|
CHARACTERS OF THE AMERICAN
REVOLUTION Rich man, poor man, beggar
man, thief. . . |
(WHAT?)
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DATE
DESIGNED |
QUARTER
USED |
ASSESSMENT ANALYSIS Target and
Method |
|
|
May 2003 |
First
Quarter 2003 |
Reasoning,
Skills, Product |
Constructed
Response and Performance |
|
#2 • convey
technical information in a written form appropriate to the audience; • support an opinion
using various forms of persuasion (factual or emotional) in speaking and
writing; #5 • use
organizational features of printed text such as citations, end notes, and
bibliographic references to locate relevant information; • evaluate
information in light of what they know and their specific needs; • use
strategies to gain information from journals, research studies, and technical
documents; • use available
technology to access information, conduct research, and produce a carefully
documented product. |
#1 ·
Students
know the general chronological order
of events and people in history. #2 ·
Students
know how to formulate questions and hypotheses regarding what happened in the
past and to obtain and analyze historical data to answer questions and test
hypotheses. ·
Students
know how to interpret and evaluate primary and secondary sources of
historical information. #5 ·
Students
understand how democratic ideas and institutions in the United States have
developed, changed, and/or been maintained. |
(WHY?) (HOW?)
|
Knowledge and Skills Colonialism, Revolutionary War—causes and effects,
Puritans, Romantics and Classics |
Relevance This activity will give students the opportunity to evaluate the American Revolution from one person’s perspective. Students will use the research process and will document their sources and quotes. While the finished product will be a dodecahedron, students will go through the same process of research and organization that they will later for a formal written research product. |
Application (work a/o college) Following directions, attention to detail, time
management, and completing a quality product are all marketable skills. Students will be refining these skills all
year in American Studies. Applying
the research process in the form of general inquiry and documenting sources
are also skills that students will use in the their chosen vocations. |
ASSESSMENT(s)
Students will choose a character from the Revolutionary War period and research that person’s role in the causes, effects,
and events of the Revolutionary War. Using their notecards (having met the deadlines and proficiencies), students will organize
this information into a dodecahedron. Students will have the opportunity to present their finished products to the class.
EVALUATION—See rubrics for topic selection, notecards, and dodecahedron
PROCESS
·
Choose your person from the list, sign up and check
that your topic is approved
·
Sign up for approved topic by September 19—make sure that there are no repeats on your group’s
block list
·
Check to see that your choice is approved
·
Begin research and notecards—Please see the
suggestions for direction and focus.
·
Keep track of your sources using bib cards.
·
As you complete your bib cards, have Miss Perrin
sign off for format and each acceptable source
·
Remember that you need at least 10 cards from each
source
Notecards
SEE FORMAT PAGE FOR THESE
¨
Students
will follow the correct format provided:
¨
3x5
white lined index cards
¨
no
post-it or spiral index cards
¨
code
numbers in the upper left hand corner
¨
page
numbers of the text in the lower right hand corner
¨
notecards without code
numbers a/o page numbers are invalid and not eligible for credit
¨
Students
will have original notecards—no two people should have the same notecards
¨
Notecards
that are plagiarized are not valid and
are not eligible for credit
¨
Students
will have at least ten notecards per source
¨
Students
will have at least a total of 50
notecards from at least 3 acceptable
sources for proficiency
¨
50 notecards do not include
the bibliography cards in the count
¨
only notecards that meet the
deadline are eligible for credit
Bibcards—SEE FORMAT PAGE FOR THESE
¨
Students
will use at least 3 acceptable
sources. At least two sources must be
in print (book, pamphlet, or periodical).
¨
All
Internet sources must be valid, with a reference, works cited or bibliography
within the source
¨
Any
Internet source used for this assignment must be in a hard copy at the request
of Miss Perrin.
¨
All
bibcards must be in correct format—
¨
All bib cards must have Miss
Perrin’s signature by September 25 for
notecards and bib cards to be eligible for credit.
·
Finish your notecards in the library and turn them
in by the end of the hour September 26.
·
After you notecards have been evaluated, if you are
not at proficiency, for either format or number, correct these and turn in by October 1.
·
Trace your dodecahedron on poster board paper. Overhead projectors with the pattern are in
rooms 118 and 120.
·
Begin typing up your information and gathering the
graphics for the dodecahedron—keep track
of your documentation for the bibliography and citations
·
Attach all of your text, illustrations and graphics when your
dodecahedron paper is flat—this will help with final copy format for the
dodecahedron.
·
Assemble your dodecahedron. Using a hot glue gun works the best, and it
helps if you have another pair of hands to help you. Be careful of hot glue.
Dodecahedrons that are stapled, paper clipped or taped will not be
eligible for credit. Waiting until the
last minute to assemble this is not a good idea.
·
Complete a typed formal bibliography. Use the correct format. Remember that Miss Perrin will proofread
this through October 10. This is on a separate
sheet of paper and is not attached to the dodecahedron.
