Title: Reading in History
1Reading in History
2What is history reading? Reading of texts that
include
Memoir Biography Historical fiction Political map Thematic Data Tables Textbook Juried Essay Polemic Essay Editorial News story Political Cartoon Graphic Novel Graph, chart, table Artwork Interview Documentary Video Trade books Legislation Legal Documents Photographs Historical artifacts Translations Blogs, tweets Primary Sources artifacts, documents, recordings, etc. from time period Secondary Sources interpretations of primary sources Tertiary Sources Interpretations of secondary sources
3What is history reading?
- Reading that embodies ways that historians
interpret the world - Historians create categories of historical study
such as - Political
- Ideological
- Social
- Economic
- Artistic
- Historians study basic systems (feudalism,
monarchy, etc.)
4What is history reading?
- Historians study relationships among these
systems and categories - Contingency
- Chance Coincidence
- Chronology
- Historians study change over time.
5Contingency
- Out of the conversations grew Bunau-Varilla's
conviction that if the Panamanians tried to
declare their independence, the United State
would use force. - Because people had difficulty finding work during
the depression, Roosevelt created a number of
works programs.
6Chance Coincidence
- The balance is certainly struck in the history of
decisive battles Those most contingent of
events whose effects alter the parameters of
possibility. In this context, the great men of
history such as William the conqueror do not
control and predict the uncontrollable and
unpredictable. Rather they are those best able
to take advantage of the chances thrown their way
and make things happen.
7Chronology
- 1790
- By the American Revolution, 20 percent of the
overall population in the thirteen colonies was
of African descent. The legalized practice of
enslaving blacks occurred in every colony. The
economic realities of the southern colonies,
however, perpetuated the institution, which was
first legalized in Massachusetts in 1641. During
the Revolutionary era, more than half of all
African-Americans lived in Virginia and Maryland.
Most of these blacks lived in the Chesapeake
region, where they made up more than 50 to 60
percent of the overall population. The majority,
but not all, of these African-Americans were
slaves. In fact, the first official United States
Census, taken in 1790, showed that 8 percent of
the black populace was free. Edgar A. Toppin.
"Blacks in the American Revolution" (published
essay, Virginia State University, 1976), p. 1.
Whether free or slave, blacks in the Chesapeake
established familial relationships, networks for
disseminating information, survival techniques,
and various forms of resistance to their
condition.
8How do historians think about history?
- History is an interpretation
- There are competing narratives
- History is an approximation of the past
- History is contested and contestable
- To understand history, one must have historical
empathy - Historians care about historical significance
- Some events and issues are more significant that
others
9How do historians read?
- They engage in
- Sourcing (determining where information came
from) - Contextualization (determining what the
circumstances were when the information was
written) - Corroboration (determining the extent of
agreement and disagreement across sources) - In order to evaluate the credibility and
trustworthiness of what they are reading
10Sourcing
- I saw, ohI dont know him very well, but he the
author is part of a right-wing group of southern
conservatives who is a secessionist. Im not sure
that the best model for thinking about Lincoln as
a president is one that comes from a racist. So I
have my critical eyes up a little bit, so its a
bit of a stretch to be friendly to, so I wanted
to make sure to read it fairly.
11Contextualization
- Id want to take up this book. Its a 1984 book,
and in Lincoln scholarship, thats ages. There
have been many books written since, and I would
want to know how the arguments changed since
1984.
12Corroboration
- How does it relate to the other piece I just
read? The title in the Oates book doesnt imply
a particular perspective, except to say that it
is published by Harper and Row, so it is for a
popular audience interested in history. It may
also be trying to reach the professional audience
as well. Many historians try to write to both
audiences simultaneously. When you compare that
with the Bradford piece, its a very different
impression. The title indicates that the author
is writing from a particular perspective
southern and conservative. Immediately, that
colors how you read the piece. You expect it to
be critical of Lincoln. If anyone is critical, it
would be a southern conservative. A southern
scholarly press means it was probably not
intended for a wide audience like the other book.
