Chat with us, powered by LiveChat How and why did religion become a central part of early Mesopotamian, Egyptian, and Greek civilizations? Week 1: January 15 ?Early Western Civilization? Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 1 - Essayabode

How and why did religion become a central part of early Mesopotamian, Egyptian, and Greek civilizations? Week 1: January 15 ?Early Western Civilization? Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 1

How and why did religion become a central part of early Mesopotamian, Egyptian, and Greek civilizations?

Week 1: January 15  Early Western Civilization 

Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 1  January 15 Holiday, No Class   

Required Films: Guns, Germs, and Steel—Out of Eden (54:00); Survival: History of the World (58:00); First Civilizations (Parts 1 and 2—War and Religion—53:00 each—one in class) 

Optional Films: Journey of Man: Story of Human Species (1:54:00); Mystery of  Neanderthals (26:00); Deep Earth: How Earth Made Us-Segments: Minoan Civilization (5:00) Volcano and Tsunami (5:00); Women of Troy (Part 1-9)         

watch and complete answer thoroughly and ask a really good through question for the packback question

General Instructions:

Using your textbook and lecture notes along with Canvas module resources including films and power points, thoughtfully respond to my question and another student’s question and support your answer with numerous and specific examples. Include information from each resource and make use of at least one primary source and one film. Write in paragraph form and include an introduction, body, and conclusion. Pay attention to Packback's instant feedback as you write. You will also create your own question. Your question, like mine, must deal with that specific week’s chapter (and for a 13-week or 7-week class it can be multiple chapters!) and your question, like mine, will involve themes, ideas, events, etc., from the chapter’s text, films, or primary sources and you may modify a textbook question to create your own question.

Some questions to consider when analyzing any primary source or document:

· 1) Who wrote this document, when, and where?

· 2) What type of document is this?

· 3) Who is the intended audience of the document?

· 4) What are the main points of this document?

· 5) Why was this document written?

· 6) What does this document reveal about the particular society and period in question?

Let me know if you have any questions.

Packback Questions:

Participation is a requirement for this course, and the Packback Questions platform will be used for online discussion about class topics. Packback Questions is an online community where you can be fearlessly curious and ask open-ended questions to build on top of what we are covering in class and relate topics to real-world applications.

Packback Requirements:

Your participation on Packback will count toward 15% of your overall course grade.

There will be a Sunday at 11:59PM EST deadline for each of the fifteen submissions (due every week for each chapter for 15-week classes or multiple chapters due every week for 13- and 7-week classes). Submit your question first, from Monday to Wednesday before each deadline and then submit your two responses (one to my and one to another’s question) from Wednesday to Sunday, the deadline date. For each answer, include information from at least 1 primary source and 1 required film with your answer—also make use of and reference (or quote from) your textbook and class notes. Packback does not accept late work (beyond the final deadline for each assignment). Submit the following for each of the deadlines:

1 Open-ended Question (Ask a New Question) with a minimum Curiosity Score of 45. Submit Monday-Wednesday before the due date. (Do not answer your own question.)

2 Responses (Add Response) with a minimum Curiosity Score of 45. Respond to my question and one other student’s question. Submit Wednesday-Sunday.

Google Chrome is recommended for Packback. Safari error messages are likely caused by cookies and LTI integration. Google Chrome is recommended.

How to Register on Packback:

Note: Only access Packback through Canvas in order to ensure your grades sync properly

1. Click the Packback assignment link within Canvas to access the community

2. Follow the instructions on your screen to finish your registration.

3. In order for your grade to be visible in Canvas, make sure to click each Packback assignment link as you post your Packback submissions.

How to Get Help from the Packback Team:

If you have any questions or concerns about Packback throughout the semester, please read their FAQ at help.packback.co . If you need more help, contact their customer support team directly at [email protected].

For a brief introduction to Packback Questions and why we are using it in class, watch this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OV7QmikrD68

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NORTHERN VIRGINIA COMMUNITY COLLEGE ANNANDALE CAMPUS LANGUAGES, ARTS, AND SOCIAL SCIENCES DIVISION HIS 101-012 WESTERN CIVILIZATION I SPRING 2024

Dr. John Schmitz Google Voice: 571-445-4683 Office: CN 214G Email: [email protected]

Office Hours: M/W 1:00-2:15 and Virtual Class: Virtual (Zoom) Virtual: Email, Zoom, and Google Voice (Phone) T/R 4:00-5:20

Course Goals: History 101 sets forth major events in European and related world history from 4000BC to 1648AD.

