1 / 3

Analysing Sources

O – Origin. Where did the source come from? Who did it come from? When did it come from? P – Purpose. What are the ramifications of the origins? In terms of the historical context of the source, what does it mean?

manchu
Download Presentation

Analysing Sources

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. O – Origin. Where did the source come from? Who did it come from? When did it come from? P – Purpose. What are the ramifications of the origins? In terms of the historical context of the source, what does it mean? V – Value. With the origin and purpose in mind, what value does this source have? (Bias does not make a source worthless!!!) What does it show about the society? What does it show about the type of thinking at that time? L – Limitations. Despite the value, what pitfalls in the origin and purpose cause this source to not be valuable? Is it damaged? Was it mistranslated? Was it “corrupted” since it was altered for a specific audience only? Just try to structure your source analysis with these points in a logical sequence; each one should build on top of previous points. AnalysingSources

  2. TIPS: •Bias does not make a source worthless. •Try to give a balanced discussion of value and limitations (don’t spend a page on value and a sentence on limitations). •In regards to origin, make sure you are familiar with the major political cartoons, newspapers, media, etc. of the time era you are studying. It often shows you what kind of perspective this source is coming from. •Do not disregard a source because it is “merely” propaganda. •Try to develop a purpose which relates to the origins of the source. •Keep in mind different historical interpretations of the source. •Is the source primary, secondary, etc? A historical artifact and an encyclopedia article are very different.

  3. Example www.schoolhistory.com/railways................. Origin: Internet Source, accessed 2012, a websitedesignedforschools. Purpose: Provide a simple version of historicalevents in aninterestingwayforchildren Value: Objective and basedonobjectiveinformation Limitations: informationmaybe “over-simplified” and importantdetailmay be lost Example as text: Source B is a diagramrepresentingthewaysrailwayscreated more jobs. Itwastakenfrom a modernwebsitedesignedforschoolpupils so itis a secondarysource. Itspurposeistoeducateyoungpeople so theinformationisprobablyobjective and basedonreliablesources. Itisvaluable as ittellsusthat ………… However, itmay be limited in itsvalue as theinformation has beensimplifiedforyoungerpupils and importantdetailsmight be lost

More Related