THE HISTORY DEPARTMENT
WRITING SITE
by
Sarah Covington, with Arleen GrahamSpecial thanks to Professor Joe O'Brien and Edward Hanlon

Contents
3. Strategies in Excelling at History
|
|
5. Step-by-step Guide to Writing Papers
|
|
| In writing history,
you do not simply throw out facts about what happened and when; instead, you must know how
to take those facts and interpret them in a clear and persuasive way. The discipline of
history allows you to deepen your understanding of the world by placing it within a larger
context that includes the past; it also forces you to read and think critically, to ask
questions, to argue, and to understand the causes behind why things occurred--all of which
are skills that apply to every area of study and life. John Jay College requires all history classes to incorporate writing into their assignments, so you should expect to use and develop this skill extensively in the two survey courses that constitute History 231 and 232. Apart from that requirement, writing will also help you as a tool in processing the overwhelming number of issues you will need to learn, allowing you to succeed in your classes and in your temporary apprenticeship as historians. History thus requires the careful analysis of evidence and fact; but it also calls on you to write, and to write well, to convey the richness and complexity, the whys and the hows, of past times. |
2. History and the CUNY Proficiency Exam
| (Note: go to http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~writing/cuny_proficiency_exam for more on this exam and for exam preparation workshops see also http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~jobrien/general/ob97.html for a good overview) All students who registered as first-time freshmen in the fall of 1999 and after will be required to take this exam in order to proceed on to the upper division. The exam consists of two sections, Task I and Task II, which require you to read a long passage and then write about it, demonstrating the following:
Here, by the way, is what the exam evaluators do not want to see:
How can history classes help you with the proficiency exam? For one thing, history is a reading-intensive activity that demands a certain amount of interpretation, thought, and feedback on your part. In addition, you will never enjoy history unless you personally and actively engage with it on a multitude of levels, and make connections between past events, developments, and larger issues and meanings. If you pursue history with diligence (and follow some of the suggestions below), you will do well on the proficiency exam, which also calls for the skills you need for your history courses: critical thinking, understanding, personal engagement, and finally the ability to make connections and express your thoughts with fluency. |
3. Strategies in Excelling at History
(a) How to take notes in
class
Sample excerpt:
(b) Keeping a journal
(c) Note Cards
(d) Group Study and Writing
|
(a) Journals
(b) Research Papers:
(c) Summaries:
(d) The Essay
(e) Essay Exams (In-Class)
(f) Book Reviews/ Annotated Bibliographies:
Example of a (short) annotated bibliography entry:
|
5. Step-by-Step Guide to Writing Papers
| I. Read the
assignment carefully II. Write down ideas for a topic, or areas to pursue. Be sure to have your choice approved by the professor, or check to see if the topic is assigned. III. Research information (note: the internet can be a useful research tool, but it is better that you also work from books). Some tips:
IV. Make an outline before you draft your paper. A. Introduction/ Opening Paragraph Provide basic information: who, what, where, when, why.
B. Body of Paper Plan to begin each paragraph with a topic sentence, which serves as the focal point of your paragraph and asserts a major point that will propel the paper forward. The following is taken from the Dartmouth College writing site (http://www.dartmouth.edu/~compose/student/ac_paper/write.html): Do I have enough evidence to support this paragraph's idea? Do I have too much evidence? (In other words, will the reader be lost in a morass of details, unable to see the argument as a whole?) Does this evidence clearly support the assertion I am making in this paragraph, or am I stretching it? If I am stretching it, what can I do to persuade the reader that this stretch is worth making? Am I repeating myself in this paragraph? Have I defined all of the paragraph's important terms? Can I say, in a nutshell, what the purpose of this paragraph is? Has the paragraph fulfilled that purpose? C. Conclusion Summarize but don't be repetitive or redundant; a good conclusion will not only capture the essence of your argument but also open the topic up to a larger perspective.