13How do historians read?
- Historians question how inclusive the
interpretation iswhat perspectives are included
and what is left out - Historians question the coherence of the
historical argumentswhether or not they make
sense - Historians look at word choice as a signal of an
authors perspective - Historians try to find out where a story begins
and ends (periodization) - Historians read history as an argumenta
presentation of warrants, claims, and evidence,
even if the text has a narrative structure
14What are the characteristics of history texts?
- Textbooks commonly combine narrative, exposition,
and description - Texts use conventions of chronology (before,
after, next, In date, later) - Texts borrow technical vocabulary from the other
social sciences (economics, political science,
sociology, etc.) - Texts have a lot of difficult general academic
vocabulary. - Texts employ metaphorical language (e.g. The
gilded age) - Primary sources often use outdated language and
ideas that are difficult and sometimes
uncomfortable to read.
15What are the characteristics of history texts?
- Sentences are complexthe information can be
buried in long noun phrases - The enlargement of the nations industrial
capacity, including the making of barbed wire and
the advent of western train transportation,
served the demands of the west. - Sentences are about time, place, and manner (over
the next decade they gathered in Philadelphia,
their harsh stands made enemies) - There are participants/actors, processes, and
goals
16Place, Actors, processes, goals, manner
- At the same time, George II and his ministers
made enemies of many moderate colonists by their
harsh words.
17Example of history text
- By 1932 the unemployment rate had soared past 20
percent. Thousands of banks and businesses had
failed. Millions were homeless. Men (and women)
returned home from fruitless job hunts to find
their dwellings padlocked and their possessions
and families turned into the street. Many drifted
from town to town looking for non-existent jobs.
Many more lived at the edges of cities in
makeshift shantytowns their residents derisively
called Hoovervilles. People foraged in dumps and
garbage cans for food. - The presidential campaign of 1932 was run against
the backdrop of the Depression. Franklin Delano
Roosevelt won the Democratic nomination and
campaigned on a platform of attention to the
forgotten man at the bottom of the economic
pyramid. Hoover continued to insist it was not
the governments job to address the growing
social crisis. Roosevelt won in a landslide. He
took office on March 4, 1933, with the
declaration that the only thing we have to fear
is fear itself.
18Example of history text
- The high level of unemployment, the decrease in
national income, and the falling price level
during the Great Depression seemingly caused the
federal government to intervene to reduce this
crisis. President Franklin Roosevelt stated in
his 1933 inaugural address Our greatest primary
task is to put people to workIt can be
accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the
Government itself In fact, his desire to use
the government as a quick remedy to the
Depression was so strong that he also stated in
his address that if Congress failed to follow his
recommended policies, he would request broad
Executive power to wage war against the
emergency, as great as the power that would be
given to me if we were in fact invaded by a
foreign foe. Although these statements indicate
a strong desire to strengthen government powers
to soften the economic downturn, the severity of
the economic contraction cannot necessarily be
deemed the direct cause of the rapid growth in
government spending since the 1930s.
19Purposes for reading history texts
- To be informed about the past
- To learn how to think critically about multiple
perspectives - To inform understanding of the present
- To understand the discipline of historywhat
questions can be asked and answered by a study of
the past - To engage in argumentation based upon historical
evidence
20Why is reading history important?
- All historians are dependent upon reading
- The documents and artifacts used to construct
history require nuanced and critical reading - The study of documents allows students to
evaluate different perspectives on the past (and
present)
21Why is reading in history important?