Course Objectives: Students should be able to comprehend, analyze, synthesize, evaluate, and explain major and related topics identified in the course description, texts, lectures, multimedia, writing, and discussion assignments.

Student Responsibilities: Completion of all assignments and exams. Attendance is important for academic success. If withdrawing from the course, you must complete the withdrawal process. Students who have not attended class (on campus or virtually) by the Census Date will be automatically withdrawn. The last day to drop with tuition refund or change to audit is February 1 (Census Date); the last day to withdraw without grade penalty is March 23. Complete all assignments on the due date through Turnitin. Late work will typically earn no higher than 70% and any work submitted more than 1 week after the due date will typically receive no credit. Attendance and other college policies are set forth in the Student Handbook and the NVCC catalog. Regular class attendance is critically important; missed classes will negatively impact your grade. All students accept the responsibility of attending all classes and doing all work on time. Excessive absences (more than 3 or not working online) may result in an "F" in the course regardless of grades. Finally, for a 15-week course you should spend 1 hour a day, every day (7 hours weekly), reading, watching the required films, writing, and studying. (For a 6 or 7-week course we move at an accelerated pace covering the same amount of material! Spending roughly 2-3 hours per day, every day, reading, working, and watching films is required in order to do well!) There is no substitute for time and effort and only you can do that—for a 15-week class, 1 hour per day, every day; for a 6 or 7-week class, 2-3 hours per day, every day.

Academic Integrity: Follow the Information Technology Student/Patrol Ethics Agreement and academic integrity standards as found in the Student Handbook. Plagiarism is a serious academic offense and will result in a zero for the assignment and/or an F in the course. Dictionary.com and Oxford Dictionaries are good online sources that define plagiarism. See those sources or myself if you have questions about plagiarism. See also When to cite sources and other documents in Paper Assignment Resources and Writing Guides module on Canvas. AI is an issue—avoid using AI in any form, excepting limited use of Grammarly for the paper only; use the NVCC Writing Center for help. All assignments are checked automatically by Turnitin for plagiarism and AI use, do not use AI!

Fire/Emergency Evacuation Procedures: In case of emergency, please follow the emergency procedure as discussed on the first day of class and as posted in the classroom.

General: NVCC is a place for learning and growing. You should feel safe and comfortable on campus. Let your instructor, his/her supervisor, the Dean of Students or Provost know if any problems arise. Students with disabilities may be eligible for class accommodations and should contact Disability Support Services (DSS) either online at https://www.nvcc.edu/disability-services/ or go to the Counseling Center, CA 112. For help studying, reading, and writing, go to the Reading and Writing Center, CG 409 or http://www.nvcc.edu/annandale/asc/writing/index.html

Required Texts: The Making of the West (textbook) and Sources of the Making of the West (primary source reader) Lynn Hunt, et.al., The Making of the West, Peoples and Cultures, A Concise History, 6th or 7th ed. (Bedford/St. Martins, Boston, 2019/2022). The 5th (2016) edition is acceptable. To do well, read the assigned chapters, at least 3 primary sources per chapter, and do the weekly Packback work for each chapter. You must use your textbook and primary source reader (hardcopies or e-copies) for the exams and the primary source analysis paper.

Katharine Lualdi, Sources of The Making of the West, Vol. 1: To 1750, 6th or 7th ed. (Bedford/St. Martins, Boston, 2019/2022). The 5th (2016) edition of the Sources book is also acceptable. The reader is needed for the exams.