V. Draft the Paper Some tips (from the CUNY write site):
VI. Rewrite and put the paper through drafts, checking spelling, grammar, idea clarity; see below for checklist Check your draft for revision. Have you:
VII. Write the bibliography (see below) |
6. Research and Reading Sources
| The discipline of history is based primarily on the evidence of written sources, which must be properly attributed and documented. Historical sources themselves are divided into two categories:
The following are questions that can be asked of primary (and secondary) sources: 1. When and where was the (primary/secondary) source written? 2. Who is the author(s)? 3. What is the agenda or purpose of the author? 4. Why was the text even written? 5. Who was the audience for the text? 6. Do you think the author is reliable and credible? 7. How do the values expressed in the source differ from those of our own age? 8. Is there anything unspoken in the text (in other words, does the author seem to leave some things out intentionally?) 9. Do you agree or disagree with what the author is saying? Why?
You may also create a chart in approaching sources: (The Author's) Perspective My Perspective
|
7. Attributing and Documenting Sources
| In any history paper, you
must cite the sources that you quote, paraphrase, or generally borrow from; in fact,
citing sources only adds to the strength of your paper, indicating the depth of your
research and engagement with the material. The following are cases where you need to use
documentation or citation: When to cite sources: 1. Direct, verbatim quotes Direct quotes can be rich additions to your paper, especially if they are well-written or powerful in their impact, or if they serve to advance your topic and argument. Here are some suggestions in using quotes: - Keep them relatively brief; you don't want your paper to be overwhelmed by another's words, even if those words are properly attributed. - Use them only if they add in some significant way to your paper. Primary sources, for example, are always good to quote, but with secondary sources you may want to limit usage only to that which is memorable, well written, or effective. 2. Paraphrases or summaries; the ideas of others See #3 3. Ideas or information which may be unfamiliar. Numbers 2 and 3 can be a little tricky; for example, you do not need to cite facts of common knowledge, but if they are directly paraphrased from another work, you must cite it. Theories or more uncommon pieces of information should also have a citation. If you have any doubt about whether you should cite or not, you should cite. 4. Sources that contribute in a supplementary way to your topic or argument. 5. Sources that include further information on your subject, such as related works or works with differing arguments.
Format You must ask your instructor about the kind of citation format he or she requires, since formats can vary. John Jay College tends to follow the APA style of citation (see below), though history professors may favor footnotes instead. The following are ways in which you can cite a source: 1. APA Style When using a direct quote, write the author and date in parentheses, following the quote: (Author's last name, page number) Example: According to Christopher Haigh, "Henry VIII died a Catholic, though rather a bad Catholic" (Haigh, 1984, 207). (Note: you will write out the book in full at the end of the paper, in your "References," or bibliography, section). If you don't directly quote, but you mention the author's name, follow the name with a date (of the book's publication) in parentheses. Example: Susan Reynolds (1994) would like to dispel with the idea of feudalism altogether. If you do not quote from the authors or mention their names in the sentence, and if you still borrow their arguments or ideas, cite their names and the dates of their works in parentheses at the end. Example: Atheism was unknown to Europe in the sixteenth century (Febvre, 1982).
2. Footnotes/Endnotes Despite increasing use of parenthetical citations, historians still tend to favor footnotes, which don't intrude on the text as much and are more conducive to lengthy citations or asides. For a footnote, place a superscripted number after a sentence or phrase, and after all punctuation marks except dashes, follow in the rest of the text with consecutive numbers (not beginning the next page's footnotes with "1" again). Do not use asterisks or other symbols in place of numbers. Footnotes are notes found at the bottom of each page of your paper; endnotes are notes--just like footnotes--though they are located at the end of your paper. An important note: the format of citations in footnotes differ from bibliographic citations, and accord with the following format: Author (first name, last name), Title of book (parentheses here--place of publication, date), page number. Example: According to John Doe, "Crime declined drastically in the nineteenth century"1 1John Doe, Crime and Violence in the Nineteenth Century (New York, 1988), 45. If your next footnote is from the same author, don't repeat the whole citation but instead write "Ibid" and page number. For example, Ibid., 67. |
8. Analysis and Argumentation in Writing
| The world of the past
is always subject to disputes and differing interpretations; while facts themselves may be
set in objective stone, the meaning of those facts--or their larger context--is always
fluid and shifting according to one's own perspectives and points of view. Many of the
papers you write may therefore ask that you make a leap beyond simply recounting events
and that you enter the more sophisticated territory of arguing about them. While this can
be difficult if you are new to certain histories, it also makes the practice of history
more engaging and interesting, and personally meaningful to you. For example, the issue of slavery in the American south would seem to be clear: it was bad, of course, and oppressive for African Americans. But in the last forty years a debate has existed between some historians who believe that slaves were universally mistreated, violated, and overwhelmingly abused by their owners, and others who argue that a form of benign "paternalism" existed, where plantation owners protected their slaves and even displayed acts of kindness in return for the slaves' loyalty; in addition, according to these historians, slave life involved close family relationships and other supportive structures that allowed them to preserve a certain dignity in the face of their oppression. Another dispute concerns whether slaves were passive recipients of oppression, or whether they could actively resist authority, "negotiating" with it, battling it in various ways, or subverting it to their own purposes. How do you argue in a history paper? As the above example shows, you must read into the nuances of particular historical developments, weigh the opposing or established views, read the sources closely and critically, think the issues through, and then make a stand. In other words, you act like a good prosecuting attorney, making your case before an issue that you have put on trial. What was the largest factor that accounted for the decline of Rome? Why were the Spaniards able to conquer America? Was the rise of Hitler inevitable? Each of these questions demand that you formulate a theory and a thesis; but you must also know how to ask the questions in the first place.
