driving, working on machinery or other duties that require undivided attention form the premises of accidents and casualties.

Literature Review

  • The provisions of this segment primarily review other research and scholarly studies done in line with the research focus (Drowsiness detection….)
  • The scholarly resources used align to the objectives of the research and problem statement.
  • Several scholars, explicitly confirm that drowsiness and fatigue are mainly the reasons associated to accidents since they collectively reduce the attention and reaction capability of a driver [2].
  • Focus on drowsiness detection and fatigue among drivers is a viable research area. Evidence-based studies show that EEG, Heart rate variability and eye movements are correlative factors linked to drowsiness and will be key parameters of the study [3].
  • As an intervention strategy, it is relevant that the drowsiness detection study and research approaches bear regulatory and ethical considerations. Notably, beneficence and policy adherence will form the basis of regulatory and ethical considerations in dealing with drowsiness detection among drivers and other relevant subjects.

Results

  • This section forms the information hub of the research done through data mining from studies and research work
  • The results are presented using percentiles, tables and graphs.

Discussion

  • The provisions of this section delve into analyzing and explaining the results presented in the preceding segment.
  • The segment also delves into discussing about ethical considerations associated to the research topic
  • Relevant take away, recommendations and call to action are discussed in this section with regards to the research topic

CONCLUSION

  • The paper will conclude with a preamble and a take away from the discussions and findings made
  • It is relevant to appreciate that understanding and enumerating drowsiness detection will provide potent assistance not just to drivers but also other personnel who conduct attention-guided duties such as surgical doctors, chemical engineers, and advanced care nurses among others [2].
  • It is sensible to acknowledge that this drowsiness detection approach bears health costs. The health costs include EEG, Cardio analysis and optic studies, all of which are cost bound.
  • However, it is imperative that the intervention be conducted as it bears far more benefits than costs.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
References
[1]D. Malimath and K. Jain, “Driver Drowsiness Detection System”, Bonfring International Journal of Software Engineering and Soft Computing, vol. 6, no., pp. 58-63, 2016.
[2] He, “Drowsiness Detection and Management”, Journal of Ergonomics, vol. 03, no. 02, 2013.
[3]L. Joseph, “Arduino based real time driver drowsiness detection and mobile alert system using bluetooth”, International Journal Of Engineering And Computer Science, 2016.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

English 220 Spring 2018 -Creative Response/Experiential Learning: The Other

English 220
Spring 2018
Creative Response/Experiential Learning: The Other
 
Consider: We have begun to examine the plight of the Other/Outsider: an individual who is perceived by the dominant group as not belonging, and/or being different in some fundamental way.
 
In order to gain a more nuanced perception of the plight and experiences of the Other/Outsider, you will place yourself in an environment where you are the Other/Outsider (an environment where you may be considered different or not belonging). There are several ways to do this; I am happy to discuss your ideas on an individual basis (in OH or via email). Remember, being the Other/Outsider does not necessarily mean that you are the numerical minority.
 
Basically, you will take yourself on a self-designed “field trip” to a place that you have never been before, or to an event/happening in which you may be perceived as an Other/Outsider.  It must be somewhere that you would not usually go to, or an event that is new to you. It cannot be a specific place that is the same as other places you have been (for example, you can’t go and visit the UTC mall in La Jolla when you’ve been to other malls somewhere else UNLESS you can prove in your response that you went there to interact with a culture that is fundamentally different to yours, nor can you watch a movie that you’ve never seen before).
 
You can find out about different free or low-cost events by looking in free newspapers/magazines around town or going on the internet to San Diego sites such as signonsandiego.com (go to the Entertainment section).  Or, you can keep your eyes open for flyers, posters, etc. There are many Multi-cultural events happening on a weekly basis here at SDSU; most of them are free!
 
Once there, make sure you respect any rules/traditions that this place has (or event entails) so that you don’t offend anyone. Also, please do not put yourself (or others) in any danger—if you feel unsafe at any time, leave immediately and/or seek assistance.
 
Some examples include (but are not limited to):
¯ an open mic or storytelling event on campus, at a café or bar
¯ a book/author reading in a bookstore
¯ a public event (like a fair or festival of some type)
¯ a club/campus organization’s event or meeting
¯ a museum you’ve never visited
¯ a social protest event
¯ a different religious service than what you are familiar with (e.g. if you’re Christian, visit a Jewish Synagogue, if you do not have a faith practice, visit any church, etc.)
¯ a restaurant with food/culture you’ve never been exposed to –you’d have to taste the food to get the full experience
¯ a part of San Diego you have never spent time in (e.g. City Heights, Del Mar, the Border, etc.)
¯ a show or play you’ve never seen before IF you don’t usually go to these things
¯ trying or watching a sport you’ve never played before
¯ somewhere that fits this description outside of San Diego (i.e. if you plan to be out of town in the next few weeks and can do this assignment about the place you visit)
 
Compose: You will be a sort of mini-anthropologist when you visit a specific locale, or attend an event.  Somehow, take notes about the new environment or event.  Notice physical features, cultural customs, people themselves, the general atmosphere.  Soak it all in, including (and most importantly) how you feel (honestly) about being an Other/Outsider.
Use these research notes to compose a creative narrative (a story) that synthesizes your experience, in detail. Consider how Mary Shelley portrayed the Monster’s ‘adolescent-to-adult’ experiences (Chs XI-XVI). Use this as your mentor text.
 
Organize the narrative chronologically and use literary devices and tools (e.g. imagery, metaphor/simile, symbolism, allusion, etc.) to bring your story to life. Lastly, once you’ve detailed the experience, explore critically the implications of your experience as an Other/Outsider (i.e. What did you learn about yourself as the Other/Outsider and the dominant group at the place or event? What did you learn about the overall plight/experience of the Other/Outsider?)
 
Important dates:
2/1: Exploring stylistic approaches to this assignment (“Stealing like an Artist”)
2/27: Creative Response due in class (no exceptions)
 
Additional Logistics:

  • Responses must be typed (3-5 pgs), rendered in MLA format, submitted in hardcopy. (*Emailed submissions may be accepted in the case of a serious emergency, with sufficient proof of circumstances.)
  • Consider treating this as more than just a school assignment; allow yourself to be open-minded and curious.
  • Though you may have already been to a place, event, etc. where you felt like the Other/Outsider, you may not use this as the basis for your response; your “field trip” must be a completely new experience.
  • I am not requiring any proof of your attendance at a place or event (e.g. a photo, program, artifact, etc.), but please use the honor system. DO NOT fabricate attendance at an event or place. If fabrication is suspected (and proven after due process), you will receive a 0 for the assignment.

 
Grading (Total, 100 pts):
 

Narrative (Story is detailed & compelling; significant effort has been demonstrated.) 20 pts
Creativity (Story demonstrates effective use of literary devices and tools) 20 pts
Reflection (Story reflects detailed/thoughtful perceptions/experiences of Other/Outsider) 40 pts
Clarity (Story is organized; transitions are smooth and ideas flow logically) 10 pts
Grammar, MLA (Grammatical mistakes are minimal; story is structured in compliance with MLA format) 10 pts

 

What do you think about using small area studies based on large Medicare databases, such as the one presented here, to identify outliers?

Read Case Study 1: “Case 7: Small Area Variations (included)
 
Read the case below and respond to the discussion questions that follow. Each Case Study must be at least 1,000 words, cite at least 2 peer-reviewed journal articles in addition to the course textbook, and include biblical integration. Each Case Study must be double-spaced, follow current APA format, and include a title page and a reference page. The word count does not include the title page and the reference page.
 
Case 7 Small Area Variations
BACKGROUND
One of the ways to examine the efficiency and efficacy of different approached to medical care is to study variations in the types of care delivered in different area and then compare the outcomes.  The Dartmouth Atlas Working Group at Dartmouth Medical School uses Medicare data to conduct this type of “small are analysis.”
In 2006, the group reported that residents of Elyria, Ohio, received angioplasties at four times the national average.  Angioplasty is an invasive, nonsurgical procedure widely utilized for treating heart attacks and alleviating symptoms of heart disease.  It Is also used in cases of severe heart disease in hopes of possibly preventing future heart attacks.  The procedure involves pushing a collapsed balloon into the coronary artery and then expanding the balloon to press plaque against the arterial wall.  Often a stent is left behind in an effort to keep the artery open.  Other approaches to heart disease include drug therapy, lifestyle changes, and coronary artery bypass grafts.  The latter procedure requires open heart surgery.
Elyria has a population 54,533 (2010 census) and is the county seat of Lorain County.  In 2003, the rate of angioplasties in Elyria was 42 procedures per 1,000 Medicare enrollees.  By comparison, the rate for all of Ohio that year was 13.5, and the national rate was 11.3.  All but 2 of the 35 cardiologists in Elyria at the time belonged to the North Ohio Heart Center, which relied heavily on angioplasties.  The center performed 3.400 angioplasties in 2004 (Abelson, 2006c).
There is considerable controversy about different treatment options for blocked coronary arteries.  Some experts, according to an August 2006 New York Times article on the Dartmouth findings, “say that they are concerned that Elyria is an example, albeit an extreme one, of how medical decisions in this country can be influenced by financial incentives and professional training more than solid evidence of what works best for a particular person” (Abelson, 2006c).
According to medical historian Dr. David S. Jones, neither angioplasty nor coronary bypass surgery have been shown to prolong life except in cases of severe disease.  Risks associated with bypass surgery include infections and brain damage resulting in memory loss and cognitive impairment.  One of the concerns with angioplasty is that most heart attacks stem from tiny, often invisible lesions, and angioplasties tend to target larger lesions that show up on angiograms.  He argues for a greater focus on prevention through medicines and life-style change (Park, 2013).
Angioplasty and coronary bypass surgery are highly profitable, and together they make up a $100 billion a year industry in the United States.  At the time of the Dartmouth study, Medicare was paying Elyria’s community hospital $11,000 for angioplasty with a coated stent, and the cardiologist performing the procedure received about $800.  Bypasses, however, were performed by surgeons from the Cleveland Clinic who had privileges at the community hospital.  Those surgeons received up to $2,000 per operation, and the hospital would receive up to $25,000.
 
OUTCOMES
The founder and president of the North Ohio Heart Center responded to the Dartmouth findings by telling the New York Times that the center had good results with its patients and attributed the high use of angioplasty to early diagnostic interventions and aggressive treatment of coronary heart disease and to concerns about patient safety.  Because of safety concerns, the center treats many of its patients in stages, doing more than one admission and procedure.  Other cardiologists might perform multiple procedures at the same time.  Thirty-one percent of Elyria center’s patients underwent multiple admissions and procedures, about three times the rate in Cleveland.  Insurers report that the hospital’s results are good, and UnitedHealth has names it a center of excellence for heart care.
 
Discussion Questions

  1. What do you think about using small area studies based on large Medicare databases, such as the one presented here, to identify outliers?
  2. Salaried cardiologists at Kaiser Permanente in northern Ohio used drugs more often and performed cardiac procedures at slightly below national rate. What role might different financial incentives be playing here?
  3. If you were Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield Ohio, what studies would you conduct to attempt to explain and/or deal with these striking local difference in treatments and costs?