Required Videos: Databases: Video (nvcc.edu) or NVCC main page go to Libraries, Streaming Multimedia, Video Homework includes 3-4 hours of video per week (15-week class). Film links are provided in the modules—you

sometimes need to double-click at the top or be signed or logged in (SSO login for PBS). You can also access videos by typing “library” or “libraries” in the main NOVA search bar, then in NOVA Libraries scroll to multimedia, click Video, scroll and click F- Films on Demand or for PBS videos click PBS or go to http://eli.nvcc.edu/videoservices/ Make sure you are signed in. For 6 or 7-week courses you will be spending more time watching videos per week. Summaries of films are online, e.g., http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/program/episodes/

Classes: Classes consist of lectures and discussions organized around readings and videos. We will discuss the text on the first and the films on the second meeting each week, so come prepared. Check the syllabus and Canvas often.

Grades: (Submit Paper and Exams through Canvas Assignments and Turnitin by 11:00 pm of the due date.) Paper: 25% –Topic 2% (Jan. 28); Outline 3% (Feb. 18); Draft 10% (March 24); Final 10% (April 21) Exams: 60%– Mid-term Exam: 30% (March 3); Final Exam: 30% (April 30) Packback: 15%– Packback Discussions 15%–15 x 1 point per chapter (Submit through Packback link on Canvas.)

Paper: Submit all 4 parts on Canvas Assignments, check I agree for Turnitin, due by 11:00 pm for each date. Type and double-space your paper. Use ¾ inch left and right margins and ¾ to 1-inch top and bottom margins. Your final paper should be 5-8 pages of actual text. The paper must have a title page, bibliography, and must include the proper use and citation of sources. You cannot earn higher than a D if you do not use and cite sources properly. See Chicago-Turabian Styles, When to Cite Sources, Sample Title Page, Writing Tips, Summary v. Analysis, and Primary Source Analysis Paper Example, among others, in Paper Assignment Resources Canvas module. Carefully read the Paper Assignment part the syllabus that describes in detail the primary source analysis paper assignment and note that each chapter comes with primary sources. Visit the writing center or see me for more help analyzing documents. Do not plagiarize and do not use AI! The paper’s central purpose is to analyze primary sources.

Exams: Submit on Canvas Assignments, check I agree for Turnitin, due by 11:00 pm for each due date. Each exam will consist of a long essay or essays, short essays, and identifications. A good essay has an argument supported by numerous and specific examples drawn from the texts, lectures, films, and class discussions. Exams are open-note and open-book; you must draw from the texts, class notes, films, and from course documents and power points, but do NOT use internet sources (except an academic site) and do NOT plagiarize! I’m looking for your ideas and arguments based on evidence found in sources used in this course—you must use evidence from the texts, class lectures, films, and Canvas resources. Do not plagiarize and do not use AI sources or Grammarly!

Packback: Submit through Packback link on Canvas. See the Packback Syllabus and Packback tab for the Assignment Instructions and the weekly due dates. Participation is required, and the Packback Questions platform will be used for online discussion about class topics. Packback Questions is an online community where you can ask open-ended questions to build on top of what we are covering in class and relate topics to real-world applications. Do not plagiarize and do not use AI!

Review Questions and Making Connections Questions (for help with Packback): You have RQs and MCQs (along with discussion and comparative primary source questions (Sources book) for each chapter) starting with Ch.1 that you may use from your text or Sources book to help you write your Packback questions. Use your answers as a basis for participating in class discussions and use your responses to help answer exam questions. See Packback instructions and syllabus for more information. Make the question and your answers academic (proofread, edit, and include an introduction, body, and conclusion) and use them to help with the exam.

Attendance/Participation (Suggestions for a successful semester) Learning is an interactive process. Come to class prepared and ready to contribute. Reading along with attendance and participation are vital for achieving success. To do well, you should study 6 to 9 hours per week for this or any 3- credit course (that means one hour per day, every day) and that is for a normal 15-week course, so double the time each day for an 8-week course (that means two hours per day, every day)! While there is no English prerequisite, I highly recommend that you pass English 111 or its equivalent prior to taking this class. Canvas resources include Paper Assignment Resources, Writing Guides, and Primary Source Links along with chapter modules and videos. Ask me if you have any questions about plagiarism, assignments, or the course—we are dedicated to your success, but you must put in the time and effort into all course assignments to do well.