·
Turn in
completed project with typed bibliography by October 14 at the beginning of the
hour.
BIBLIOGRAPHY AND NOTECARD EXAMPLES
from “A Soft Wind Blowing Through the American West”
|
1 Willaims, Terry Tempest A Society to Match the Scenery. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 1991. |
1 Story: Japanese man held the dirt in his hand and could tell where it was from Comparison of the internment camps
52 |
|
1 regional diversity ties everything together Ästories that bind man to the land 51 |
1 Story : Mexican Church with the healing soil—“la tierra cura” the earth heals
56 |
|
1 StoryÄconnects past—present—future memory—imagination—possibility becomes the future 51 1 |
1 Brigham Young Knew that the Salt Flats were the place he was searching for—spiritual tie to the land. 56 |
|
1 “Native people have always known that the earth is a storied landscape”
52 51 |
1 Fredrick Jackson Turner “the Future Primitive” Story of Western settlement is spiritual
56 |
|
1 not only Natives –Kalahari bushmen say “ a story is like the wind. It comes from a far-off place and we feel it.” 52 |
1 Herman Melville “It is not down in any map: true places never are” 57 |
|
1 story: Native American children and the Mountain Lion Chants in the back of the truck Danger
to the sheep 52 |
1 “The Coyote Clan harbors myriads of stories that evoke a sense of place, a sense of belonging to something much larger than ourselves.” 59 |
EVALUATION FOR NOTECARDS AND BIBLIOGRAPHY CARDS
100 POINTS
¨ minimum of 75 notecards from a total of three valid, acceptable sources—at least two of the sources must be from print
¨ cards have valid information
that provides focus and support
¨ bibliography cards are error
free and signed by Miss Perrin
¨ notecards and bib cards are
in the correct format:
¨ code numbers in the upper
left corner
¨ page numbers in the lower
right hand corner
75 POINTS a/o PROFICIENCY—your notecards must be proficient for you to continue
to the
next step of the research process and project
¨ 50 notecards
from at least three valid, acceptable sources—at least two of the sources must be from print
¨ cards have valid information
that provides focus and support
¨ bibliography cards are error
free and signed by Miss Perrin
¨ notecards and bib cards are
in the correct format:
¨ code numbers in the upper
left corner
¨ page numbers in the lover
right hand corner
Only notecards from bibcards
signed by Miss Perrin by September 25 will be eligible for credit
Proofread your work
carefully! Errors in format will cost
you points:
= 5 code numbers missing minus 10 points
= 5 cards with invalid or repetitive information minus 10 points
More than 10 missing code
numbers, page numbers, or valid information will result in no more
than a 60 % score on notecards and bibliography cards, and a
non-proficiency. This is attention
to detail, an important life-skill.
REFERENCE/DOCUMENTATION/WORKS CITED/BIBLIOGRAPHY
Here are a few things to
consider as you complete your project:
Ø
Make
sure that you are including the required citations on your product (any information that is not original)
Ø
Encyclopedias and Clip Art
are not acceptable—either in print or CDROM (Encarta, Grolier, Compton,
etc.)
Ø
Look
for the names of encyclopedias in the address.
If it’s there, it is not a valid source.
Ø
Do
you understand the format for citation?
o For a quotation directly from the author of the text
“Quotation goes here” (author’s last name, page #).
o For a quotation from the text, by someone other than the author
“quotation” (who originally said/wrote this in author’s last name, pg#)
EXAMPLE—
“It was the best of times,
it was the worst of times” (Dickens in
Brown, 782).
This is a quote from a book
by Brown on page 782. He is quoting
Dickens, who actually wrote this in A
Tale of Two Cities
o For statistics from the text
75% of all students will attend a four-year
university (Carson, 24).
o For statistics from a study, quoted in a text
In a study by Sims, one out of two marriages will
end in divorce(Carson, 24).
One out of two marriages will
end in divorce(Sims in Carson, 24).
o For a picture or graphic that is not your work
In the lower right-hand corner of the illustration
(Illustrator, if given, in Author’s last name, pg #)
(Author’s last name, pg#)
The
Works Cited/Bibliography page is an alphabetized compilation of all of the sources you cited in your
paper or project. Even if you only used
a few sources, you must have the documentation in order for your citations to
be valid.
·
All
sources cited are included in the Works Cited page
·
Works
Cited page is alphabetized
·
Use
formal bibliography formats
Some common formats: These are also in your library handbook
q
Book with one author or
editor
Author’s last
name, first name. Title of Book .
City published: Publisher, Most recent date published.
Ø
You
would cite this as (Author’s last name, page #).
q
History textbook—Book with
more than three editors
Danzer, Gerald
A. and others ed. The Americans. Evanston, IL: McDougal Littell, 1998.
Ø
You
would cite this as (Danzer, pg#)
q
Magazine article with author
Author of
article’s last name, First name. “Title
of Article.” Magazine title. Month day
and year of magazine: pages of
article.
q
Internet source
Creator of
website’s last name, first name. “Title of website.” Online
http://complete address. Date
you accessed this.