 

Modes of Reasoning 1770 Techniques of Persuasion Critical Essay

York University
Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies
Modes of Reasoning 1770
Techniques of Persuasion
Critical Essay
Due Feb 27, 2018
This assignment is a version of the Argumentation Exercise; Writing the
Dialogue, found on page 230 of the textbook. We have now acquired the
skills necessary to evaluate extended arguments. That is, we are going
to take our understanding of argument structure (soundness, cogency and
fallacies), and apply that understanding to arguments embedded in longer
passages. Examine the dialogues on copyright in Modules 1 through 10.
Assume Peter and Jean have developed the analysis you have done on the
Copyright and Piracy Dialogues in your group work submissions. Write the
next two pages of their dialogue incorporating this analysis. Make sure they
engage on one or more of the significant issues in this. Analyze your dialogue
to show what you have done in terms of the content of the discussion and
the argumentation moves. The assignment should be uploaded onto Moodle
by 23:55 on Feb 27, 2018.
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A Short Guide to Writing History Essays

THE HISTORY STUDENT’S HANDBOOK
A Short Guide to Writing History Essays
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: The Pre-Writing Process
Finding a Topic
Formulating Research Questions
Finding Sources
Evaluating Printed and Internet Sources
Reading and Note Taking
Composing a Thesis Statement
Preparing a Proposal
Assembling Notes and Preparing an Outline
Part II: The Writing Process
Audience, Voice and Tense
The Introduction
The Body
Using Quotations Effectively
Reference Notes and Introducing Sources
The Conclusion
Plagiarism
Rewriting and Proofreading
Part III: Book Reviews and Document Analyses
The Art of Criticism
The Introduction
The Body
The Conclusion
Quotations and Referencing
Part IV: Style and Referencing Guide
Presentation Format
Grammar and Style
Common Grammar and Punctuation Mistakes
Notes and the Bibliography
Proper Note Format
Proper Bibliographical Format
Annotated Bibliographies
Further Resources
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Introduction
As history is a discipline based on interpretation, debate, analysis, and synthesis, history
essays are more than narrative accounts of the past. The purpose of a history essay is to
communicate useful conclusions in a logical, lucid, purposeful, and persuasive manner.
History essays that are mere narratives of historical events, without being analytical are,
therefore, of limited value. Analytical essays are also called argumentative ones, because
you are trying (which is what essayer means in French) to convince the reader of your
point of view. The argument developed throughout the paper must be persuasive, which
means that it is supported with evidence and analysis. This is not the same as an argument
that is merely asserted. Argument that is asserted – though often written using confident
language – lacks evidence, logical progression, and analysis. In order to make your
argument as objective and persuasive as possible, use counter-arguments and counterevidence
to show why your idea must be accepted as the more correct one.
Historical Perspective
Making a strong argument also means paying careful attention to historical perspective.
No matter what historians choose to research, be it politics, diplomacy, economics,
society, or culture, our principal task is to understand the historical context of the issue at
hand. It is impossible, for example, to explain royal power in the seventeenth century
without also explaining the beliefs, rules, and customs governing that society. It would
not make sense to critique a seventeenth-century government on the grounds that it did
not afford its citizens democratic rights, because the notion of democracy was not
established until much later. These types of arguments are anachronistic, which means
imposing modern beliefs on earlier times. This approach is not historical, as individuals
from history cannot be expected to appreciate ideas that did not exist in their time.
Historical perspective also means not making inappropriate, overly moralistic arguments.
We are often troubled by the prevalence of violence in history and are shocked to learn
about abuses of what we today call human rights. While statements about the particular
cruelty, immorality, or injustice of an individual or state are not necessarily out of place
in historical essays, we must be careful to take into account the prevailing norms and
practices of the period in question. Your job is to explain how and why an event
occurred, not to criticize the fact that it occurred. It would be inappropriate, for example,
to argue that women should not have been accused of witchcraft in the seventeenth
century or that capital punishment should not have happened in the eighteenth century,
because the simple fact is that these events did happen. Objectively explaining events that
seem amoral to you does not mean that you morally agree with what happened, but rather
shows that you can understand these events in their proper, historical context.
1
Part I: The Pre-Writing Process
Writing a history paper requires much more than just sitting down at a computer. It
involves a lot of early planning, detailed research, critical thinking, skilled organization,
and careful writing and rewriting. The first rule of essay writing is to start early so that
you have plenty of time to follow these steps. An essay that is hastily conceived,
researched, organized, or written will inevitably be lacking in essential components,
which will always result in a lower grade.
Finding a Topic
Sometimes your professor will assign a specific topic for investigation and provide the
research materials that are necessary to complete the paper. More commonly, you will be
required to select your own subject and then conduct a search for materials. The topic
must be one that is interesting to you. A topic that engages your interest will be more
enjoyable to research and write about, will result in more valuable findings, and will
sustain your enthusiasm for an extended period of time. If you feel compelled to choose a
topic about which you have a strong moral or ethical opinion, be careful to gather
materials that express opinions on all sides so that your own biases do not overwhelm the
paper. The topic you choose must also be relevant to the themes, questions, or issues
addressed in your course. Reviewing your class notes or speaking to your instructor about
a topic raised in class or readings will help you select a topic that will contribute specific
knowledge to the course. After selecting a topic, ask yourself the following questions:
Is the topic sufficiently narrow? If not, you might not be able to do justice to the topic in the
prescribed length or scope of the assignment.
Is the topic feasible? If there are not likely to be enough sources available, or if you do not have
the necessary technical or language skills, think about another topic.
Does the topic have enough probative and provocative value? Because the key purpose of writing
a history essay is to put forward an argument, a topic about which a lot has been written or about
which there is no debate might not lend itself to these goals.
Can I use the subject to demonstrate my ability to research, interpret, organize, and convey
important ideas? These, in addition to a good writing style, are the aspects of the paper that
professors are evaluating.
If the answer to any of these questions is “no”, consider revising your topic or choosing a
new one. Most people will select and reject several topics before finding one that meets
all of these criteria.
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University of Calgary The History Student’s Handbook
Formulating Research Questions
After choosing your topic, form one or two questions that you must answer in order to
make a contribution to knowledge in the subject area. Preparing such questions in
advance – even though they are likely to change as you perform your research – will help
you choose appropriate sources and avoid the tendency merely to narrate facts and events
with no specific purpose in mind. For example:
To what extent was World War I caused by international power struggles?
Did these power struggles exist for a long period, were they short-term, or were they immediate?
Finding Sources
After arriving at your topic and principal research questions it is time to look for
appropriate source materials. Remember to use the range and number of sources required
by your instructor. Many history essays will require the use of both primary and
secondary sources.
Primary sources are unanalyzed, contemporary documents (that is, they were written in
the time you are studying). These documents can be in manuscript (handwritten) form,
which are sometimes assembled into microfilm collections or books; unpublished, typed
documents (such as official letters and memoranda); or published documents, which are
sometimes available as (or assembled into) books. Primary sources are not always easy to
find and sometimes their availability will help to determine or narrow the specific nature
of your project. The internet is sometimes a good place to look for primary sources,
provided that they come from a reliable institution.
Examples of Primary Sources
Diaries and journals
Newspapers and magazines
Census data and statistics
Literature (poetry, novels, and plays)
Official government records (memoranda, position papers)
Artifacts (coins, stamps, maps)
Secondary sources are scholars’ interpretations of primary sources or critiques of other
scholars’ ideas. Secondary sources can be found in the University library and the internet
using various search engines, such as JSTOR, Humanities Index, Historical Abstracts and
America: History and Life, which may be accessed through the University of Calgary
library website under the heading “Find Articles”.
Examples of Secondary Sources
Journal articles provide the results of research on a focused subject
Monographs are books that address, in detail, a single subject
Edited collections are essays bound in a book covering a single subject
Book reviews are historians’ critiques of monographs and collections
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University of Calgary The History Student’s Handbook
Evaluating Printed and Internet Sources
Always evaluate the usefulness of a source before devoting too much time to reading it.
Examples of Poor Sources
Popular history (works written by non-academics or published by non-academic presses)
Textbooks and class lecture notes (these works are not well referenced)
Encyclopedia and dictionaries (good for facts but not for analysis)
Works with obvious biases that are unsupported by reputable historical evidence
Personal web sites or sites that come from a commercial institution
Works that do not look scholarly or professional
Examples of Better Sources
Works whose argument is still relevant (this depends on the subject matter)
Books or journals published by university presses or other academic presses
(these works have been reviewed by other historians prior to publication)
Works with extensive footnotes and endnotes
Internet sources from reliable institutions
Students must be extremely cautious when seeking information on the World Wide
Web. The internet is an unregulated medium and anybody, anywhere, can upload
material. Be wary of websites from interest groups, such as those who promote
wildlife preservation, holocaust denial, certain political parties or individuals, and
even certain types of news. Just because the opinions expressed on these sites are
“in print,” this does not make them true or reliable. Reliable internet sites are
usually (though not always) those with extensions such as .edu (an educational
institution) and .ca, .uk, and .gov (material deriving from Canadian, British, and
American governments). Major news outlets, such as CNN, NBC, CBC, etcetera,
are likely to be objective, but you should verify all information you get from these
sites. Avoid sites ending in .com, as these are commercial sites that can be
purchased by anybody. Never, ever, reference Wikipedia, Encyclopedia Britannica,
or similar encyclopedic sources. Material that appears elsewhere in print (especially
academic journal articles) should be cited instead of the electronic version. When in
doubt, ask your professor about using internet sources before you begin research.
Reading and Note Taking
Historians read source material carefully and smartly. It is not always necessary to read
every word, nor to read an entire book or article if the material you require is represented
in a small portion of the complete work. Good writers will have their argument and
structure laid out in the introduction and conclusion and will begin each paragraph with a
topic sentence. These will help you determine the usefulness of a source or portion of a
source quickly. While reading, take notes that will help you understand, evaluate, and
synthesize your subject. Although some students prefer today to take notes on a
computer, a pad of paper or an index card is best, because this will reduce the recording
of irrelevant information and will be easier to organize later. Above all, your notes should
focus on answering your research question. Direct quotations should be recorded
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University of Calgary The History Student’s Handbook
sparingly, because they will be used sparingly in the essay. Instead, paraphrase and
summarize the author’s argument. Before moving on to the next source, jot down your
own ideas about the source, so that you can build on this in the essay. Remember to
record the complete citation (author, title, place and date of publication) and page
numbers of all quoted and paraphrased materials. Failure to do so may result in a
desperate return to the library to find a source you should have recorded in the first place.
Composing a Thesis Statement
After you have read and taken notes on your source material, it is time to prepare a thesis
statement, or argument. This statement, usually consisting of one, complex sentence, is
the answer to your principal research question, not the question itself. It is the sole
argument to be proven throughout the paper and all of your evidence must relate
somehow to the thesis statement. A weak thesis statement is one whose argument is
obvious to the reader and does not stand in need of proof. A good thesis statement is one
whose argument is aggressive, sustainable, and stands in need of proof to be correct. Be
careful not to make a statement that will be impossible to prove throughout the paper.
Consider the following examples:
World War I was a conflict between European powers. This statement contains a weak, selfevident
generality without an argument to be proven.
World War I was the result of various international power struggles in Europe. This statement is
slightly better, but still too broad and without sufficient indication of the argument.
World War I resulted from the confluence of various long-term and short-term international
power struggles, best characterized by a series of preconditions, precipitants, and triggers. This
statement contains a distinct argument, stands in need of proof, and can be proven in the essay. It
also indicates the structure of the paper, which is an optional component of a thesis statement.
Preparing a Proposal
At this stage of the project, your professor will sometimes ask that an essay proposal be
submitted for review or grading. The purpose of an essay proposal is to convince the
reader that the project is sustainable, that the sources selected are sufficient and useful,
and that a persuasive argument can or has been formulated. Proposals are normally
between two and four pages long, and might also be accompanied by an annotated
bibliography of sources (see part IV below.) The proposal—which must be written in
prose, not point form—answers the following questions:
9 What is your topic and how is it defined (thematically, chronologically)?
9 What is/are your principal research question(s) and why?
9 What is your hypothesis or preliminary answer to research question(s)?
9 Why is your project interesting and important?
9 What do you expect your reader to learn from your project?
9 What sources are you going to use? Why are these the best sources?
9 Is there a methodology you are applying and, if so, why is it appropriate?
9 What preliminary conclusions have you formed?
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University of Calgary The History Student’s Handbook
Once the proposal is returned with comments, it might be necessary to focus the topic
more, return to the library for additional sources, modify your research questions, find a
more persuasive argument, or even abandon the project and begin a new one.
Assembling Notes and Preparing an Outline
Now that you have a complex thesis statement that needs to be proven, develop an
outline. Sometimes it is helpful to “brainstorm” the topic for five minutes. To do so, take
out a piece of paper, set a timer, and write down everything you know about your topic in
a flow chart. After the timer goes off, look at your results and pull the disparate ideas
together to form various sub-themes of your topic. Then prepare the outline, which will
help to ensure that the paper is highly organized, focused on the thesis statement, and
contains all the evidence necessary to prove your argument. For example:
I. Introduction: state topic and thesis statement, give structure of paper
II. Preconditions (“Long term” causes)
a. Anglo and Franco-German Rivalry (arms race)
b. Triple Entente and Triple Alliance
c. African imperialism
III. Precipitants (“Short term” causes)
a. Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand
b. “48 hour ultimatum”
c. The Forming of Alliances
IV. Triggers (“Immediate” causes)
a. Schlieffen Plan
b. Invasion of Belgium
c. British ultimatum
V. Conclusion: restate thesis statement; why is this paper important?
Outlines can be much more complex than the one in this example and include the
evidence that will be used to prove each theme and sub-theme. Good writers often go
through several outlines before arriving at one that will result in a top-quality essay. After
you have completed the outline, look at each theme to be addressed closely and identify
any weak areas. Once the outline is completed to your satisfaction, assemble your notes
in the order you will need them during the writing process. It might be necessary at this
point to make a final trip to the library to research specific items. Finally, your professor