- Reading is required for the reading portion of
the ACT. - After the opening of the Erie Canal in1825, the
Legislature of New York directed a land survey
for a state railroad that was to be constructed,
at public expense, through the southern tier of
counties from the Hudson River to Lake Erie. The
unfavorable profile that the survey indicated
apparently prompted the legislature to abandon
the project. But, the notion of an east-to-west
railroad spanning nearly the entire breadth of
the state continued to hold sway over the minds
of many New Yorkers, and the significant benefits
that the Erie Canal had brought to the Mohawk
Valley and surrounding country led the southern
counties to demand a rail route that would work
similar wonders in that region. This growing
sentiment finally persuaded the legislature to
charter, in April 1832, the New York and Erie
Railroad Company, and to give it authority to
construct tracks and regulate its own charges for
transportation.
22ACT Questions
- As it is used in the passage, the word
subscriptions (line 72) most nearly means - F. an agreement to order a specified number of
issues of a newspaper. - G. receiving discounted tickets for a series of
railway trips. - H. contributions of a specified amount to a
project. - I. a membership fee paid regularly.
23ACT Questions
- Which of the following statements best describes
the authors method and purpose for addressing
his subject? - A. Presenting a comparative history of
railroads to justify the success story of the
Erie Railroad - B. Constructing an argument for the construction
of the Erie Railroad based on the sentiment of
the people of the state of New York - C. Presenting the authors own personal
experience in the field of railway construction
in order to acquaint the reader with the
financial hurdles faced by the Erie Railroad
project - D. Presenting a series of researched facts in
order to provide a detailed chronological history
of the Erie Canal
24ACT Questions
- The passage provides clearest support for which
of the following statements? - F. Constructing the Erie Railroad is a remarkable
feat of engineering. - G. The construction of the Erie Railroad was a
disaster of unimaginable proportions. - H. Subsequent surveys changed the planned route
during construction. - J. The proposed route for the railroad was
successfully completed and expanded upon
25Why is history reading important
- It is a large part of the Common Core Standards
26Literacy in History/Social Studies (6-8, 9-10,
11-12) Key Ideas/Details
- Cite specific textual evidence to support
analysis of primary and secondary sources. - Determine the main ideas or information of a
primary or secondary source summarize the
source, basing the summary on information in the
text rather than on prior knowledge or opinions. - Identify key steps in a texts description of a
process related to history/social studies (e.g.,
how a bill becomes law, how interest rates are
raised or lowered). - Cite specific textual evidence to support
analysis of primary and secondary sources,
attending to such features as the date and origin
of the information. - Determine the main ideas or information of a
primary or secondary source summarize how key
events or ideas develop over the course of the
text. - Analyze in detail a series of events described in
a text and the causes that link the events
distinguish whether earlier events caused later
ones or simply preceded them. - Cite specific textual evidence to support
analysis of primary and secondary sources,
connecting insights gained from specific details
to an understanding of the text as a whole. - Determine the main ideas or information of a
primary or secondary source provide a summary
that makes clear the relationships between the
key details and ideas. - Analyze how ideas and beliefs emerge, develop,
and influence events, based on evidence in the
text .
27Literacy in History/Social Studies (6-8, 9-10,
11-12) Craft Structure
- Determine the meaning of words and phrases in a
text, including vocabulary specific to domains
related to history/social studies. - Identify how a history/social studies text
presents information (e.g., sequentially,
comparatively, causally). - Identify aspects of a text that reveal an
authors point of view or purpose (e.g., loaded
language, inclusion or avoidance of particular
facts). - Determine the meaning of words and phrases in a
text, including the vocabulary describing
political, economic, or social aspects of
history. - Explain how an author chooses to structure
information or an explanation in a text to
emphasize key points or advance a point of view. - Compare the point of view of two or more authors
by comparing how they treat the same or similar
historical topics, including which details they
include and emphasize in their respective
accounts. - Interpret the meaning of words and phrases in a
text, including how an author uses and refines
the meaning of a key term over the course of a
text (e.g., how Madison defines faction in
Federalist No. 10 and No. 51). - Analyze in detail how a complex primary source is
structured, including how key sentences,
paragraphs, and larger portions of the text
contribute to the whole. - Evaluate authors differing points of view on the
same historical event or issue by assessing the
authors claims, evidence, and reasoning.