The following points should
therefore be addressed as you embark upon a thesis (or argument-oriented) paper:
|
| Note: The APA style
is John Jay College's "official" style. For more on bibliographies, APA-style,
go to http://webster.commnet.edu/apa/apa_index.html
Single-author book: Alverez, A. (1970). The Savage God: A Study of Suicide. New York: Random House.
More than one author: Hesen, J., Carpenter, K., Moriber, H., & Milsop, A. (1983). Computers in the Business World. Hartford, CT: Capital Press.
An anthology or edited volume: Schmoe, Joseph (Ed.). (1987). The History of It All: Historians on History. Chicago: Goingbroke Press.
An article from a journal: (Note: Do not use the abbreviations "p." or "pp." ) Maddux, K. (1997, March). "True Stories of the Internet Patrol." NetGuide Magazine, 88-92.
Online article "Monetary Regulations of the Carolingians, 750-817." Retrieved November 18, 2000 from the World Wide Web: http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/750caroling-money.html. |
10. Spelling, Grammar, and Style
a. Spelling
b. Commonly misused words:
c. Sentence Fragments, or incomplete sentences
d. Correct Use of Tenses
e. Use of Apostrophes
f. Its and It's
g. Capitalization
h. Conditional Verbs I
i. Conditional Verbs II
j. Split Infinitives
k. Use of First Person Pronouns
l. "Feel" and "Believe"
m. "Being that"
n. Words to Avoid
o. Passive Constructions
|
11. A Note on Plagiarism and Paraphrasing
|
Plagiarism, according to the department of Academic Affairs at John Jay College, is the
presentation of words,facts, or ideas belonging to another source without proper
acknowledgment. In other words, plagiarism is theft, or passing off someone else's words
as your own, and as such will earn you a failing grade and possibly more serious
consequences at the school. Whether it's conscious or not, stealing another writer's words
is not only insulting to the professor, but it also reflects a lack of learning on your
part, and is very vulnerable to being found out. Everything, even the most impersonal of encyclopedia entries, has an author, and if you're going to incorporate a phrase, a sentence, or a paragraph, you must put it in quotations. Although the conventions of documentation vary, you can follow your quote either with a footnote or a parenthetical reference. See the bibliography format above for proper citation and attribution. Paraphrasing is not the same as outright plagiarism, though simply restating another writer's ideas or rewording his or her sentence structures is also another form of theft. Like direct quotations, paraphrases must be credited to their sources; to fail to do so constitutes an indirect plagiarism. According to the University of Richmond's Writer's Web (http://www.richmond.edu/~writing/wweb.html), "When you paraphrase material, put it in your own words and use your own sentence structure. Don't allow the wording to resemble the original, even if you cite the source. Otherwise, you're plagiarizing the author's words without letting the reader know that the words aren't your own." |
12. Checklist: After You've completed the paper, before you hand it in, by Arleen Graham
| You can cut-and-paste the Helpsheets below into Microsoft Word and print it out. |
| Professor J. OBrien &
Arleen P. Graham, Writing Fellow Helpsheet # 1 Organizing Your Essay
Before beginning your writing assignment, read the assignment carefully. It may be helpful to take notes as you read using the two column journal entry system . Then use this interactive checklist to help you focus, organize and develop your essay. Fill in the answers to the following questions, based on the wording of the assignment and/or your reading(s). This worksheet should then be attached to your writing assigment and submitted with it.