will sometimes ask you to submit your thesis statement and outline for grading before
you proceed with writing the essay.
Rule of Thumb!
Although there is no rule about how long you should spend in the pre-writing process, a good
rule of thumb is one hour of preparation for each page of the essay. An essay of 8-10 pages
should result in at least 8-10 hours in the pre-writing process.
6
Part II: The Writing Process
There are numerous techniques writers use to prepare the draft of an essay. Some begin
with the introduction and write the paper to its conclusion. Others write several formal
paragraphs for each theme, assemble the paper, and then write the introduction and
conclusion. Whatever system you use, all history papers require an introduction, body,
and conclusion.
Audience, Voice and Tense
Essays are always written for an audience, which is the person who will be reading the
paper. Unless you are told otherwise, assume that your audience is a person exactly like
yourself: mature, intelligent, and interested, with a similar educational background and
body of knowledge but not necessarily an expert. This is sometimes called the
“enthusiastic amateur” audience. Do not assume that your audience is your professor –
even though this is usually the case – and that, therefore, you do not have to explain key
terms or write in a manner that reflects clarity, conciseness, and precision. Professors
often hear from students something like “I thought you would know what I meant,”
which is not the same as writing what you mean. If you or a fellow student would require
a definition, clarification, or explanation, then provide these to your reader.
Always write in the active voice. This means writing prose that is direct and persuasive.
Passive writing is weak, wordy, and less compelling. An example of passive writing
would be, “You should try to make sure that your writing is done in the active voice,”
instead of the shorter and more compelling version written above. It is also passive to
place the verb before the subject in a sentence. Thus, instead of writing “the food was
eaten [verb] by the cat [subject],” write the more direct “the cat ate the food.” Voice also
refers to who is doing the speaking. Be careful to indicate whether the ideas you express
are your own or are derived from a primary or secondary source. Although it is
acceptable today to use the pronoun “I” to indicate your own voice, ensure that it is used
in an objective rather than a subjective manner. (When in doubt, speak to your
instructor.) Historians, as opposed to writers in related disciplines, such as literature and
sociology, generally write about the past in the past tense and reserve the present tense
only for contemporary events (that is, events occurring “at the present time.”) Using
words that imply the past tense infuse a correct historical perspective into your writing.
The Introduction
An introduction fulfills a number of tasks. It reveals your topic and its relevance,
establishes the chronological and thematic parameters of the paper, provides any
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necessary definitions, and states the argument and the manner in which the paper will
proceed to prove the thesis statement. If your topic is one that has been debated by
historians, it will also be necessary in the introduction to position your argument within
the current debate. Although the introduction is often referred to as a “reverse pyramid,”
moving from the general to the specific, do not begin your paper with broad generalities
and rhetorical statements such as “Since the beginning of time” or “Throughout recorded
history.” Be careful that your introduction, and indeed the entire paper, does not contain
value judgments or subjective ideas, such as “I think World War I was a bad war that
should not have happened,” which reveal poor historical perspective and are impossible
to prove using historical evidence. In most undergraduate history papers, the introduction
is one paragraph long, although papers written for senior courses might be several pages
so that the nature of the debate can be explained fully. The introduction is normally about
10% of the total length of the paper. Although many students write the introduction
quickly in order to move to the body of the essay, this is a mistake. A clear, concise, and
precise statement of your topic, thesis, and structure sets the tone for the essay and can
make the difference between “A” and “B” papers.
The Body
The body of the paper is where you introduce each theme, explain its relevance to the
thesis statement, and offer the evidence, interpretation, and critical and abstract thinking
necessary to prove your argument. Essays are always written in paragraph form and
lengthier papers (15 pages or more) are sometimes divided into sub-headings to indicate
the transition between themes. Sub-headings are discouraged in shorter papers because
the result is usually an essay that is choppy and poorly organized. Contrary to what we
are often taught, the formulaic “five paragraph essay,” with an introduction, three body
paragraphs, and a conclusion, is rarely useful. Instead, the essay will require as many
paragraphs as you have themes and sub-themes to develop. Avoid the use of paragraphs
that are too small or too large. Small paragraphs, usually of only one or two sentences,
are ineffective and suggest poor organization. Large paragraphs, of greater than one page,
suggest that the author has not taken enough time during the outline stage to group the
evidence together effectively. As a rule of thumb, good paragraphs are 150 to 200 words
long, or five to ten sentences.
Paragraphs contain more than a recitation of facts. Each paragraph must have “singleness
of purpose.” That is, it must have a central idea, normally stated as the first, or topic,
sentence. It must have evidence that proves the contention of the central idea. It should
also have a conclusion that summarizes the findings reached within the paragraph and
offers a transition to the next idea by showing how the central idea in one paragraph
logically leads to the central idea in the next. Depending on the length of the paper, each
theme will likely require the preparation of several paragraphs, which, in addition to each
paragraph having a central idea, should collectively prove the contention of the theme. In
the first theme of the example provided above, entitled “Preconditions,” the central
contention is that World War I had several “long-term” causes. This would be proven
through several paragraphs (one on Anglo/Franco-German Rivalry, one on the alliance
system, and one on African imperialism), each with a central idea but each also
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ultimately contributing to the broader contention about long-term causation. The next
theme, “Precipitants,” would follow with several more paragraphs. This process
continues until you have completed each of the themes and sub-themes that need to be
addressed.
Using Quotations Effectively
Direct quotations from primary and secondary sources can be useful when offering
evidence to prove your thesis statement. They should, however, be used sparingly and
only when the quotation might be misinterpreted or confused if paraphrased. Papers that
are strung together with a series of direct quotations usually indicate that the author has
not offered an original or argumentative analysis. When they are used, quotations must
reproduce exactly the original author’s words, including spelling, capitalization, and
punctuation. If any words are added to the quotation for reasons of grammar or
coherence, they must be set off in square brackets ([ ]). An ellipsis (…) must be used to
indicate where words are omitted in the midst of a quotation. It is no longer necessary to
begin or end quotations with ellipses. Here is an example that uses the first sentence of
this paragraph: “Direct quotations … can be useful when … prov[ing] your thesis
statement.”
Short quotations (those of four lines or less) should be incorporated into the text of the
essay and enclosed in double quotation marks (“ ”). Quotations within quotations, as in
“Tom said, ‘I want to go home,’ and promptly left,” should be placed in single quotation
marks. Even single-word quotations – such as Foucault’s use of “power” – are placed
into double quotation marks. When incorporating quotations, the entire sentence should
be written so that it reads in a correct grammatical form; there must not be a noticeable
shift in tense. Commas and periods are placed inside the quotation marks; semi-colons,
colons, and questions marks that did not form part of the original quotation are placed
outside the quotation marks. Lengthy quotations – those of more than four lines – are
single-spaced and offset 1 inch from the left and right margins; they do not require
quotation marks. These “block quotations” should be used very sparingly and only if the
quotation will subsequently be discussed in detail. In most instances, instead of quoting
directly, paraphrase the original author’s words and cite this as you would a quotation.
The source of all quotations must be referenced.
Reference Notes and Introducing Sources
Historians use the Chicago Manual of Style for citing primary and secondary source
material. This means using complete footnotes or endnotes and bibliographies rather than
the abbreviated or embedded (also called parenthetical) referencing method used in other
social sciences and humanities disciplines. In particular, the common APA (American
Psychological Association) and MLA (Modern Language Association) methods are not
acceptable for history essays, and writers who do not use the proper method will
normally be penalized. Reference numbers are placed in superscript outside all
punctuation at the end of the sentence. For example, “Historians use the Chicago Manual
of Style for citing … source material.”1
Occasionally, it is necessary to place a reference
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number within the sentence; this occurs when, for example, only a portion of a sentence
is being attributed to another author, while the remainder is your own idea. In such cases,
the reference number should be placed after the portion derived from the other source. In
general, however, it is preferable that reference numbers be placed at the end of the
sentence or paragraph to which it refers. If more than one source has been used, reference
the sources together in a single note at the end of the sentence.
Reference notes allow the reader easy access to the material used when writing the essay.
Historians often work with material that is difficult to access, or that has been printed in
numerous editions. If a fact or quotation is to be checked, the fullest possible citation is
required. In addition, a reference note gives credit to the author of an idea or statement
and also demonstrates to the reader the amount of effort and care that has been put into
the paper. Always reference material or ideas derived from another source, regardless of
whether it is paraphrased or quoted. Ensure that the sources of all statistics are cited;
although these often appear to be “objective facts,” they are the result of numerous
decisions made by an author during the course of research and are, therefore, subject to
interpretation. It is not necessary to cite sources for facts that are common knowledge
(such as that World War I was fought between 1914 and 1918), which might be defined
as material that all university students know before commencing their studies.
Although there is no rule to how many footnotes or endnotes are required in an essay,
approximately three or four per page is average. An eight page essay with only four or
five notes in total is either under-referenced or contains too much opinion and assertion
and not enough facts and evidence to prove the argument. Conversely, eight or ten notes
per page suggests a random cutting and pasting of evidence into your paper without using
your own debating and prose skills and to explain and engage with the material you are
citing as evidence.
Finally, because you will be providing complete references in the notes, it is not usually
necessary to indicate the title of articles or books in the body of the essay, which often
just take up valuable space. For example, instead of writing, “In his article entitled
‘Cleansing and Clarifying: Technology and Perception in Nineteenth-Century London,’
Christopher Otter argues that…,” simply write “Christopher Otter argues that…” and
include a reference note indicating the complete title and reference. After you have
introduced an author by name for the first time, subsequent references should include
only the author’s last name, such as “Otter further argues that….” When it is deemed
necessary to include the title of the work within the body of the essay – which is normally
only the case if you are discussing multiple works by the same author – the titles of
articles, chapters in books, and unpublished documents should be placed in quotation
marks, and book titles should be italicized.
The Conclusion
The conclusion to the essay is designed to help the reader understand the relevance of the
themes that have been examined throughout the paper. It is often described as a
“pyramid,” moving from the particular (restating your thesis statement) to the general
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(explaining why your conclusions are important). Do not merely summarize the paper
and be careful not to introduce new evidence in the conclusion. Make sure that you
answer the “So what?” question by explaining how and why your paper has made a
contribution to the subject matter. This is a good opportunity to show in what ways your
case study or focused topic has wider implications and to suggest a new direction for
research into this topic. Like the introduction and the body, the conclusion is a vital
component of your paper and must not be neglected. Keep in mind that it is the last thing
your instructor will read before assigning a grade. It should be about 10% of your paper.
Plagiarism
Plagiarism occurs when an author, either deliberately or without the exercise of
reasonable judgment, passes off the writing of another as his or her own. A plagiarized
paper will automatically be failed and can also result in failure of the course and other
penalties, as outlined in the University Calendar. Plagiarism can include, but is not
limited to, using a few important words, merely rewording a sentence or paragraph, or
using another author’s ideas, without providing a citation to the original source. To avoid
plagiarizing another’s work, accurately reference all direct quotations (which should be
enclosed in quotation marks) and paraphrases, ideas or information derived from another
source, and all concepts that are not commonly known. Lack of references usually
suggests plagiarized work, so when in doubt include a footnote. Plagiarism also occurs
when an author submits work that is borrowed from another person, purchased,
ghostwritten, submitted for credit in another course, or that has been extensively edited
by a third party to the degree that it barely resembles the original.
Rewriting and Proofreading
Once the draft of your paper is complete, rewriting begins. If possible, set the draft aside
for a few days and return to it with a fresh, analytical eye. Read the paper over slowly –
some authors prefer to read the paper aloud – and identify and correct weak grammatical
constructions, illogical statements, poor argumentation, or lack of evidence to prove a
central idea or thesis statement. You might find that one paragraph belongs in a different
place, or that the introduction does not lay out the argument very clearly. Take this
opportunity to correct these errors. Check your diction to ensure that every word you
have used is the right one. In English, very few words have exact synonyms, so select the
correct word and not one that is merely close in meaning. The re-writing process is vital
to the success of an essay because, when properly and carefully done, it usually results in
the reduction of non-essential prose, leading to more clarity and precision and a taut,
logical argument that has no superfluous elements. After rewriting the paper (twice, if
time allows), proofread it carefully to identify and correct spelling, grammatical, and
punctuation errors and pass the paper to a friend who can find other mistakes.
Rule of Thumb!
Just like the pre-writing process, expect to spend at least one hour of writing time for each
page of the essay. An essay of 8-10 pages will require at least 8-10 hours to write, plus time
for rewriting and proofreading.
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Part III: Book Reviews and Document Analyses
Book reviews and document analyses are similar in content, style, and structure, even
though they assess quite different types of writing. While book reviews assess books
produced by scholars (secondary sources), document analyses assess writings prepared
contemporary to the time you are studying (primary sources). Both require a report on the
content of the work and an evaluation and critique of the writing by considering the
author’s argument, structure, evidence, biases, and logic. Whereas book reviews usually
evaluate works of several hundred pages, document analyses can assess works as short as
a single page and often evaluate several documents at the same time. Like essays, reviews
and analyses need to be interpretive and critical, although they usually accomplish their
goals in a limited number of words, usually between 500 and 1500 words, or 2-5 doublespaced
pages. It is important to think of this type of report as a short essay, which means
that it, like a research essay, contains an introduction, argument, body, and conclusion.
The Art of Criticism
Criticism, or evaluation, is at the heart of book reviews and document analyses. A good
report can tell other historians whether they should read a book or document and in what
ways they should be cautious while reading it. It is not sufficient merely to summarize
what has been written, but rather to engage with the material in a meaningful way.
Authors, whether of secondary or primary materials, make many decisions and encounter
many obstacles when writing their work, most of which you will not be aware of while
reading. Respecting this complex process should prevent you from criticizing just for the
sake of doing so. Criticism must be constructive and you must be able to back your
criticism up by drawing upon your own knowledge or logic. It is not enough to write, “I