Ø
You
would cite this source as (Author’s last name).
q
If you can’t find a creator
of the website
“Title of the
website.” Online http://complete address. Date you accessed this.
Ø
You
would cite this source as (Title of website)
Characters
of the American Revolution Dodecahedron Student Name _________________________________________ |
|
|
5 20 points |
4 18 points |
3 15 points |
0 |
|
CATEGORY |
Exceeds
the requirements with relevant additions |
Very
strong and meets requirements |
Good
work. A few (1-2) errors in format or content. Possibly errors in documentation format |
Incomplete or not the assignment |
|
Required Elements See
Specifications |
The
dodecahedron includes all required elements as well as relevant additional
information. |
All required elements are included on the
dodecahedron, but 1 or 2 may be unclear or unexplained |
Missing 1-2 of the required elements included on
the dodecahedron. |
Several required elements were missing. |
|
* Content - Accuracy |
All
content is accurate. There are no factual errors. |
Most of the content is accurate but there is one piece
of information that might be inaccurate or unclear. |
The content is generally accurate, but two or
more pieces of information are clearly flawed or inaccurate. |
Content is typically confusing or contains more
than one factual error. |
|
* Graphics - Relevance |
All graphics are related to the topic and make it
easier to understand. All borrowed graphics have a source citation from a
valid source in the bibliography. |
All graphics are related to the topic and most
make it easier to understand. All borrowed graphics have a source citation
from a valid source in the bibliography. |
All graphics relate to the topic. All borrowed
graphics have a source citation, but there may be errors in citation format.
All citations are from valid sources in the bibliography |
Graphics do not relate to the topic OR several
borrowed graphics do not have a source citation or the source is not in the
bibliography, or is not a valid source. |
|
Effectiveness |
Project includes all material needed to gain a comfortable
understanding of the topic. It is a highly effective study guide. |
Project includes most material needed to gain a
comfortable understanding of the material but is lacking one or two key
elements of explanation or clarity. It is an adequate study guide. |
Project is missing more than two key elements. It would make an incomplete study guide.
|
Project is lacking several key elements and has
inaccuracies that make it a poor study guide. |
|
Appearance |
This dodecahedron is in final copy format. The additions enhance the project
aesthetically while staying with the intent of the assignment. The dodecahedron is completely and
correctly assembled. There are no glue gobs, loose edges or mechanical
errors. All text is typed.
Dodecahedrons that are stapled or
taped will not be eligible for credit |
This dodecahedron is in final copy format. Additions enhance the project
aesthetically but may stray from the intent of the assignment. The dodecahedron is completely and
correctly assembled. There are no glue gobs, loose edges or mechanical
errors. All text is typed. |
This dodecahedron is not in final copy
format. Any additions distract from
the intent of the assignment. The
dodecahedron is completely and correctly assembled, but there are glue gobs, loose edges or mechanical
errors. All text is typed. |
This dodecahedron is incomplete either in
assembly for content. There are glue gobs, loose edges or mechanical
errors. These errors are distracting
and make it impossibly to regard this for credit. Only projects with typed text will be eligible for credit. |
* A complete and valid bibliography must
accompany the dodecahedron for the
project to be eligible for credit
11 and 12
These two sides are yours to enhance your dodecahedron. These are required for the project to be
eligible for credit. You may use illustrations, additional facts and information about your person,
quotes by your person, or quotes about your person (remember to include
documentation). Both of these sides must add to your proof about why this person was an American Revolutionary a/o what his
or her role was during the American Revolution.
®You will also have a bibliography for your dodecahedron. It will be typed in formal format and on a
separate sheet of paper. The bibliography is not attached to the dodecahedron.
The bibliography is due with the dodecahedron. Without the proper documentation, the project is not
eligible for credit.
*Topics will not repeat per block group (black or gold)
and block
|
Abraham Baldwin |
Charles Cotesworth Pinckney |
|
Alexander Hamilton |
Charles Pinckney |
|
Ben Franklin |
Commodore John Barry |
|
Benedict Arnold |
Crispus Atticus |
|
Comte de Rochambeau |
David Brearly |
|
Daniel Morgan. |
Deborah Sampson |
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Daniel Shays |
Francis Marion |
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Deborah Sampson |
George Rogers Clark |
|
Ethan Allen |
Gouvenour Morris |
|
Francis Marion |
Hugh Williamson |
|
George Mason |
James McHenry |
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George Washington |
John Langdon |
|
Henry Knox |
Mary McCauley Hays (Molly Pitcher) |
|
James Madison |
Nathaniel Greene |
|
James Otis |
Rufus King |
|
John Adams |
Thomas Mifflin |
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John Hancock |
William Blount |
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John Jay |
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John Paul Jones |
|
|
John Rutledge |
|
|
Jonathan Dayton |
|
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Marquis de Lafayette |
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|
Michael de Crevecoeur |
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|
Nathan Hale |
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