D. What terms are used that demand a certain task of you? ("read and take notes," "explain," "describe," "analyze," "compare," "narrate," "comment on" "assess" etc.)
Helpsheet #2 - Writing Your Essay Now that youve done the necessary preparation (completed Helpsheet #1), the main task arisesgathering your thoughts together in order to compose a well written and, as far as possible, error-free essay. In general your essay will have: A) and introductory section that should give the necessary background for the historical events you will be narrating and assessing; B) a development section that offers a full narrative, stage by stage, of the historical events suggested by the question asked and C) a concluding section that notes the historical significance and/or consequences of the events described. Each of these three sections are developed below through the use of these self-help questions. Answer each with a brief phrase or significant word rather a "yes" or "no" as it applies to the question at hand after completing a first draft of your paper.
A. Introduction:
B. Body of the Paper:
C: Conclusion: (depending on the nature of your assignment)
Helpsheet #3 Proof Reading Your Essay
_____Read the paper aloud to catch any grammatical errors? _____Used a spell check and a grammar check? _____Used a dictionary to check the meaning of words that I am unsure of or sound like other words? _____Used a thesaurus to vary my vocabulary? _____Eliminated any slang or colloquial expressions? _____Used a tone appropriate for this academic writing assignment and eliminated slang expressions? _____Used the past tense for this history assignment?
_____Given the essay a title and/or indicated which question I am answering? _____Set the margins adequately and according to the directives? _____Used a Times New Roman typeface or an equivalent? _____Used a 10 or 12 font size? _____Double spaced the text? _____Indented paragraphs or used appropriate spacing? |
13. Campus Resources + John Jay College of Criminal Justice
|
Location: 2450 North Hall Phone: 212-237-8569 |
Campus Home Page |
Location: 1201 North Hall Phone: 212-237-8231 |
|
14. Internet Resources: History Web Sites
| The following sites provide
good primary history sources, and offer some background and leads to other sites: Prof. Joe O'Brien's web site http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~jobrien/index.html (note: this is an excellent site, and also delves specifically into History 232 at John Jay) Horus' Web Links to History Resources http://www.ucr.edu/h-gig History Central Catalogue http://www.ukans.edu/history/VL/ World Civilization Reader http://www.humanities.ccny.cuny.edu/history/projects.htm (compiled and edited by Profs. George Ouwendijk and Bill Rednour) Internet History Sourcebooks (Paul Halsall) http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ Writing the History Paper http://www.dartmouth.edu/~compose/student/soc_sciences/history.html |
(note: these are very good for grammar, spelling, and style checks) CUNY Write Site http://writesite.cuny.edu/nsindex.html Roget'sThesaurus online http://humanities.uchicago.edu/forms_unrest/ROGET.html Merriam-Webster Dictionary http://www.m-w.com/dictionary.htm APA Style Writer's Web http://www.richmond.edu/~writing/wweb.html The UVic Writer's http://webserver.maclab.comp.uvic.ca/writersguide/MasterTOC.html Guide University of Illinois Online http://www.english.uiuc.edu/cws/wworkshop/mainmenu.html Writing Guide Grammar & Style Notes http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Writing/ Rensselaer Writing Center http://www.rpi.edu/dept/llc/writecenter/web/handouts.html |
Further Reading
Benjamin, Jules R (1998). A Student's Guide to History. Boston: Bedford Books.
Campbell, W. G. (1954). Form and Style in Thesis Writing. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Ellis, B. L. (1971). How to Write Themes and Terms Papers. New York: Barron's Educational.
Gibaldi, J. and W.S. Achtert (1984). MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers.
New York: Modern Language Association.
Hacker, Diana (1999). A Pocket Style Manual. 3rd edition. Boston: Bedford Books.
Rampolla, Mary Lynn (1998). A Pocket Guide to Writing in History. 2nd edition. Boston: Bedford Books.