do not like the way the argument is developed” or “this author was obviously biased”.
What is wrong with the argument and how could it be made better? What is the nature of
the author’s bias and how can be it be overcome?
The Introduction
Whether a review or analysis, the introduction should begin by stating the author and title
of the work. The introductory paragraph should also indicate the author’s intentions for
the work and state the argument that is developed in, if possible, one, succinct sentence.
Introductions to book reviews and analyses should situate the themes of the work with
other, relevant works. In the case of the document analysis, situate the work within its
proper historical context by reflecting on why the document was written. Like essays,
good reviews and analyses will have a thesis statement, which is the argument you will
be making in the review. For example, in a book review you might argue that: “In his
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book Innocence Abroad, historian Benjamin Schmidt successfully shows the relevance of
Dutch activities in the New World.” This thesis suggests that the author was successful in
achieving the goal and argument set for the book, while other thesis statements might be
more critical about these accomplishments. In an analysis, you could argue that: “In The
Prince, Nicolò Machiavelli demonstrates his debt to classical forms of government, while
also recognizing that true governance is based on the immediate needs of the society that
the government serves.” This thesis is active and stands in need of proof, which it is the
purpose of the analysis to provide.
The Body
The body of reviews and analyses is used to answer a number of questions about the
work, each of which may be handled in a separate paragraph. While it is not necessary –
or sometimes even possible – to answer all of these questions, or to devote equal space to
each one, the report should be as comprehensive as possible. Depending on the nature of
the book or document under review, additional questions may arise during reading of the
material or preparation of the report that need to be answered.
9 What issues, topics, and themes does the work cover? It is neither necessary nor desirable
to summarize the entire work, or even each chapter. Instead, include a paragraph that indicates
the chronological and thematic sweep of the work, the main issues that are addressed, and
how these contribute to the overall theme of the work. It is important in this section that you
show a sound understanding of the material.
9 What is relevant about the author and the audience? What other works has this author
written to which this work contributes? Are there specific aspects of the author’s background
(race, religion, education, nationality, etc.) that affect (positively or negatively) the author’s
interpretation? Who was this work written for, and was this goal accomplished? Was the work
prepared to advance a specific political, intellectual, or social agenda? If so, does this
strengthen or weaken the work?
9 What historical genre and theoretical approach best fits this work? Is this a biography, an
economic, cultural, social, intellectual, environmental, political, military, or religious study?
Does the author employ a feminist, Marxist, Whig, Annales, or revisionist methodology?
Does the author offer an interdisciplinary approach by fitting the book or document into more
than one genre or theoretical approach? Does the author use a theoretical approach that he or
she is not even aware is being used? Is or was the author associated with a specific school of
thought or branch of literature? Why and to what extent should historians be skeptical when
reading this source? Was there a propagandist or rhetorical purpose to the work?
9 What evidence or type of argument does the author use? If a review, is the work based on
primary or secondary research? Is the primary research based on archival documents or
printed sources? If an analysis, does the contemporary author use personal experiences,
second hand information, other types of documentation, or rhetorical devices? Does the
author’s choice to use certain evidence result in a skewed interpretation? Does the author fail
to consider evidence or works that challenge his or her interpretation? Does the evidence
presented suggest an alternate interpretation to you than was suggested by the author? Does
the author base her or his interpretation on hard evidence (the facts), assertion (personal
opinion), or on inference (informed opinion)?
9 How and how well is the information presented? Is the work organized and structured
well? Is the argument developed chronologically or thematically, or does the author use a
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combination of both? Are important themes and terms properly and sufficiently defined? Does
the writing flow well or is it turgid or technically flawed to the point of causing problems for
the reader? Are there intelligent transitions from one theme to the next? If a review, does the
introduction properly introduce the main themes of the book and provide the argument, and
does the conclusion reflect well on the issues addressed? If this is a document analysis, keep
in mind the time period in which the work was written and try to assess its merits based on
those times rather than the present.
The Conclusion
The concluding paragraph should comment on the overall significance of the work. What
new questions has the author brought up or answered? If a review, what further work
needs to be done on the subject now that this work has been evaluated? If an analysis,
what individuals or writings were affected or effected by the document or documents
under consideration? This is also an opportunity to reflect on the overall strengths and
weaknesses of the work. For example, if the author has placed too much emphasis on one
theme to the exclusion of another, this is noteworthy. Do not use the conclusion to
mention minor matters of style (such as typographical errors). Instead, focus on issues of
key importance to historians, such as the strength of the thesis and the contribution of the
book or document to its field.
Quotations and Referencing
Although quotations should be used sparingly in reviews and analyses, they are often
useful when rehearsing the author’s specific argument, the use of new or peculiar terms,
or passages of special merit. If a single work (whether secondary or primary) is under
review, quotations and paraphrased elements should be followed with a parenthetical
citation that includes the page number. For example, (p. 35). If several documents or
books are being reviewed, or if other sources are cited, use the formal referencing style
appropriate to research essays, as discussed in part IV below.
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Part IV: Style and Referencing Guide
Presentation, writing style, and proper referencing are as important as the argument itself.
When done properly, these elements of the essay show the reader that you are serious
about the study of history and organized and concerned about your work. Make no
mistake about it: essays that are poorly presented, written, or referenced will always
negatively affect your grade. Most importantly, it only takes a few extra minutes to make
sure that your paper is well written and properly formatted.
Presentation Format
The entire essay (except for block quotations) must be double spaced and written in
paragraph form, not block form. This means that (unlike this handbook) the first line of
each paragraph is indented and there is no additional space between paragraphs, merely
the standard double-spacing. Essays must have a title page, which includes your name
and student number, professor’s and teaching assistant’s name (if applicable), course
number and section (if applicable), and the date. Essays must be typewritten, using an
easily-readable font (Times New Roman is a favourite), in 12-point, 1 inch margins all
around, with page numbers on all pages except the title page (which does not factor into
the page count). Few professors will accept handwritten assignments. Do not use
coloured paper, unusual fonts, or irrelevant pictures or drawings. Do not put your paper
into a duotang or have it bound; instead, a staple (rather than a paper clip, which can fall
off) in the upper-left corner is preferred. When a professor gives a page limit, it is with
the understanding that a page has about 250 words, so a 10-page paper is 2500 words.
Cramming more words in using smaller margins and smaller fonts will not escape the eye
of your marker, and some professors refuse to grade papers that are too long. The ability
to write within a prescribed limit is much more challenging than writing a long, tedious
paper, and professors are also testing these skills.
Grammar and Style
Historians use the standard conventions of the English language to communicate their
findings to their audience. In order to be understood and persuasive, your writing must
conform to the basic rules of grammar and style. Write in a clear, concise, and precise
manner. Simple, direct writing is always preferable to writing that appears as if a
thesaurus was frequently consulted. For example, it is preferable to write that one is
“paid” not “remunerated,” one is “angered” not “infuriated,” one “uses” not “utilizes,”
etcetera. Work hard to purge your writing of colourful adjectives, adverbs, superfluity,
repetition, and unwarranted complexity. Avoid qualifiers such as very, extremely, usually,
and mostly. These terms are passive and imprecise. Essays are always written in formal
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language that displays historical objectivity and seriousness of purpose. Thus, they must
not contain contractions (such as don’t and can’t), journalistic-styled writing (usually
defined by tiny sentences and paragraphs designed to be read by a popular audience),
sarcasm or attempts at humour, indignance or disrespect for events that occurred in the
historical past, or exclamation points for emphasis.
Common Grammar and Punctuation Mistakes
Especially when frequently or carelessly committed, many common grammar mistakes
reflect badly on the credibility of the author. Essays that are poorly written will always
result in a lower grade. Here are ten common errors that graders dislike.
1. Dangling participles and modifiers. These occur when you modify the wrong noun
or verb in a sentence. To write, for example, that “If well written, you could get a high
grade on the essay,” suggests that you (the pronoun) need to be well written, not the essay
(the noun). The sentence should read “You could get a high grade on the essay if it is
well written.” Here is another example: “I saw the Calgary Tower walking downtown.”
Was the Calgary Tower walking downtown or were you? The sentence should read,
“While walking downtown, I saw the Calgary Tower.”
2. Subject-object and subject-verb disagreements. Sometimes called “singular-plural
disagreements”, these occur when you alter the tense of a sentence part-way through. For
example: “We study history because you can apply the skills elsewhere” changes the
tense from the plural subject (“we”) to the singular object (“you”). Writing “John’s
statement of grievances were presented to the president” is incorrect because the singular
subject (“statement of grievances”) shifts to a plural verb (“were presented”). The
sentence should read: “John’s statement of grievances was presented to the president.”
3. Shifts between past and present tense. A similar lack of agreement occurs when you
write, for example, that “King Henry VIII was important because he is responsible for the
English Reformation,” or vice versa. As a general rule, always write in the past tense.
4. Incomplete sentences. Also called “sentence fragments,” these are independent or
subordinate clauses that do not have a subject or verb. Such as this sentence. In this
example, there is no subject. Instead, the first two sentences must be joined together
using a comma to be complete.
5. Colloquialisms, clichés, euphemisms, and metaphors/similes. Though colourful,
these literary devices are usually tiresome, imprecise, and misleading. It is colloquial to
write that “World War I was horrible,” and it is a cliché to write that during World War I,
“Europe was going to hell in a handbasket.” A euphemism is a polite, yet often
meaningless term used to cover up reality; it should be used sparingly. A short person is
not “vertically challenged” and a trash collector is not a “sanitation engineer.” Metaphors
and similes, while not prohibited, should be used with caution. Writing statements such
as “Henry VIII was the Winton Churchill of his generation” or “Hitler was like a rabid
dog” obscure more than they reveal.
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6. Sentences ending with prepositions. Prepositions include, among others, the words
in, at, on, to, and with. These should never be used to end sentences. Often, the sentence
will read correctly if you drop the intended preposition. Thus, “Where are you going?”
instead of “Where are you going to?”; “What time are you coming home?” instead of
“What time are you coming home at?”
7. Comma splices. This error is the result of either joining two independent clauses
without using a conjunction, or joining two complete sentences together using only a
comma. Thus, “The coffee was fresh, I had a cup” is incorrect. Use either “The coffee
was fresh. I had a cup”; “The coffee was fresh, and I had a cup”; or “The coffee was
fresh; I had a cup.” It is also incorrect to separate the subject from the object: “Canada, is
a very large country” is wrong, while “Canada is a very large country” is correct.
8. Misusing the apostrophe. Apostrophes are used only to indicate possessives, not for
pronouns that refer to an antecedent noun. Thus, “the man’s car,” the “girls’ hockey
team” (in which there is more than one girl, forcing the apostrophe to go after the “s”),
and “women’s history” (in which the possessive for the plural is placed before the “s”)
are all correct. The same rules apply to possessive forms of names that end in “s”, such as
“Dickens’s writings” and “Yates’s poetry.” Writing “England was it’s own worst enemy”
is incorrect because “its” is a pronoun which refers to the antecedent noun “England” and
not to a possessive. The sentence should read: “England was its own worst enemy.”
Finally, do not use apostrophes to form plurals: “The Smiths live here” is correct; “The
Smith’s live here” is not. One eats “hamburger buns,” not “hamburger bun’s.”
9. Confusing “that” and “which”. “That” is used in restrictive clauses and “which” is
used in non-restrictive clauses. Thus, “It was these two factors that led to the war” is
correct because “that” refers to an essential (restrictive) component of the sentence. “The
Great Reform Act, which gave many middle-class men the right to vote, was passed in
1832” is correct because “which” refers to a non-essential (non-restrictive) component.
The sentence would still read correctly if the non-restrictive clause was removed: “The
Great Reform Act was passed in 1832.”
10. Hyphens and Dashes. A hyphen (-) is used to join compound words that cannot be
spelled as a single word. The words caffeine-free and mass-produced, for example, and
words that might otherwise be misinterpreted (such as re-creation instead of recreation)
require hyphens. Standard compounds, such as birthrate and cooperation, do not.
Hyphens are not used to set off an independent clause. Independent clauses that are too
distinct from the sentence to use commas should be set off by dashes, which are twice the
length of a hyphen (–). The sentence “There is no consensus – nor need there be – about
this matter” is correct; using hyphens in place of the dashes in this sentence, however,
would lead to confusion: “There is no consensus-nor need there be-about this matter.”
Notes and Bibliographies
When to reference has been discussed in part II above. How to reference is also of critical
importance. History professors will insist that you use, consistently and correctly, the
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referencing format for notes and the bibliography that is described in the Chicago
Manual of Style. Referencing methods used in other disciplines – such as APA, MLA,
etc. – are not appropriate in History and will result in a lower grade or, possibly, a refusal
to grade the essay until the proper format has been adopted. The remainder of this part
will provide explanations and examples of proper notation and bibliographical formats.
Proper Note Format
Footnotes (at the bottom of each page) and endnotes (placed at the end of the essay
before the bibliography) in history essays differ only in their placement. You can use
either footnotes or endnotes (not both) in your essay, although professors generally prefer
footnotes for ease of access. These notes should be numbered consecutively from the
beginning of the paper; do not use Roman numerals or special characters and do not
begin the numbering again with each page or section. All computer word-processing
programs have built-in footnote and endnote functions that make it easy to number and
place notes, and to add or delete notes throughout the writing and rewriting processes.
Notes must include all information necessary to locate the source easily. This might
include author(s), title and subtitle, name of editor(s) and/or translator(s), edition or
volume number, publisher and place and date of publication, and page numbers. Any
information that is missing – which is often the case with older publications – should be
omitted without comment. Second and subsequent references to sources are made using
“short form” reference. References to entire books should omit page numbers, while
references to one or more pages should be indicated following the publishing
information.
It is no longer standard to use Latin terminology in notes, such as ibid., idem., op. cit.,
loc. cit, and others. Instead, use the short form reference method discussed below.
1. Single-author books
Book entries are written as a single sentence separated by commas. Title are capitalized
and italicized (underlining is also acceptable provided it is consistent throughout the
paper), with subtitles separated by a colon. The publishing information (city: publisher,
year) is placed in parentheses. If the reference applies to the entire book, no page number
is necessary. Otherwise, put the relevant page number(s) after the year of publication. It
is not necessary to use the abbreviation “p.” or “pp.”
1
Susan Scott Parrish, American Curiosity: Cultures of Natural History in the Colonial British
