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How to do an AP DBQ

How to do an AP DBQ. The Introductory Paragraph. The “Top Bun” of your essay! 4-6 sentences. The Introductory Paragraph. Establish TIME & PLACE . Create a clear, THESIS STATEMENT . DO NOT REPEAT THE QUESTION!! YOU WILL NOT GET A POINT

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How to do an AP DBQ

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  1. How to do an AP DBQ

  2. The Introductory Paragraph The “Top Bun” of your essay! 4-6 sentences

  3. The Introductory Paragraph • EstablishTIME & PLACE. • Create a clear,THESIS STATEMENT. DO NOT REPEAT THE QUESTION!! YOU WILL NOT GET A POINT • Allude to thegroups you will discuss to support your thesis statement • Focus on the question at hand—do NOT begin with a “flowery” sentence!

  4. The "Meat" Paragraphs The “tasty” part of your essay! 8-12 sentences+ per paragraph

  5. The "Meat" Paragraphs • You must group documents in at LEAST 2 groups; 3 groups is best! • Identify your group in the first sentence of ea paragraph. • Use ALL of the documents given. • Be sure to indicate Point-of-View(POV)/bias in 3 DOCUMENTS. • Bring in supportive outside information-This is cool to do but not necessary! • REMEMBER TO MENTION ADD. DOC AND WHY it is needed!!

  6. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias • Attribution:cite the author by name, title, or position, if possible. Why is this person and document selected? How does it help me answer the question?

  7. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias EXAMPLES: John Tyler, an English writer, said (doc.3): “...” A Dominican monk in Florence described (doc. 7)…. ALWAYS INCLUDE DOC IN (IN THESE)!! example: As Bob said (doc.1)…

  8. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias • Authorial Point of View:you show awareness that the gender, occupation, class, religion, nationality, political position or ethnic identity of the author could influence his/her views. Pull in outside knowledge! How does this apply to the question? Why has the author written what he/she has?

  9. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias EXAMPLE: Balthasar Rusow (doc.7), a Lutheran pastor, was naturally upset by the celebration of a Saint’s Day, since Lutherans don’t venerate saints.

  10. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias • Reliability and accuracy of each source referenced:you examine a source for its reliability and accuracy by questioning if the author of the document would be in a position to be accurate-NOBODY is ever 100% accurate. We all have bias!!! How might this help you answer the question?

  11. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias EXAMPLE: Niccolo Machiavelli’s book (doc. 6) on the political tactics of a Renaissance prince was probably accurate but could contain political bias. He observed the behavior of the prince, Cesare Borgia, for many years and would want to make the prince look powerful; by doing so he could gain the prince’s favor.

  12. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias • Tone or Intent of the Author:you examine the text of a document to determine its tone (satire, irony, indirect commentary, etc.) or the intent of the author. Especially useful for visual documents, like art work or political cartoons.

  13. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias EXAMPLE: In his great sculpture of “David,” (doc. 4) Michelangelo wanted to convey the confidence, and even arrogance, of Renaissance Florence at the peak of its cultural influence in 16c Europe.

  14. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias • Grouping of Docs. by Author:you show an awareness that certain types of authors, simply by their authorship, will express similar views when you group documents by type of author. • **This is ONLY used if you can find NO OTHER WAY TO GROUP! Won’t get you a “grouping” point but will help you get other points!

  15. Demonstrating (POV) / Bias EXAMPLE: As Northern Renaissance humanists, Erasmus, Sir Thomas More, and Cervantes all poked fun at the foibles and scandals of late medieval society as well as of their own.

  16. How to Reference a Document in Your Essay • Baldassare Castiglione, in The Handbook of the Courtier (doc. 1), said: “………………….” • Erasmus of Rotterdam, a northern Christian humanist (doc.5), agreed with… • The 19c historian, Jacob Burkhardt, felt that ………………….(doc. 9) NEVER begin with: In document 3, …..

  17. The Concluding Paragraph The “Bottom Bun” of your essay! It holds it all together! 3-4 sentences

  18. The Concluding Paragraph • Start with a “concluding phrase.” • Restate your thesis statement a bit differently. • ** Put your essay answer in a larger historical perspective by mentioning: • the end of some trend/movement/idea; the beginning of some trend/movement/idea; the end of one & beginning of another. BUT: • Do NOT end on the note that this is the reason we are where we are today!

  19. Put It All Together And...

  20. Ummm...Burger! I Mean, "Dazzling" Essay

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