28Literacy in History/Social Studies (6-8, 9-10,
11-12) Integration
- Integrate graphical information (e.g., pictures,
videos, maps, time lines) with other information
in a print or digital text. - Distinguish among fact, opinion, and reasoned
judgment in a historical account. - Analyze the relationship between a primary and
secondary source on the same topic. - Integrate quantitative or technical information
presented in maps, time lines, and videos with
other information in a print or digital text. - Assess the extent to which the evidence n a text
supports the authors claims. - Compare and contrast treatments of the same topic
in several primary and secondary sources. - Synthesize ideas and data presented graphically
and determine their relationship to the rest of a
print or digital text, noting discrepancies
between the graphics and other information in the
text. - Evaluate an authors premises, claims, and
evidence by corroborating or challenging them
with other sources of information. - Integrate information from diverse sources, both
primary and secondary, into a coherent
understanding of an idea or event, noting
discrepancies among sources.
29The Lessons
- Essential Questions
- What is the purpose of our government?
- Has the government become too large and/or taken
on too much power? - Has the government become too involved in
economics? - What is the governments role in our current
economic situation? - What, or who, is to blame for our current
economic situation? - What was the cause of the first Great Depression?
- How is the first Great Depression related to the
economic situation today? - Explicit Instruction Modeling/explanation,
guided practice, independent practice, feedback,
transfer
30The Texts
- Szulczyk, K. (2010). The Economics of
Government - Brinkley. An American History A Survey
- Davis, K. Great Depression
- Taylor, N. (2010). A short history of the Great
Depression. NYTimes.com - Zemike, K. Generation OMG. NYTimes.com
- Baker, P. Obama to Wall Street Join us instead
of fighting us. NY Times - Thomas, G. Institutions and Government Growth
Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review - Obama, B. (2010) The right thing to do.
- McIntyre, D. (2009). The recession America
needed. Newsweek - Lai, D. (2010). The great crash of 2008. Cato
Journal
31Vocabulary
Economy Economics Socialism Democracy Communism Laissez-faire Monopoly Black Market Barter Tax Subsidy Depression Volatile Inflation Recession
32Examples of Strategies
- Before Reading
- Quickwrites
- Magnet Words
- Smart
- Anticipation/Reaction
- During Reading
- Summarizing
- Annotation
- Discussion Web
- After Reading
- Save the Last Word
- The Most Important Word
- Reciprocal Teaching
- Collaborative Annotation
- Cause and Effects Chart
33Writing Activities
- Writing to learn
- Summarizing
34What will teachers need to do to teach the unit?
- Decide how to introduce and frame/reframe the
essential questions as they relate to each of the
readings - Decide before teaching how the strategies can be
used to help students understand the history
texts, especially in relation to the essential
questions and the practices of historians as they
read history - Choose strategies that make sense for the
discipline of history - Find a way to help students make connections
across texts and to keep track of the different
perspectives these texts represent. - The teacher provides the glue!
35Text Example
- By September of 1929, nervous investors began
selling stocks in order to get out of the market
while prices were still high. As the volume of
selling increased, stock prices began to fall in
October. On October 24 (Black Thursday) and
October 29 (Black Tuesday), prices fell
drastically as sellers panicked. By December, a
staggering 40 billion in stock value had been
lost. Hoover and business leaders attempted to
calm Americans by assuring them that the
country's economy was fundamentally sound. J.P.
Morgan and other bankers bought 20 million of
U.S. Steel to try to restore confidence, but to
no avail. The Stock Market Crash of 1929 did not
by itself cause the American economy to collapse.
Many factors contributed to a situation so
precarious that this event was but the first of a
cascade of collapses on many different fronts
around the entire world.