Atlantic World (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006), 87.
Second and subsequent references to sources are made using “short form” reference,
which include the author’s last name, a short version of the title, and the page number.
5
Parrish, American Curiosity, 43-56.
Books that were written in previous centuries should indicate as much information as is
available, and retain original spelling.
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6
Thomas Harriot, A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia (Frankfort, 1590).
[Note that there is no publisher information available. If the year of publication is written in
Roman numerals, such as “MDXC”, this should be changed to standard numbers (1590).]
Some books have national, corporate, or organizational authors.
23 Great Britain, Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, Calendar of the Manuscripts of the
Most Honourable the Marquis of Salisbury, Preserved at Hatfield House (London: Her Majesty’s
Stationer’s Office, 1885), 45. [Note that the highest authority, “Great Britain”, is indicated first,
followed by the next highest authority, “Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts”.]
2. Multi-author books
For books with two or three authors, the authors’ names should be listed as they appear
on the title page.
12 Robin W. Winks and Lee Palmer Wandel, Europe in a Wider World, 1350-1650 (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2003), 11-15.
16 Winks and Wandel, Europe in a Wider World, 17.
If there are four or more authors, use “and others,” which is preferable today to the Latin
“et al”, although both are considered correct.
8
John Briggs and others, Crime and Punishment in England: An Introductory History (London:
UCL Press, 1996), 7.
13 Briggs, Crime and Punishment, 56.
3. Edited Collections and Essays or Documents Within
For complete references to collections of essays or primary sources, indicate the editors.
2
Andrew Barrett and Christopher Harrison, ed., Crime and Punishment in England: A Sourcebook
(London: UCL Press, 1999), 45-47.
4
Barrett and Harrison, eds., Crime and Punishment, 68.
When a specific essay or document is being referred to in an edited collection, refer to the
author and title of the specific work you are using. The title is placed in quotation marks,
while the book’s title is italicized.
16 Alfred W. Crosby, “Infectious Disease and the Demography of the Atlantic Peoples,” in The
Atlantic World in the Age of Empire, ed. Thomas Benjamin and Timothy Hall (New York:
Houghton Mifflin, 2001), 169-179.
18 Crosby, “Infectious Disease,” 172.
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4. Translated and Edited books
For books that have been edited or translated, place the original author first and indicate
the name of the translator after the title.
23 Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan (New
York: Random House, 1995), 27.
56 Hugo Grotius, The Free Sea, ed., David Armitage, trans. Richard Hakluyt (Indianapolis: Liberty
Fund, 2004), 45.
5. Multi-Volume or Multi-Edition Works
For books with multiple volumes, indicate the total number of volumes after the title and
indicate the specific volume number being used before the page number.
9
William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, 4 vols. (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1979), 1: 153.
11 Blackstone, Commentaries, 2: 345.
When there are multiple editions of a book, indicate the edition being used, using “2d
ed.”, “3rd ed.”, etc., “rev. ed.” for revised editions, or “enl. ed.” for enlarged editions. It is
not necessary to indicate the edition number if it is the first.
4
Thomas H. Greer and Gavin Lewis, A Brief History of the Western World, 8th ed. (Toronto:
Nelson, 2002).
7 Greer and Lewis, Brief History, 56.
6. Journal Articles
For journal articles that are in print, place the title of the article in quotations marks and
underline or italicize the title of the journal. Note the volume (30), year of publication,
and pages numbers following a colon. Most journals number pages consecutively
throughout an entire year; when a journal begins each issue with page one, it is necessary
to indicate the issue number after the volume (30:3).
5
William V. Flores, “New Citizens, New Rights: Undocumented Immigrants and Latino Cultural
Citizenship,” Latin American Perspectives 30 (2003): 87-100.
8
Flores, “New Citizens, New Rights,” 89.
Some journals have distinct series, which reuse the volume numbers. In such cases, the
series must be noted.
15 Carole Shammas, “The Space Problem in Early United States Cities,” William and Mary
Quarterly, 3rd. ser., 57 (2000): 505-542.
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Journal articles accessed electronically that originally appeared in print (that is, in a
permanent, paper version) should be referenced as above, using the original page
numbers. Correct page numbers will be found by downloading the Adobe Acrobat
version of the on-line file (.pdf) instead of the .html file. When in doubt, consult the
printed version. Journals that are only available on the world wide web should be
referenced as follows:
48 Daniel Gorman, “Wider and Wider Still?: Racial Politics, Intra-Imperial Immigration and the
Absence of an Imperial Citizenship in the British Empire,” Journal of Colonialism and Colonial
History 3.3 (2002), muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_colonialism_and_colonial_
history/toc/cch3.3.html (accessed 25 August 2007), para. 31.
Note that because this article is not elsewhere available, the URL (uniform resource
locator), date the article is accessed, and paragraph number is cited.
7. Book Reviews
Book reviews are referenced by the author of the review, not of the book being reviewed.
13 Heather J. Coleman, review of Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times:
Soviet Russia in the 1930s, by S. Fitzpatrick, Canadian Journal of History 36 (2001): 151-152.
15 Coleman, review of Everyday Stalinism, 151.
8. Plays, Poems, and Biblical References
Well-known plays, poems, and Biblical references that carry act, scene, section, or
chapter, line, or verse numbers do not need to be referenced with publication information
unless the edition being used is important to the discussion of the texts.
12 William Shakespeare, King Lear, 2.3.12-16.
15 John Milton, Paradise Lost, book 1, lines 670-74.
18 King James Bible, 1 Corinthians 13.9.
9. Magazine or Newspaper Articles
References to magazine articles are similar to journal articles:
47 Heather Pringle, “Alberta Barren,” Saturday Night, June 1997: 30.
If you are citing from a regular feature without a title, capitalize the feature title, but do
not underline, italicize or use quotations marks.
37 Currents in the News, U.S. News and World Report, 11 February 1980, 5.
Citations to newspapers include the month and day of the issue but can leave out page
numbers. Cite the edition if the paper has more than one (ie. morning and evening).
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21 Oliver Moore, “Rumsfeld Glad to Flee Washington for Baghdad,” Globe and Mail, May 13,
2004. [Note: the article The is left off the title Globe and Mail.]
If you accessed the article online, provide the URL. Use only the main entrance to the
newspaper or service if the full URL will quickly become invalid, as is usually the case.
19 Alan Fram, “Official Says War Budget to Exceed $50B,” Yahoo! News, March 13, 2004,
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/.
10. Articles in Encyclopedia or Dictionaries
The use of dictionaries and encyclopedia should be avoided unless these works have
acquired a certain historical importance (such as the 1911 edition of the Encyclopedia
Britannica.) When they are used, however, cite the entry as clearly as possible.
32 William B. Robison, “Kidd, William (ca. 1645-1701),” in Absolutism and the Scientific
Revolution, 1600-1720: A Biographical Dictionary, ed. Christopher Baker (Westport: Greenwood
Press, 2002), 205.
34 Robison, “Kidd, William,” 205.
Well-known reference books do not need to be accompanied by the facts of publication,
unless there is potential for confusion. Give the source and the title of the entry, but
eliminate the author of the entry even if it is known.
45 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, “Dee, John.”
67 Dictionary of Canadian Biography, “Russell, Charles.”
11. Dissertations and Theses
Dissertation and thesis titles are placed in quotations marks because they are not
published. Also include the type of thesis and the place and year of completion.
3
Meshal Al-Rabeaa, “Orphaning the Victorian Child: A Study in Eight Victorian Novels (PhD
diss., University of Calgary, Canada, 2007), 87.
6
Al-Rabeaa, “Orphaning the Victorian Child,” 32.
12. Electronic Resources
Documents on the internet should include the Uniform Resource Locator (URL) and date
on which the material was accessed.
19 Martin Luther, “Address to the Nobility of the German Nation (1520),” in Internet Modern
History Sourcebook, www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/luther-nobility.html (accessed 15 May 2005).
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References to documents on CD-ROMs should include as much information as possible.
It is often impossible to put a page number; this may be omitted silently or some other
method of locating the document (such as that indicated below) may be possible.
14 Bartholomew Las Casas, “Amerindians and the Garden of Eden,” Western Civilization
Documents CD-ROM (Upper Saddle: Prentice Hall, 2004), doc. 10.4.
13. Archival and Manuscript Sources
The method of referencing a source from an archive differs depending on the archive
where it is housed and the collection in which it is found. In general, the document should
be described as fully and as consistently as possible with the Chicago Manual of Style, by
citing author, title, the archive where the document is housed, and its shelfmark (library
locator information). When in doubt, refer to the archive’s website or to books that
reference documents from that archive. Unknown information may be silently omitted.
The following example is taken from a document housed in the British Library.
34 John Dee, “Brytanici Imperii Limites,” British Library, Additional Manuscript 59681, fols. 21-
25.
39 Dee, “Brytanici Imperii Limites,” fol. 37.
14. Interviews
If you are referencing an interview that was broadcast or published, the citation should
include the name of the person interviewed, the title of the interview (if applicable), the
interviewer’s name (if this was you, write “interview by the author”), the medium (e.g.
book, television show) where the interview appeared, and the date of the interview.
42 Margaret Thatcher, “Britain’s Iron Lady,” interview by Barbara Frum, The Journal, Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation, 27 September 1983.
45 Isaac Bashevis Singer, interview by Harold Flender, in Writers at Work: The “Review”
Interviews, ed. George Plimpton, 5th ser. (New York: Viking Press, 1981), 85.
References to interviews that you have conducted or that have not been published or
broadcast are referenced as follows:
34 Horace Hunt [pseudo.], interview by Ronald Schatz, tape recording, 16 May 1976, Pennsylvania
Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg. [Note: in this example, the interview has been
deposited in an archive.]
35 Karl-Heinz Mehlan, interview by Annette F. Timm, Anna-Sabine Ernst and Donna Harsh, tape
recording, Rostock, Germany, 1 June 1996.
15. Explanatory Notes and Multiple References
Occasionally, it is desirable to place narrative in notes in order to contextualize a
discussion without delaying the development of your argument.
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45 Clinton L. Evans, The War on Weeds in the Prairie West: An Environmental History (Calgary:
University of Calgary Press, 2002). Evans argues that there is a fundamental economic
relationship between people and weeds in subsistence or non-capitalist societies. This relationship
determined both how agricultural societies developed and how weed control would be conducted.
It is sometimes necessary to put several sources into one footnote, if all the sources refer
to the material that is being referenced. In such cases, works should be separated by semicolons.
17 Glenn Burgess, The Politics of the Ancient Constitution: An Introduction to English Political
Thought, 1603-42 (University Park, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993), 34-56; Brian
Levack, The Civil Lawyers in England, 1603-1641: A Political Study (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1973), 43-67; Johann Sommerville, “English and European Political Ideas in the Early
Seventeenth Century: Revisionism and the Case of Absolutism,” Journal of British Studies 35
(1996): 168-94.
16. Additional Material
For detailed explanations on how to reference additional material, such as music scores,
videos, documentaries, and legal cases, consult one of the sources listed in the Further
Resources section below.
Proper Bibliographical Format
A bibliography is a list of all the sources that were consulted in the course of researching
and writing the essay. As a result, some works might be cited in the bibliography that are
not otherwise referenced in the essay. Do not, however, include clearly irrelevant
material in the bibliography. The main difference between notes and bibliographical
entries is how the information is presented, rather than what is presented. Entries are
alphabetized by the author’s last name or institution and the various elements of the
reference are separated by periods instead of commas. Short titles are not used in
bibliographies and page ranges are only used for journal articles. Primary and secondary
sources are usually separated, although it is not always necessary to separate them further
unless an extensive list of sources has been used. What follows is an example of a
properly-formatted bibliography, using some examples from the previous section.
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Manuscript [use only when manuscript sources have been consulted]
Dee, John. “Brytanici Imperii Limites.” British Library, Additional Manuscripts 59681.
Great Britain Public Record Office. Patent Roll, C/66.
——. State Papers, 14/164. [Note: The three-em dash (——.) is used when the author’s name is the
same as the last entry, in this case, “Great Britain Public Record Office”.]
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Electronic [use only when electronic sources have been consulted]
Las Casas, Bartholomew. “Amerindians and the Garden of Eden.” In Western
Civilization Documents CD-ROM. Upper Saddle, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2004).
Luther, Martin. “Address to the Nobility of the German Nation (1520).” In Internet
Modern History Sourcebook, http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/luther-nobility.html
(15 May 2004).
Printed [use only when printed sources have been consulted]
Blackstone, William. Commentaries on the Laws of England. 4 vols. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1979. [Note that the publishing information is not placed in parentheses.]
Harriot, Thomas. A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia.
Frankfort, 1590.
Great Britain Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts. Calendar of the Manuscripts
of the Most Honourable the Marquis of Salisbury, Preserved at Hatfield House. London:
Her Majesty’s Stationer’s Office, 1885.
Secondary Sources
Brown, Christopher L. “The Politics of Slavery.” In The British Atlantic World, 1500-
1800, ed. David Armitage and Michael Braddick. New York: Palgrave, 2002.
Coleman, Heather. Review of Everyday Stalinism: Ordinary Life in Extraordinary Times:
Soviet Russia in the 1930s, by S. Fitzpatrick. Canadian Journal of History 36 (2001):
151-152.
Flores, William V. “New Citizens, New Rights: Undocumented Immigrants and Latino
Cultural Citizenship.” Latin American Perspectives 30 (2003): 87-100.
Foucault, Michael. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Trans. Alan Sheridan.
New York: Random House, 1995.
Gorman, Daniel. “Wider and Wider Still?: Racial Politics, Intra-Imperial Immigration
and the Absence of an Imperial Citizenship in the British Empire.” Journal of
Colonialism and Colonial History 3.3 (2002),
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/journal_of_colonialism
_and_colonial_history/toc/cch3.3.html (accessed 25 August 2007).
Greer, Thomas H. and Gavin Lewis, A Brief History of the Western World, 8th ed.
(Toronto: Nelson, 2002). [Note that only the first author’s name is reversed.]
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Parrish, Susan Scott. American Curiosity: Cultures of Natural History in the Colonial
British Atlantic World. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006.
Winks, Robin W., and Lee Palmer Wandel. Europe in a Wider World, 1350-1650. New
York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Annotated Bibliographies
Professors will sometimes request that an annotated bibliography be submitted, either
with the essay or with a research proposal that precedes the essay. This uses the same
format as that shown above, except that each entry is accompanied by a brief statement
summarizing the source and showing why it is being used in the paper. Annotations
should be approximately 25 words in length. For example:
Sharpe, James. The Bewitching of Anne Gunter: A Horrible and True Story of
Deception, Witchcraft, Murder, and the King of England. New York: Routledge,
2001. Using the evidence of a case that came before the Court of Star Chamber in
1611, Sharpe shows the importance of contemporary belief systems and the
workings of the law in early modern England.
Further Resources
The most recent edition of the following resources should be consulted for additional
guidelines on writing and referencing history essays.
Chicago Manual of Style: The Essential Guide for Writers, Editors, and Publishers. 15th
ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003.
Marius, Richard, and Melvin E. Page. A Short Guide to Writing About History. 4th ed.
New York: Longman, 2002.
Northey, Margot, and Lorne Tepperman. Making Sense: A Student’s Guide to Research
and Writing. 3rd ed. Don Mills, ON: Oxford University Press, 2007.
Rampolla, Mary Lynn. A Pocket Guide to Writing in History. 4th ed. Boston: Bedford/St.
Martin’s, 2004.
Storey, William Kelleher and Towser Jones. Writing History: A Guide for Students.
Canadian ed. Don Mills, ON: Oxford University Press, 2004.
Turabian, Kate L. A Manual for Writers of Term Papers, Theses, and Dissertations. 6th
ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.
26

