historical thinking skills
Historical Writing
corroboration
recite
record key facts and ideas
for each of your questions
historiography
apa style and formatting
survey
record important titles
and subtitles from the work
sourcing
sq3r
tone
figurative language
syntax
diction
read
wright answers to the
questions you have
created.
historical reading
non written artifacts
remains, buildings, coins,
statuses, clothes, ect
contextualization
sources
secondary
this is someones writing based off of
something they read or heard. they are
writing their version of a primary source
or a few primary sources. they did not
see this happen first hand, so they can slip
in biases or fables.
primary
from someone who saw saw whatever from
a first person view. they witnessed it with
their own eyes, and these accounts are less
likely to be biased, but still can be.
close reading
chronological thinking
question
wright who, what, when,
where, and why questions
from the main idea
written documents
records, diaries,
newspapers, treaties, etc