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HST261: National Latin America, 1821 to the Present: Evaluating & Citing Sources

Spring 2016, S. Hines

Analyzing the Evidence

Document Analysis Worksheets  (National Archives) - Guide to analyzing various kinds of primary sources - written documents, photographs, cartoons, posters, maps, artifacts, motion pictures, and sound recordings.

How to Analyze a Primary Source (Carleton College)

Making Sense of Evidence (History Matters)

Reseach & Evaluation

The Information Literate Historian: A Guide to Research for History Students - ref D 16.2 .P715 2007

Critical Evaluation of Resources (Univ. of California Berkeley) - Covers scholarly vs. popular publications, primary vs secondary resources, authority, documentation.

Evaluating Web Pages: Techniques to Apply and Questions to Ask (Univ. of California Berkeley).

Using Primary Sources on the Web: Evaluating Primary Source Websites (American Library Association)

Citing Sources

  • Remember to cite your souce, when either quoting directly or paraphasing. In other words, cite your source whenever you present an idea that isn't your own.
  • Websites must be cited in your notes/bibliography, too; if you cut and paste - or paraphrase - from a website, cite the webpage.
  • When in doubt, cite your source.
  • Remember to include a context for each quotation/paraphrase. Who said it? Why does it matter? How does this support or contradict the argument you're making?
  • Use the Chicago Manual of Style for this course.  Basic questions can be answered using this quick guide; for more complex questions, use the full version
  • For managing large numbers of sources, use Zotero.

Help Writing

The Jacobson Center offers individual writing conferences, courses to improve writing, and online help to guide students through the writing process.

See especially the Jacobson Center's Writing Process Series, which breaks the writing process down into a series of steps and offers advice and strategies relevant to the main issues confronting most writers.  

Also recommended for this course: Advice for Authoring a PhD or Academic Book.

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