Explain the concept of true collaboration in health care and describe the benefits of effective interdisciplinary collaboration. Then, describe the characteristics required for effective collaboration, describe barriers to collaboration, and offer evidence-based strategies to overcome those barriers.

OVERVIEW
Explain the concept of true collaboration in health care and describe the benefits of effective interdisciplinary collaboration. Then, describe the characteristics required for effective collaboration, describe barriers to collaboration, and offer evidence-based strategies to overcome those barriers.
By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following course competencies and assessment criteria:
*****PLEASE FOLLOW GRADING RUBRIC*******
Competency 1: Explain the principles and practices of highly effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
Explain the concept of collaboration in health care.
Describe the characteristics and concepts required for effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
Describe barriers to effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
Identify evidence-based strategies to overcome barriers to effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
Competency 3: Explain the internal and external factors that can affect the health of individuals, families, communities, and populations.
Describe the benefits of effective collaboration and teamwork in health care for patients, organizations, and team members.
Competency 4: Communicate in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and consistent with the expectations of a nursing professional.
Write content clearly and logically with correct use of grammar, punctuation, and mechanics.
Correctly format paper, citations, and references using current APA style.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
To deepen your understanding, you are encouraged to consider the questions below and discuss them with a fellow learner, a work associate, an interested friend, or a member of your professional community.
Are interdisciplinary teams commonly used where you work?
If so, in which areas are they more likely to be implemented?
If not, in which areas would such a team be most effective?
How can nurses encourage more interdisciplinary teams within their organizations?
ASSESSMENT INSTRUCTIONS
You are part of an interdisciplinary team that has been highly effective. Your supervisor asks you to write a short article about why the team has been so successful and submit it to the organizational newsletter for publication.
PREPERATION
Search the University library and the Internet for peer-reviewed journal articles on collaboration and teamwork in health care. You will need at least 3 articles to support your work on this assessment.
DIRECTIONS
In the article you write for this assessment, be sure you do the following:
-Explain the concept of true collaboration in health care.
-Describe the benefits of effective collaboration and teamwork in health care for the following groups:
–Patients.
–Organizations.
–Team members.
-Describe the characteristics and concepts required for effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
-Describe barriers to effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
-Identify evidence-based strategies to overcome barriers to effective interdisciplinary collaboration.
-Format this assessment according to current APA style and formatting guidelines.
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS
Include a title page and reference page.
Ensure your assessment is 3–4 pages.
Use double-spaced, 12-pt., Times New Roman font.

