Part 4: Final product and Bibliography!
Create a final product where you communicate/show your learning on your topic including your evaluative question. This can be presented in a number of ways: powerpoint, sway, poster, create a textbook page, an interactive map, diorama, model etc....
Bibliography - follow instructions on library page. It should include a minimum of three sources (two books and one digital source/website minimum). Your bibliography should be in Chicago format, be in alphabetical order and be on a separate page or slide.
Submit: all notes & questions, bibliography and final product by Friday Feb. 21st
Part 3: Research & Evaluative Questions (Zooming in)
Decide on one part of your revolution that you want to learn more about. Come up with a research question.
A research question is one that your know you will be able to find the answer to in books etc… A “Literal Question” ** Remember Grade 8??? See slides 3-6 here.
For example for the French Revolution: Who was Robespierre; what was his role in the Revolution?
You will then continue to take notes & research to find the answer. Once you have the answer, we will help you to create an “evaluative question” to answer and you will move to Part 4. I will give you a handout on evaluative questions but essentially it is an open ended question that helps you to evaluate/synthesize and have an opinion on your research.
Part 2: Recipe for a Revolution (civil war etc...)
If a revolution was a cake, what would the recipe look like?
How long would the the prep time be? 5, 10, 50 years?
What about the ingredients? A harsh ruler? Lack of freedom? Poverty?
What would the directions look like?
Create a recipe card that reflects your answers to the above….
Prep time: time revolution/rebellion was building
Ingredients: key players and events
Directions: what happened
Cook time: length of the fighting, revolution
End Product: final result
Part 1: Basic Research
Goal: to gain understanding of a turbulent time in history by researching a revolution, a rebellion or a civil war and to understand how it effected history or changed the course of history. Look at how it impacted the time period and present day (lasting effects)
Part 1: Choose a revolution, rebellion or civil war (examples below) that interests you.
-Do some initial research using the 5W+H format (who, what, where, when, why and how)
Some examples of these questions might be: Who was involved? Who started the revolution? Why were they rebelling? etc...
-Ensure you are using credible sites and information and keeping track of these sites for your bibliography.
***You must take good notes these will be part of your mark.
Here are some examples:
-American Revolution, French Revolution, Russian Revolution, Peasant Revolt (England), Slave rebellion, Prussian uprising, Industrial Revolution, Red River Rebellion, Glorious Revolution, Serbian Revolution, Haitian Revolution, Mexican war for independence....etc...