Assignments: Submit by the due date through Canvas Assignments and check I agree for Turnitin by 11:00 pm! You may submit exams and paper parts early—you can start working on the exams and paper at your convenience. The assignments are not timed, but submit just once on Canvas, and answer all parts of the exams and do all work for each part of the paper before submitting your assignment on Canvas Assignments using Turnitin (check the “I

agree” box for the plagiarism and AI check)! Submit Packback assignments through the Packback link on Canvas.

Grading Scale: A 100-90; B 89-80; C 79-70; D 69-60; F 59-0.

Key Dates: Classes begin January 16 Last day to drop with tuition refund or change to audit (census date) February 1 Last day to withdraw without grade penalty March 23 Classes end April 29 Final Exam April 30

Schedule (Complete the readings and watch films prior to class meetings!!!)

Monday-Tuesday: Making of the West and Wednesday-Thursday: Films

Week 1: January 15 Early Western Civilization Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 1 January 15 Holiday, No Class Required Films: Guns, Germs, and Steel—Out of Eden (54:00); Survival: History of the World (58:00); First Civilizations (Parts 1 and 2—War and Religion—53:00 each—one in class) Optional Films: Journey of Man: Story of Human Species (1:54:00); Mystery of Neanderthals (26:00); Deep Earth: How Earth Made Us-Segments: Minoan Civilization (5:00) Volcano and Tsunami (5:00); Women of Troy (Part 1-9) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 2: January 22 Near East Empires and Reemergence of Civilizations in Greece Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 2 Paper Topic Due January 28 (Submit on Canvas by 11:00 pm) Required Films: Mesopotamia: I have conquered the river (59:00) and Ancient Egypt (47:00); First Civilizations (Parts 3 and 4—Cities and Trade—53:00 each—one in class); The Greeks—Cavemen to Kings (54:00, in class) Optional Film: Empires, Egypt's Golden Empire _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 3: January 29 The Greek Golden Age Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 3 Required Films: Ancient Greece (46:00); Who were the Greeks? (Ep.1—59:00); The Greeks—Good Strife (in class) Optional Films: Greeks, Crucible of Civilization _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 4: February 5 From the Classical to the Hellenistic World Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 4 Required Films: Who were the Greeks? (Episode 2—59:00); Classical Greek Philosophy (50:00); Spirit of Alexander (27:00); Ancient theaters of Greece and Rome (23:00); The Greeks—Chasing Greatness (54:00, in class) Optional Film: Greeks, Crucible of Civilization _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 5: February 12 The Rise of Rome and its Republic Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 5 Paper Outline Due February 18 (Submit on Canvas by 11:00 pm) Required Films: Ancient Rome (48:00); Underground Rome: World hidden for centuries (50:00); Republic of Virtue: Ancient World (52:00) Optional Film: Julius Caesar's Rome; Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire, Julius Caesar (45:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 6: February 19 Creation of the Roman Empire Hunt and Lualdi, Ch. 6 Required Films: Roman Empire in the First Century: Order from Chaos (53:00), Years of Trial (55:00), Winds of Change (54:00); From Jesus to Christ, Part 1 (54:00) Optional Films: Roman Empire in the First Century: Years of Eruption (54:00); Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire, Rebellion and Betrayal (45:00) and Wrath of the gods (45:00); Rome: Engineering an Empire (1:31:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 7: February 26 Transformation of the Roman Empire Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 7 Mid-term Exam due March 3 (Submit on Canvas by 11:00 pm) Mid-term exam coverage must include the textbook, films, class notes, primary sources, and Canvas resources.

Required Films: From Jesus to Christ, Parts 2, 3, and 4 (51:00 each) OR Trials and Triumphs in Rome: Christianity in the 3rd and 4th Centuries (46:00); Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire, Last Emperor and Constantine (45:00 each) Optional Film: Empires, Roman Empire; Rome: Rise and Fall of an Empire, Barbarian General (45:00), and Puppet Master (45:00)