What kind of problems do women encounter who challenge the gender expectations of their societies, either through their everyday behavior or through their feminist attitudes and activism? And why is it often other women who oppose such efforts to struggle for a better life for women?

The questions for your Research Synthesis Paper are the following:
What kind of problems do women encounter who challenge the gender expectations of their societies, either through their everyday behavior or through their feminist attitudes and activism? And why is it often other women who oppose such efforts to struggle for a better life for women?
For your answers, please try to compare and synthesize information from the three articles and texts by Deniz Kandiyoti, Amalia Sa’ar, and Uma Narayan. You can of course also include other sources that you are familiar with and that help you find answers to these questions.
Your paper should be about 4-5 pages long. It must have in-text-citation and a bibliography with all the sources you have used.
You will be graded according to the following criteria:
1. How well do you answer the main questions?
2. How well do you synthesize information from these three articles? (for example: Do you point out similarities and/or differences between the authors’ main arguments? Are you able to summarize shared views? Are you able to use ethnographic data from different sources to provide evidence for an argument? Do you highlight additional insights by one author that the others might not have included in their texts?)
3. How well is your paper organized? Does it have introduction, main body and conclusion? Is there a logical structure to your essay, a certain “flow” that makes it easy to understand your arguments?
4. Language usage and correctness

ANALYSING PRIMARY DOCUMENTS

ANALYSING PRIMARY DOCUMENTS
When scholars study a historical issue they often survey the works of colleagues to gain information on a particular subject they are exploring. This type of source is named a secondary source. They provide a researcher with background information and explore a broader historical context than a single document or series of documents can offer. They represent synthesis, analysis and interpretation of documents. They provide a scholarly interpretation of issues and events from a vantage point removed from the topic being studied. The use of secondary scholarly sources is important, especially for the undergraduate student who does not have access to archives and who lacks an in depth knowledge of the topic he/she is researching. Nevertheless even undergraduate students should pursue historical understanding through evidence produced by people directly involved in the topic, event or activity being investigated. Sources produced by those who directly experienced or witnessed a historical event are called primary sources.  Primary sources are not just letters and government records. They can include a wide range of materials including diaries, newspapers, census data, works of art, films, recording of oral interviews, material objects and a host of other materials. They all present unique challenges as different types of primary sources demand the student ask different questions.  A historian must examine primary evidence to come to some kind of interpretation of its meaning and its contribution to insight into the past.
While primary documents were produced by participants in a particular series of events they must be interpreted and analyzed to place them in their respective historical context . One cannot merely accept them at face value as literal truth. People lie, memories fade, or a witness is misinformed. The point a historian must consider when analyzing a historical document relates to the nature of the specific historical medium under consideration.  For example when viewing visual document such as a painting or film one will want to think about how characters etc are depicted and what does it imply about the creator’s attitude towards the subject? How is the picture composed? Are symbols incorporated into the image that would have had meaning to a viewer in the creator’s time? With letters and other written materials one may want to consider the use of adjectives etc to describe a person or events- is the subject labeled a ‘terrorist’ or a ‘freedom fighter’? Whether a primary source is visual or written one should consider the background of the creator. An observation of the conditions of landless farm workers might be interpreted differently if the author is a landed aristocrat than if she was a poor cottager. Similarly a written description of Edwardian women working in a factory might be shaped by the writer’s background as a female suffragette or a male Conservative member of parliament. When analyzing a primary one source one wants to think about who is the intended audience? For example a painting commissioned by a powerful politician anxious to ‘advertise’ his noble, heroic character would demonstrate a certain point of view or bias. It is important therefore to achieve some sort of insight into the creator’s bias and the reasons for it. Does the document challenge other similar accounts? Does it include any inconsistencies or contradictions? One should consider when a document was produced. A description of combat written in the heat of battle would be influenced by that circumstance in a different way than the same person writing his memoirs years after the event.
Finally, it is important for an analysis of a primary source to be framed in the broader context of its time. What was happening at the time that could have influenced the historical witness or actor’s depiction of contemporary events? Does the document challenge other primary or secondary scholarly accounts? If it does represent a challenge to the historical consensus what significance is it for understanding the ongoing historical debate about the topic being studied?  Primary documents and analysis of them is critical for understanding the beliefs, actions and experiences of actors in our historical past.
THE STRUCTURE OF THE DOCUMENT ANALYSIS PAPER 
When writing a document analysis one should produce a paper with a clear structure that lays out one’s interpretive analysis in a clear fashion. To this end it is recommended that the paper should adhere to a distinct structural framework. The paper should begin with an introductory paragraph that introduces the document and lays out the writer’s theory or thesis regarding its significance. The introductory paragraph should include the following components – first it should begin with a topic sentence. A topic sentence is what your paper is about. Next it should include a thesis statement. A thesis statement is a fancy way of saying the theory your paper is trying to prove. It is a declaration of the conclusions you have reached. The thesis is the theory that the rest of your paper will endeavor to prove.  Finally the introductory paragraph should include one or two sentences conveying an idea of the paper’s organizational structure.
The body of the analysis essay has two components. The first part should focus on describing the broader historical context in which the document was created.  One should describe the circumstances in which the document was created. For example maybe an artist was commissioned to produce a painting celebrating a great military victory. One should also discuss the broader historical context as it relates to the document being discussed. Our artist producing a painting to celebrate a great military victory might have been asked to do so at a time of some national crisis. It should briefly describe the document.
The next section of the paper should focus on a close analysis of the document. This section should deconstruct the document by exploring issues such as use of language and imagery that communicates what the creator of the primary source intended his or her audience to feel.  A case in point is a propaganda poster that seeks to create a feeling of enmity towards an enemy. How does the creator of the document achieve a certain result? What is its significance for understanding the historical theme it relates to?
The final paragraph or two should provide the reader with a conclusion that pulls together the discussion of the content and analysis of the document for understanding its significance in a broader historical context. It demonstrates how your discussion of the context and analysis of the document prove your thesis. Remember that this assignment ultimately is an exercise in persuasion of your interpretation of the significance of a historical document.

Paper II: Study One Methods, Results, and Discussion-The psychological purpose behind Paper II is to make sure you can tell your reader what you did on your study, how you did it, and what you found

Instructions for Paper II: Study One Methods, Results, and Discussion (Worth 35 Points)
Ryan J. Winter
University


 
Purpose of Paper II: Study One Methods, Results, and Discussion
1). Psychological Purpose
The psychological purpose behind Paper II is to make sure you can tell your reader what you did on your study, how you did it, and what you found. By now you have read several empirical studies in psychology, and you should be familiar with the Methods, Results, and Discussion sections. Now is your chance to write Methods, Results and Discussion!
Like those prior studies you looked at in Paper I, you will provide information about your participants, materials, and procedure in your Methods section. Your participant section goes first, and it includes descriptive statistics about your sample (means and standard deviations for age as well as percentages for gender and race/ethnicity). Your materials and procedure sections include information about what you did and how you did it. You should write this section for an audience who is unfamiliar with your specific study, but assume that they do know research methods. Thus educate your reader about your materials and procedure, giving enough detail so they could replicate the study. This includes explicitly describing your independent and dependent variables and talking about how you presented those variables to your participants. My suggestion is to look over the articles you summarized in Paper I and see how they wrote their Methods. This will give you a good idea regarding the level of depth and detail you need in your own Methods section.
Your Results section follows. The purpose of this section is to make sure you can show how you analyzed the data and describe what you found. You will have a lot of help in this section from your lab instructors.
Finally, I want you to include a short description of your findings. Tell me if you supported or did not support your hypotheses and explain why you got those results (you can actually speculate here if you like, but make it an “educated” speculation!)
Note: The plagiarism limit is higher in this paper (up to 65%) since your classmates are doing the same design. Don’t go higher than that, though! 65% is the maximum allowed!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Methods