36Text Example
- One weakness in the American economy was lack of
diversification. Prosperity of the 1920s was
largely a result of expansion of construction and
automobile industries and their corollary
industries such as the petroleum industry. Older
businesses, such as coal, declined. - Poor distribution of income and purchasing power
among consumers also contributed. By 1929, the
top 10 percent of the nation's population
received 40 percent of the nation's disposable
income, but this 10 percent did not purchase the
mass quantities of food and goods that were being
turned out in the nation's farms and factories.
Many farmers and factory workers, on the other
hand, were unable to make the purchases of cars
and houses that would have sustained economic
growth. Farm income actually declined 66 percent
from 1920 to 1929.
37Text Example
- Overproduction of goods and farm products
compared to the public's ability to pay for them
dragged the economy down. Panicked farm and
business owners plowed what profits they made not
into wages of workers who would have been
customers, but into ever-less-profitable plants
and acreage. Industrialists, rather than increase
wages, put their money into new production
capacity. Massive business inventories (up 300
percent from 1928 to 1929) and food surpluses
drove prices ever downward. As farms and
businesses faltered, unemployment rose cutting
the nation's purchasing power even more.
Overproduction drove down prices, and things were
cheap, but farmers and workers were too strapped
to buy goods at any price.
38What should a teacher consider?
- What does this piece say in regards to the
essential questions? (Last two about the
depression are the ones highlighted in the ex.
text) - What stylistic features are in this text that
your students should know? (chronology,
cause/effect description, narrative) - How is this text structured? (argument
structurefew headings and subheading, graphics) - Which before, during, and after activities make
most sense for your students? - Who wrote the text? For what purpose and from
what perspectives? When was it written? Is it a
trustworthy account?
39Before Reading Anticipation/Reaction Guide
- Teacher constructs questions that have a yes/no
answer. - As students read, they revise their answers.
Agree Dis- Agree The depression was only in the U.S., and not global Pgs. Evidence Agree Dis- Agree
At least people could go back to the farm if they lost their city jobs
President Roosevelt ended the depression
40Before/During Reading Magnet Words
- Have students read a short section and identify
magnet words. - Put magnet words on the board. Students write
magnet words on index cards. - Students recall important details related to the
wordsthen check recall by returning to text.
Put details on index cards. - Students finish reading the text, identifying
magnet words (3 or 4). - Students add details in groups.
- Students turn details in to summary statement,
using magnet word. - Students combine magnet word summaries into a
single summary in a group and then share.
41Magnet words
- Overproduction
- Details
- Industries and farms overproduced goods but did
not raise wages - The wealthy did not buy up the oversupply
- The others didnt have enough money to buy the
goods and farm products - Summary
- Industries and farms overproduced goods that the
wealthy did not buy and the others, because their
wages werent raised, couldnt afford.
42After Reading Save the Last Word
- Students get in groups of 3-5
- Students write a quote on one side of index card
and why they think it is important on another. - Individual shares quote only. The group responds
with their own ideas. - Individual shares what he or she wrote on the
back. - Example Overproduction drove down prices, and
things were cheap, but farmers and workers were
too strapped to buy goods at any price. - Wages must have been very low, because usually,
when prices go down, sales go up.
43StrategiesDuring (and after) Reading
Discussion Web
- Reasons for Yes
- Source 1
- Source 2
- Source 3
- Reasons for No
- Source 1
- Source 2
- Source 3
The government is too involved in our economy
today
Our Answer
44Other things to consider
- Help students use sourcing, contextualization,
corroboration in evaluating the information they
are reading in the texts - Help students keep track of the different
perspectives they are reading in relation to the
essential questions. Perhaps put the essential
questions on one grid of a chart and the texts on
the other, having students write information that
relates to that question in the box. - Help students look at word choice in the text as
an indication of an authors perspective.
45Remember the purposes for reading history
- Common Core Standards
- ACT
- Helping students to make sense of the past and to
think critically about historical evidence - THANKS!!!
- Cyndie Shanahan
- chynd_at_uic.edu