_____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 8: March 4 Heirs of Rome: Islam, Byzantium, and Europe Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 8 (March 11-15 Spring Break) Midterm Exam coverage includes Making of the West, films, class notes, primary sources, and power points. Required Films: Byzantium, Tale of three cities–Byzantium (51:00); Islam, Empire of Faith—Messenger (55:00); The end of Rome, the birth of Europe (52:00) Optional Film: Inside Mecca; Moors, Height of Empire (53:00); Islam, Religion of Peace and Tolerance (27:00); The Secret Mecca (53:00); Tracing Constantinople (55:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 9: March 18 From Centralization to Fragmentation Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 9 Paper Draft Due March 24 (Submit on Canvas by 11:00 pm) Required Films: Empire of Reason, Science and Islam—the Golden Age (59:00); Inside the Medieval Mind, Power (59:00); Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire (31:00); Knights and Nobles (53:00), The Middle Ages (24:00); Peasants, serfs, and servitude (52:00); Islam, Empire of Faith—Awakening (54:00); The Viking Age (48:00) Optional Films: The Vikings (48:00); Europe in Middle Ages, Feudal system (36:00), Vikings and Normans (37:00)

_____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 10: March 25 Commercial Quickening and Religious Reform Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 10 Required Films: Byzantium, Tale of three cities–Constantinople (51:00); The Crusades, Holy War, (48:00); Bankers, Builders, and New Beginnings (53:00); A World Inscribed: Illuminated Manuscript (24:00); Monks: Keepers of Knowledge (54:00) Optional Films: Crusades, Christianity, a history (48:00); Europe in the Middle Ages, City of God (36:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 11: April 1 The Flowering of the Middle Ages Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 11 Required Films: Inside the Medieval Mind: Knowledge (58:00); Modern Marvels, Gothic Cathedrals (46:00); The Crusades, Clash of Titans (48:00), Fires of Faith, Dissidents and the Church (49:00): History of the Popes (50:00) Optional Films: Domesday to Magna Carta (59:00); Plantagenets: Devil’s Brood and English Empire (59:00 each) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 12: April 8 The Medieval Synthesis—and its Cracks Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 12 Required Films: Inside the Medieval Mind: Belief (56:00) and Sex (58:00); Crusades, Victory and Defeat (48:00); Invention of Banking (48:00); History of the Popes (50:00); Genghis Khan, Empire of the Steppes (26:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 13: April 15 Crisis and Renaissance Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 13 Final Paper Due April 21 (Submit on Canvas by 11:00 pm) Required Films: Gunpowder, Quirky Science (24:00); The Plague (1:30:00); Renaissance, Scientific Revolution, and Enlightenment (14:00); Agincourt (51:00) Optional Films: Medieval Lives, Death (59:00); The Renaissance (58:00); Renaissance, Reformation, and Beyond (24:00); Introduction to the Italian Renaissance (28:00); Cataclysm, Black Death visits Tuscany (48:00); Rick Steves’ Europe: Florence—City of Art (25:00); Medici, Godfathers of the Renaissance (55:00); The Italian Renaissance (1:00:00); The Northern Renaissance (59:00); Islam, Empire of Faith—Ottomans (54:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 14: April 22 Global Encounters and the Shock of the Reformation Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 14 Required Films: Guns, Germs, and Steel—Conquest (54:00); Age of Plunder (57:00); Face of the World, First Steps into the Unknown (29:00) and Discovery of a New World (29:00) and True Image of the Earth (29:00); Sectarianism and Schism in Europe (47:00) Optional Films: Columbus, Explorer of the New World (44:00); Reformation: Luther and the Protestant Revolt (51:00); Battle for the language of the Bible (51:00) The future of reading (segments 1-7, roughly 20:00); Glass: how we got to now (segments 1-7, roughly 24:00); Politics of belief: Protestantism and the state (segments 1-9, roughly 40:00); Revolution of Conscience: Life, convictions, and legacy of Martin Luther (56:00) _____________________________________________________________________________________ Week 15: April 29 Wars of Religion and Clash of Worldviews Hunt and Lualdi Ch. 15 (Time sensitive with lecture—do the reading, watch the films) Required Films: Reformation: Individual before God (59:00); Renaissance, Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment (14:00); Newton’s Laws of Motion (9:00); What is out there? A history of astronomy (50:00)

Optional Film: Desperate Crossing: Untold story of the Mayflower (2:15:00); The Agony and the Ecstasy _____________________________________________________________________________________ Final Exam: April 30 Final Exam Due April 30 (Submit on Canvas by 11:00 pm) Final Exam coverage must include Making of the West, films, class notes, primary sources, and power points.