  1. Title Page: I expect the following format (1 point):
    1. The title page for your Paper II is identical to the one you used for Paper I: Literature Review Study One. For proper APA formatting, I suggest you either copy your title page from Paper I or review the title page instructions I gave you in Paper I.
  2. Abstract, Graphs, and Tables? These are optional
    1. You DO NOT need an abstract for Paper II: Methods, Results, and Discussion (Study One), and you DO NOT need a table or figure. You can choose to include them if you want, but they will not be graded.
  3. Methods Section: I expect the following format (15 points):
    1. For this paper, the methods section starts on page 2.
    2. Write Method at the top of this page, make it bold, and center it (see the top of this page as an example!)
    3. The participants section comes next. The word Participants is bolded and left justified. In this section …
      1. Tell me who your participants were (college students, family members, friends?) and how many there were.
        1. Note: If a number starts a sentence, then spell out the number. That is, “Two-hundred and five participants participated in this study.”
        2. If a number is mid-sentence, you can use numerals. “There were 205 participants in this study.”
        3. Keep numbers consistent, though. If you spell them out at the start of the sentence, carry that through and spell out other numbers in the sentence.
        4. For statistics, always use numbers (for the mean, SD, %, etc.)
      2. Provide frequencies and descriptive statistics for relevant demographics.
        1. For some variables—like ethnicity and gender—you only need to provide frequency information (the number of participants who fit that category). “There were 100 men (49%) and 105 women (51%) in the study.” Or “The sample was 49% male (N = 100) and 51% female (N = 105).”
        2. Other variables—like age—are continuous (rather than categorical), so use descriptive statistics here (the range, mean, and the standard deviation). “Participants ranged in age from 18 to 77 (M = 24, SD = 3.50).” or “The average age of participants was 24 (SD = 3.50).” Your TA can help you find the mean and standard deviation for this assignment, though information is also available in a lab powerpoint.
        3. Make sure to italicize the N, M, and SD (the letters, not the numbers)
      3. Materials and Procedure
        1. For this section, things are flexible. Some studies include Materials and Procedure in the same section while others break them up into two sections. This is a matter of choice.
          1. In general, the more complex the design, the better it is to split up the methods and results. In one section, the author may describe the materials; in the next, they describe what participants did with those materials (the procedure). This is one option for you. However …
          2. However, your “Paper II: Methods, Results and Discussion (Study One)” is simple enough that I strongly recommend combining them into one overall Materials and Procedure section.
        2. Again, the words Materials and Procedure are flush left. In this section …
          1. Provide information about your materials and your procedure.
            1. I suggest starting with your procedure. Tell your reader what your participants did in the order participants did them. Be specific here. I have the following recommendations:
              1. First, talk about the oral informed consent procedure.
              2. Second, talk about the three versions of the Terror Management Theory questionnaire. Provide enough detail so that your readers know how the three conditions differ. I need to able to replicate your design, so give me enough detail so I can do so. (Hint: Copy and paste the various questions or refer the reader to an appendix that has those materials!)
  • Third, talk about your dependent variables (that is, your survey questions. For these dependent variables, once again provide enough detail so I know exactly what questions you asked. For example, “Participants provided their gender, age, and race”. For other dependent variables, tell me how the responses were recorded (yes/no, true/false, a scale of 1 to 6, etc.). If you used a scale, note the endpoints. That is, does a 1 mean it is high or is it low? “Participants were asked, ‘How frustrating was this task?’, and they responded on a scale from 1 (very frustrating) to 9 (not at all frustrating).’” Your study has a few really important DVs (including the number of word fragments completed with a death-related word as well as several DVs about the essay). For these DVs, you once again need to tell me what they are specifically!
  1. Fourth, make sure to highlight which specific DVs you analyzed. If there are DVs participants completed but you did not analyze it, feel free to say those DVs were not analyzed, but if you analyze them in the results section, then be specific about them in the methods section.
  2. Finally, mention debriefing
  1. There is no set minimum or maximum on the length of the methods section, but I would expect at least a page or two (though probably more. After all, your own research script took up several pages – you should provide a similar level of depth and detail in your methods section!). Missing important aspects of your IVs and DVs or presenting them in a confused manner will lower your score in this section.
  2. Remember, make sure that another researcher can replicate your study based on your methods section. If they can’t, then you may not have enough detail!
  1. Results Section: I expect the following format (10 points):
    1. The results are the hardest part of this paper, and your lab powerpoints will help you with this part of the paper (also refer to the crash course statistics quizzes, which walk you through similar analyses!).
    2. First, write Results at the top of this section, center it, and use boldface. This section comes directly at the end of the methods section, so the results section DOES NOT start on its own page.
    3. For this assignment, include statistics about the most important variables in your study, including your IV (Terror Management Theory – Mortality Salience, Dental Pain, and College) and the DVs you feel are most important to your hypotheses (again, I suggests the word-fragment question (total # of death-related words each participant completed), as well as any other question(s) as you see fit (You should look at one DV related to the essay). Note that some instructors may not do this Terror Management Theory study at all, but the results section should follow the same guidelines regardless of your study design.
    4. For this paper, you must run at least three different analyses on three different dependent variables. One must be a chi square for the question asking participants which to recall which essay they wrote in Part e (our manipulation check). At least one of the remaining two analyses must be a One Way ANOVA (I actually recommend that both of your last two analyses focus on One Way ANOVAs). The third analysis can be either an ANOVA or a t-Test. Since all of the essay-based questions are scaled 1 to 6, I recommend running ANOVAs on at least one of those dependent variables. However, you should also run an ANOVA on the total number of death-related words. Now, you could run an ANOVA on the number of word fragments and a t-Test on the number of word fragments, but because it is the same DV, that only counts as one DV. We count the number of DVs you analyze – NOT the number of tests you run!
      1. Chi square: Your first analysis will be a chi square, which you use if your DV is categorical (yes / no; yes / no / maybe; male / female, or … in our case, we have our Mortality Salience, Dental Pain, or College multiple-choice options in the question in Part e). So let’s discuss the chi square, which does not look at means but rather counts how many responses there are compared to how many you would expect.
        1. Consider DV e) on your questionnaire – “Without looking back, tell me whether the open-ended question you completed on page one asked you to write about death, dental pain, or getting into college (Mark one with an X).” Here, you can run a chi square looking at the frequencies of the three answer options
        2. We are interested in the chi square (χ2) and p We also provide percentages for each of our groups (rather than means and SD).
          1. “Using the essay condition as our independent variable (MS, Dental Pain, or College) and the essay participants recalled writing as the dependent variable, we saw a significant effect, χ2(4) = 68.49, p < .001. Most participants in the MS condition recalled writing about death (98%); most participants in Dental Pain condition recalled writing about dental pain (96%); and most participants in college condition recalled writing about college (90%). This indicates that participants saw our manipulation as intended.”
          2. Make sure to italicize the χ and p
        3. ANOVA: Since you have a condition independent variable with three levels (e.g. MS, DP, or College), the most appropriate test is a One-Way ANOVA if your DV is scaled (like a 0 to 6 scale or a 1 to 6 scale). Your lab and lecture powerpoints show you how to conduct an ANOVA, but there are some guidelines I want to give you about how to write your results. Below, I am going to walk you through one analysis specific to this paper. However, keep in mind that you can run ANOVAs on several different DVs.
          1. First, there are several dependent variables to choose from. For my example analysis below, I want to focus on Part c in your survey (the word-fragment question). Since this is a scaled variable that has a zero point (they could find zero death-related words or up to six), it is a ratio scale, which is perfect for an ANOVA. (Other questions we can look at are all of those ranging from 1 to 6 in Part d).
          2. Second, given that this study has one IV with three levels and one DV that is on a continuous (ratio or interval) scale, a One-Way ANOVA is the best test to use to see if there are significant differences among the levels. We look first at the ANOVA table (or F table) and focus on the between subject factor. We note the degrees of freedom, the F value itself, and the p (We’ll get into two-way ANOVAs later in this course, but here we only have one independent variable, so it is a one-way ANOVA. Yes, we have three levels to our IV, but it is still only one IV).
          3. If the p value is significant (less than .05), we have one more step to take. Since this is a three level IV, we need to compare mean A to mean B, mean A to mean C, and mean B to mean C. We do this using a post hoc test (try using Tukey!). That will tell us which of the means differ significantly. You then write up the results (Note: I completely made up the data below, so don’t copy the numbers!) …
            1. “Using the essay condition (MS v. DP v. College) as our independent variable and how many death-related words the participant found as the dependent variable, we found a significant condition effect, F(2, 203) = 4.32, p < .05. Tukey post hoc tests showed that participants found more death-related words in the mortality salience condition (M = 4.56, SD = 1.21) than participants in both the dental pain (M = 2.24, SD = 0.89) and college (M = 2.23, SD = 0.77) conditions. The dental pain and college conditions, however, did not differ. This supports our hypothesis that participants who are death-aware are more likely to complete word fragments with death-related words than those who are thinking about dental pain or college.”
              1. Note there are three possible outcomes: NONE of the three conditions differ (A = B = C). ALL differ from each other (A ≠ B ≠ C). One differs from the other two, but those other two do not differ (A ≠ B = C)
              2. Also note that participants in the dental pain and college conditions DID find some death-related words. This is not a problem. Our prediction was that MS participants would find more death-related words, not that dental pain and college participants would find zero words!
            2. Make sure to italicize the F, p, M, and SD (as in the example)
            3. Pretty simple, right! I suggest going back and doing this same procedure for at least one additional scaled DV (like question 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5).
            4. However, if you choose you can do a t-Test on one of those other dependent variables as well. Here’s how:
  • t-Test: If you have only two levels to your IV (e.g. MS or Dental Pain only), things are even more simple.
    1. Here, you will run a t-Test (a t-Test looks at differences between only two groups). Again, your lab presentations tell you how to run this, but you can do it on your own as well (you can even run this if your study originally has three levels to the IV – when you go into the t-Test menu in SPSS, choose “define groups” and select 1 and 3 (MS = 1 and Dental Pain = 2). This will let you look at two of the groups! You could also select “2 and 3” or “1 and 3” where the College condition = 3).
    2. Rather than an F value, we will look at the t value in the t-Test data output. Here, we have one number for the degree of freedom, we have the t value, and we have the p
    3. The nice thing about a t-Test is that since you only have two groups, you do not need a post hoc test like Tukey (you only need that if you have to compare three means. Here, we only have two means, so we can just look at them and see which one is higher and which is lower when our t-Test is significant). Then just write it up …
      1. “Using the essay condition (MS v. Dental Pain) as our independent variable and the number of death-related words participants found as our dependent variable, we found a significant condition effect, t(203) = 8.12, p < .05. Participants found more death-related words in the mortality salience condition (M = 5.56, SD = 1.21) than participants in the dental pain condition (M = 2.23, SD = 0.77).”
      2. Repeat for other dependent variables
      3. Make sure to italicize the t, p, M , and SD (as in the example)
    4. Statistics order recommendation: For this paper, start your results section with the chi square (your manipulation check). Then talk about your main analyses (The word-fragment question as well as at least one essay-based dependent variable). Make sure the analyses line up with your hypotheses.
  1. There is no page minimum or maximum for the results section, though I would expect it to be at least a paragraph or two for each dependent variable
  1. Appendices (4 points)
    1. I want to make sure you are including the correct numbers in your results section, so I want you to include all relevant SPSS tables for each of your analyses in a series of appendices.
      1. Appendix A: Include your tables for age, gender, and ethnicity.
      2. Appendix B: Include your tables for your chi square and the crosstabs
  • Appendix C: Include your tables for your first DV (This must be an ANOVA table, the descriptive statistics table for that ANOVA, and the post hoc test whether it is significant or not)
  1. Appendix D: Include your tables for you second DV (Although I prefer a second ANOVA like iii. above, you could include t-Test tables here. This would involve both the descriptives for the t-Test and the t-Test output itself
  1. Hint: The best way to get these tables is to copy them directly from SPSS. In the SPSS output, right click on the table, copy it, and then paste it into your appendix. Another alternative is to use a “snipping” tool (search “snipping tool” in Microsoft Word to find it). You can highlight an area on any computer page and save it as a picture. Copy the picture and paste it into your appendix. Easy!
  1. Discussion Study One (2 points)
    1. In this section, tell me about your findings and if they did or did not support your results. It might help to refer back to your hypotheses “We expected to find A but instead found B” or “We expected to find A and our results supported this hypothesis.” Explain using plain English why you think your study turned out the way it did.
    2. IMPORTANT – Do NOT give me statistics again here. I can find those in your results section. Here, all I want is a plain English summary of your findings.
    3. Also, don’t give me results for a DV if you did not run an analysis on that DV. Only tell me about the results you actually looked at in the results section.
    4. There is no length requirement for this section, but I recommend at least four or five sentences
  2. Overall writing quality (3 points)

 
 
 

  • Page size is 8 1/2 X 11” with all 4 margins should be one inch. You must use a 12-point font in Times New Roman.