Assessment 2 Instructions: Historical Analysis
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Introduction
Note: The first three assessments in this course build on each other; therefore, it is essential that you complete them in the order presented.
In the first assessment, you located and analyzed primary and secondary sources about a historical event, issue, or movement. This second assessment focuses on evaluating and synthesizing the information you have collected from your sources. During this process, you will apply your critical thinking skills, which is an essential part of problem solving.
Historians use problem solving to better understand the past, but they also use it to understand key historical figures—from the suffragettes to members of the #MeToo movement and from the Knights of Labor to today’s labor and business leaders—continue to use it today to change the course of history. Using critical thinking to solve problems outside of this course could help you, for example, propose a solution to address nursing mothers’ rights at work, decide how to put a positive spin on an employment gap at a job interview, or even consider how skills you’ve learned in past Capella courses have impacted your current success. Understanding how to apply critical thinking to solve problems in any personal or professional situation you encounter will help you take control of your own life to achieve the future you want.
Note: The first three assessments in this course build on each other; therefore, it is essential that you complete them in the order presented.
Overview
Now that you’ve evaluated the credibility of your sources (Assessment 1), you are ready to use innovative thinking and problem solving to analyze the content of your sources. For this assessment, you will complete the Historical Analysis Worksheet [DOCX], using a critical thinking process to evaluate evidence as you explore the causes and longterm impacts related to your issue. Analyze how those in the past have successfully and unsuccessfully tackled the same issues while also considering how these same issues might now be addressed by your organization.
Preparation
Review the evidence you compiled and compared for Assessment 1, Evaluating Historical Sources. Then begin to formulate your explanation or main arguments about your chosen issue. Consider the historical context of the issue, its challenges, and the strategies and approaches people used to deal with those challenges.
Instructions
For this assessment, use the Historical Analysis Worksheet [DOCX] to complete the following steps. You will use this worksheet to further examine the sources you’ve collected for your topic (facing economic change or engaging civil rights).
Step 1: Identify questions that need to be answered to understand a historical event and its longterm impact.
Step 2: Describe information learned from historical sources that can be used to inform a current understanding of a historical issue.
Step 3: Explain similarities and differences in sources of historical information.
Step 4: Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of historical evidence, including the challenges of using such evidence to make an argument about a historical issue.
Step 5: Use critical thinking to relate past challenges and strategies to a current organizational issue.
Step 6: Write in a wellorganized and concise manner that adheres to the rules of grammar, usage, and mechanics.
Additional Requirements
Your submission should meet the following requirements:
Competencies Measured
By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following course competencies and assessment criteria:
Use the scoring guide to understand how your assessment will be evaluated.
VIEW SCORING GUIDE
Historical Analysis Scoring Guide
CRITERIA | NONPERFORMANCE | BASIC | PROFICIENT | DISTINGUISHED |
Identify questions that need to be answered to understand a historical event and its longterm impact. | Does not identify questions that need to be answered to understand a historical event and its longterm impact. | Identifies one or more questions that need to be answered to understand a historical event and its longterm impact, but questions need further refinement. | Identifies questions that need to be answered to understand a historical event and its longterm impact. | Identifies clear, specific questions that need to be answered to understand a historical event and its longterm impact. |
Describe information learned from historical sources that can be used to inform a current understanding of a historical issue. | Does not describe information learned from historical sources that can be used to inform a current understanding of a historical issue. | Describes information learned from historical sources that can be used to inform a current understanding of a historical issue, but this information is incomplete. | Describes information learned from historical sources that can be used to inform a current understanding of a historical issue. | Describes information learned from historical sources that can be used to inform a current understanding of a historical issue, with supporting examples. |
Explain similarities and differences in sources of historical information. | Does not explain similarities and differences in sources of historical information. | Identifies similarities and differences in sources of historical information. | Explains similarities and differences in sources of historical information. | Explains similarities and differences in sources of historical information, with supporting examples. |
Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of historical evidence, including the challenges of using such evidence to make an argument about a historical issue. | Does not analyze the strengths and weaknesses of historical evidence. | Attempts to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of historical evidence but does not include the challenges of using such evidence to make an argument about a historical issue. | Analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of historical evidence, including the challenges of using such evidence to make an argument about a historical issue. | Analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of historical evidence, including the challenges of using such evidence to make an argument about a historical issue, using supporting examples and specific details. |
Use critical thinking to relate past challenges and strategies to a current organizational issue. | Does not use critical thinking to relate past challenges and strategies to a current organizational issue. | Uses critical thinking to relate past challenges and strategies to a current organizational issue, but the analysis is incomplete. | Uses critical thinking to relate past challenges and strategies to a current organizational issue. | Uses critical thinking to relate past challenges and strategies to a current organizational issue, using specific evidence. |
Write in a wellorganized and concise manner that adheres to the rules of grammar, usage, and mechanics. | Does not write in a wellorganized and concise manner. | Writing is unclear, wordy, or disconnected, with errors in grammar, usage, and mechanics. | Writes in a wellorganized and concise manner that adheres to the rules of grammar, usage, and mechanics. | Organizes content so clarity is enhanced and all ideas flow logically and smoothly. Writes concisely, precisely, and directly, with nearly flawless adherence to the rules of grammar, usage, and mechanics. |
Resources: Essential Outcomes
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That’s what critical thinking is—the ability to step back from a problem, assess what you have to work with, and rationally decide the best way forward toward a solution. It’s a key component of practicing problem solving in this course and beyond. By improving your critical thinking so you can solve problems in the present and future, you’ll take a positive step toward achieving both your personal and professional goals.
Application of Essential Outcomes
One aspect of analyzing historical information is good notetaking. Taking notes effectively helps you organize the information from your sources and make connections, something you will be doing in the Historical Analysis assessment and in your Lessons from History presentation later in the course. The following resource discusses the elements of effective notetaking.
In the following Capella Stories, you’ll learn how decorated Thunderbird pilot Nicole Malachowski used critical thinking to achieve her longheld dream: the conferment of the Congressional Medal of Honor on WWII’s Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP).
Have you ever been confronted with two versions of the same story? It can be hard to know which to believe, right? Historians and students of history (like you!) often face the same challenge. In the following Capella Stories, biographer and historian Kate Clifford Larson walks us through important moments in Harriet Tubman’s life and reveals the critical thinking steps she took to determine their historical accuracy. How will these same steps strengthen your problemsolving skill and help you think critically in your own life? Learn how Harriet Tubman’s biographer used the six steps of critical thinking to discover the real story of this fascinating American hero.
Resources: History of the United States
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