Primary Source Analysis Paper Assignment

Paper Assignment: Primary source analysis (supported by secondary sources for context and historical narrative). A great place for Western Civilization primary sources is PCC: https://guides.pcc.edu/c.php?g=225959&p=1497800 (PCC is Portland Community College Library) Note: for help studying, reading, and writing, go to the campus Reading and Writing Center, CG 409 or go to http://www.nvcc.edu/annandale/asc/writing/index.html

Using primary sources from chapters 1-15 of Sources of the Making of the West-Volume 1 or any primary source (book, novel, or Portland Community College (PCC) Library etc.,), what can we learn about a society or civilization during a particular historical era (from ancient history to 1648)? Write a 5–8-page paper analyzing what the primary sources reveal about important issues, events, or ideas. Your paper must contain a central, guiding thesis stating your viewpoint or interpretation of the documents and related historical events. Be creative, marshal your evidence (use your textbook to help you analyze your primary sources), and defend your views. Effective historical writing contains a clearly articulated thesis, convincing evidence, and insightful analysis.

Based on your reading or research, address the following: 1) What possible conclusions can you make about the nature of the society, culture, and politics during the time? 2) What concerns seem to be uppermost in the public mind? 3) What do your sources reveal the existence of particular tensions and anxieties peculiar to the period? 4) What attitudes do the writer(s) exhibit toward any of the following (depending on your topic and thesis): politics, international and military events, economics, religion, territorial and urban growth, ideologies, agriculture and industry, transportation and communication, reform movements, social issues, gender, race, immigration, slavery, class, crises, imperialism, war, technology, sexuality, racism, leisure, the family, etc…?

You should have the following prepared for each stage of the paper:

Paper Topic (2pts): Your first page should be a separate title page (include your name, course name and number, the paper’s title, and the date). The title should reflect the paper’s purpose (an analysis of primary sources)—eg., An Analysis of Ancient Roman Primary Sources. Include a brief description of a potential topic, a one or two- sentence thesis (arguments or points you intend to make) and some of the key ideas and themes and the importance of the primary sources you have chosen to analyze. Include a list of the primary sources you are intending to analyze from particular chapter(s) of the primary source reader or identify other primary source(s) you will use. In addition to the title page, I’m looking for a paragraph (which can include bullet points) that has the aforementioned information.

Paper Outline (3pts): Include the title page, add to your thesis (include important or key ideas and arguments that you will address based on primary sources from Sources chapter(s) or any primary source reader). You should have a basic introduction (with arguments and ideas based on the primary documents you are analyzing), an outline of the body (small paragraphs or “bullet points” of key ideas and arguments with brief descriptions of each main point), and a possible conclusion. Include a few citations (Chicago/Turabian-footnotes or endnotes or MLA-parenthetical) and a list of your primary and secondary sources (bibliography). The outline should include all the aforementioned information and should be 1-2 pages in length. Start citing sources and begin proofreading and editing!

Paper Draft (10pts): The draft has a title page, the text is double-spaced in paragraph form, the introduction is fully developed and reveals key ideas from the primary sources you will analyze and describes your main arguments, key points, and ideas that the paper’s body develops. Include a much more substantial paper body, now 3-5 pages of text, that more thoroughly develops each of your key arguments and ideas. Include a more refined conclusion. There can be some grammatical and other errors, but proofread and edit the draft so that it is in a polished form (relatively free of errors). All your sources must be properly cited (Chicago/Turabian footnotes or endnotes or MLA- parenthetical) and include a bibliography. You cannot earn higher than a “D” if you do not cite sources.

Final Paper (10pts): The final paper (5-8 pages of text) should include the draft requirements plus corrections, additions, and edits (including more document analysis and extensive proofreading) needed for final submission. As with the draft, you must properly use and cite your sources—you can earn no higher than a “D” if you do not. There should be significant improvement from the draft in terms of analysis and historical context. Adding a sentence or two or changing a few words from the draft is not the goal—put time and effort into improving the final paper.

NB: for help with your paper generally and citations, evaluation criteria, plagiarism, and primary source links etc. specifically, see the Paper Assignment Resources and Writing Guides Canvas module. The library has many online

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