Mr. Dalton's Class
  • AP Human Geography
    • General Class Information >
      • AP Human Geography Test
      • The Seven Units of Study
      • Sample Questions
    • Assignments >
      • Unit I: Nature and Perspective
      • Unit II: Population and Migration
      • Unit III: Culture
      • Unit IV: Political Organization
      • Unit V: Agriculture
      • Unit VI: Economic Development
      • Unit VII: Urban Landuse
    • AP Human Geography Summer Assignment
    • AP Human Geography Calendar
    • Test Corrections
    • Jeopardy Review Games
    • AP Human Geography Files
    • AP Human Geography Links
    • Why should I take this class?
  • Economics
    • Economics Assignments
    • Economics Extra Credit
    • Econ Class Calendar
    • How does this class work?
  • Contact Information
  • Class Resources
    • How to Cite Sources
    • Bibliographies
    • Primary vs. Secondary Sources
  • Old Classes
    • Government >
      • Unit I: The Founding Fathers
      • Unit II: Rights and Responsibilities
    • US History (8th Grade) >
      • US History (8th Grade) Assignments >
        • Unit I: Different Worlds Meet
        • Unit II: Colonial Settlement
        • Unit III: Creating a Nation
        • Unit III.5 New Governments
        • Unit IV: The New Republic
        • Unit V: The Growing Nation
        • Unit VI: Civil War and Reconstruction
        • Career Planning Unit
      • US History (8th Grade) Review >
        • Unit I: Different Worlds Meet
        • Unit II: Colonial Settlement
        • Unit III: Creating a Nation
        • Unit III.5 New Governments
        • Unit IV: The New Republic
        • Unit V: The Growing Nation
        • Unit VI: Civil War and Reconstruction
    • World History >
      • World History Assignments >
        • Unit I: The First Civilizations
        • Unit II: Ancient Greece and Rome
        • Unit III: The World of Islam and Unit III.5 Early African and Asian Civilizations
        • Unit IV: The Byzantine Empire and The Middle Ages
        • Unit V: Renaissance and Reformation
        • Unit VI: Revolutions and Enlightenment >
          • Unit VI: Stations
        • Unit VII: Industrialization and Imperialism
        • Unit VIII: WWI and Pre WWII
        • Unit IX: WWII
        • Unit X: The Cold War
      • World History Review
    • AP European History >
      • General Class Information >
        • The AP Euro Test
        • Historical Thinking Skills
        • Thematic Learning Objectives
      • Assignments >
        • Period 1: 1450-1648 >
          • Unit I: Renaissance and Reformation
          • Unit II: Exploration and Colonization
        • Period 2: 1648-1815 >
          • Unit III: Absolutism
          • Unit IV: The Enlightenment
        • Period 3: 1815-1914 >
          • Unit V: The Industrial Revolution
          • Unit VI: Imperialism
        • Period 4: 1914-Present >
          • Unit VII: "Modern" Europe
      • AP Euro Summer Assignment
      • AP Euro Calendar
      • Test Corrections
      • Jeopardy Review Games
      • AP Euro Files
      • AP Euro Links
      • Why should I take this class?

Historical Thinking Skills

Chronological Reasoning:
1. Historical Causation
2. Patterns of Continuity and Change over Time
3. Periodization
Crafting Historical Arguments from Historical Evidence
6.  Historical Argumentation
7. Appropriate Use of Relevant Historical Evidence

Skill 1: Historical Causation

Historical thinking involves the ability to identify, analyze, and evaluate the relationships among multiple historical causes and effects, distinguishing between those that are long-term and proximate, and among coincidence, causation and correlation.

Examples:  Students should be able to;
 
Compare causes and or effects, including short-term and long-term effects.
Analyze and evaluate the interaction of multiple causes and/or effects.
Assess historical contingency by distinguishing among coincidence, causation, and correlation, as well as critique existing interpretations of cause and effect.

Skill 3:  Periodization

Historical thinking involves the ability to describe, analyze, evaluate, and construct models that historians use to divide history into discrete periods.  To accomplish this periodization, historians identify turning points, and they recognize that the choice of specific dates accords a higher value to one narrative, region, or group than to another narrative, region, or group.  How one defines historical periods depends on what one considers most significant in society -- economic, social, religious, or cultural life -- so historical thinking involves being aware of how the circumstance and contexts of a historian's work might shape his or her choices about periodization.

Students should be able to;
Explain ways that historical events and processes can be organized within blocks of time.
Analyze and evaluate competing models of periodization of European History.

Skill 5: Contextualization

Historical thinking involves the ability to connect historical events and processes to specific circumstance of time and place and to boarder regional, national, or global processes.

Students should be able to;
Explain and evaluate ways in which specific historical phenomena, events, or processes connect to broader regional, national, or global processes occurring at the same time. 
Explain and evaluate ways in which a phenomenon, events, or process connects to other similar historical phenomena across time and space.

Skill 7:  Appropriate Use of Relevant Historical Evidence

Historical thinking involves the ability to describe and evaluate evidence about the past from diverse sources (including written documents, works of art, archaeological artifacts, oral traditions, and other primary sources), and requires paying attention to the content, authorship, purpose, format, and audience of such sources.  It involves the capacity to extract useful information, make supportable inferences, and draw appropriate conclusions from historical evidence, while also noting the context in which the evidence was produced and used, recognizing its limitations and assessing the points of view it reflects.

Students should be able to; 
Analyze features of historical evidence such as audience, purpose, point of view, format, argument, limitations, and context germane to the evidence considered.
Based on analysis and evaluate of historical evidence, make supportable inferences and draw appropriate conclusions.

Skill 9:  Synthesis

Historical thinking involves the ability to develop meaningful and persuasive new understanding of the past by applying all of the other historical thinking skills, by drawing appropriately on ideas and methods from different fields of inquiry or disciplines, and by creatively fusing disparate, relevant, and sometimes contradictory evidence from primary sources and secondary works.  Additionally, synthesis may involve applying insights about the past to other historical contexts or circumstances, including the present.

Students should be able to;
Combine disparate, sometimes contradictory evidence from primary sources and secondary works in order to create a persuasive understanding of the past.
Apply insights about the past to other historical contexts or circumstances, including the present.
Comparison and Contextualization
4. Comparison
5. Contextualization
Historical Interpretation and Synthesis
8. Interpretation
9. Synthesis

Skill 2:  Patterns of Continuity and Change over Time

Historical thinking involves the ability to recgonize, analyze, and evaluate the dynamics of historical continuity and change over periods of time of varying length, as well as the ability to relate these patterns to larger historical processes or themes.

Students should be able to;
Analyze and evaluate historical patterns of continuity and change over time.
Connect patterns of continuity and change over time to larger historical processes or themes.

Skill 4:  Comparison (and contrast)

Historical thinking involves the ability to describe, compare, and evaluate multiple historical developments within one society, one or more developments across or between different societies, and in various chronological and geographical contexts.  It also involves the ability to identify, compare, and evaluate multiple perspectives on a given historical experience.

Students should be able to;
Compare related historical developments and processes across place, time, and/or different societies, or within one society.
Explain and evaluate multiple and differing perspectives on a given historical phenomenon.

Skill 6: Historical Argumentation

Historical thinking involves the ability to define and frame a question about the past and to address that question through the construction of an argument.  A plausible and persuasive argument requires a clear, comprehensive, and analytical thesis, supported by relevant historical evidence -- not simple evidence that supports a preferred or preconceived position.  Additionally, argumentation involves the capacity to describe, analyze, and evaluate the arguments of others in light of available evidence.

Students should be able to;
Analyze commonly accepted historical arguments and explain how an argument has been constructed from historical evidence.
Construct convincing interpretation through analysis of disparate, relevant, historical evidence.
Evaluate and synthesize conflicting historical evidence to construct persuasive historical arugments.

Skill 8:  Interpretation

Historical thinking involves the ability to describe, analyze, evaluate, and construct diverse interpretations of the past, and to be aware of how particular circumstances and contexts in which individual historians work and write also shape their interpretation of past events.  Historical interpretation requires analyzing evidence, reasoning, contexts, and points of view found in both primary and secondary sources.

Students should be able to;
Analyze diverse historical interpretations.
Evaluate how historians' perspectives influence their interpretations and how models of historical interpretation change over time.

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