Pedagogy

FACET CHECK - Evidentiary Support of a Thesis

Supporting Your Thesis Is Zen

The Chicken or the Egg

Last week, you learned how to form a thesis statement. This week I wish to talk about evidence

Here's the weird thing about History: the discipline suffers from the old "which came first, the chicken or the egg?" conundrum. Think of the cute little chickie as the thesis and the egg as a yolk-filled sac of reading materials. The thesis cannot exist without first considering the readings and discovering the evidence that lies within! But the evidence does not come to light unless there's a thesis to make them shine! Maddening. 

So let's clear this up. Your thesis, if done right, is really a statement about YOUR interpretation of reading materials. However, History demands that you prove yourself. "Because I said so!" doesn't cut it. If you make the mistake of not supplying evidence, then all your work looks to be opinion rather than scholarship.  YOU are a scholar, and supplying ample evidence is what you do.

So, what exactly is "evidence"?

Great question! In this class, evidence comes in three guises - primary, secondary, and current events. 

Primaries

According to the University of Washington, primary documents are created by witnesses or participants during a past "event." I'll add in the word "trend." Primaries can be a letter, a diary entry,  "interviews, oral histories, photographs, newspaper articles, government documents, poems, novels, plays, and music," basically anything that involves human language.

But (there's always a but), some of those "witnesses or participants" to past events were likely biased. In fact, you should always assume that those from yesteryears saw things way differently than you and I do today in the here and now. The bigger element, though, is that primary materials are the windows by which we travel, the portal to comprehending past viewpoints, and an opportunity to understand why long ago people made the choices they did.  

Secondaries

In the field of History, secondaries exist because scholars asked questions. These scholarly questions likely arose when they read the primaries. Scholars then form their own ideas about the primaries (and the past they represent) and write it down in the form of a thesis. Aha! Then, the scholar will work to prove their thesis is correct using - get this - evidence.

Warning: evidence should be primaries AND secondaries. Also, scholars are humans and they, too, can be biased.

The most important element to remember here is the end result. Secondaries can be books, journal articles, documentaries, lectures made by your professors, basically anything that involves the human language but in an interpretive and scholastic way.   

Both primary and secondary evidence should be used to gussy up that thesis of yours. BOTH.

Current Events

The Connections Paper assignments ask you to connect the past and to the present. Thus, in that third and final paragraph of your work, evidence is necessary from current sources. Again, anything a human produces in the here and now is considered a current event. Mostly, when we think of current events we think of media outlets. But we live in an age where "media" comes in all sorts of forms, can be done on the cheap, and produced by humans that relish in their biases.

Warning: Be extremely careful, here. Do you really wish to quote an article from the RT News Network (Russian Times), Fox News, MSNBC, Breitbart, OAN, The Palmer Report, some vlogger spouting neo-Nazi conspiracy theories?

Listen, your arguments will fall apart if you choose to utilize disreputable sources. You can hedge your bet by using the interactive Media Bias Chart, but that's just a tool and a conversation for later. 

How do I use Evidence and Why...?

The simple advice I place before you is this: only use evidence that supports your thesis. Fall in love with your thesis, get to know it, and then send your thesis gifts of evidence, but only the gifts your argument will enjoy.

Transitioning to a hypothetical: Let's say you have a significant other that is really into cooking, but on that person's birthday you gift them with a ceramic chicken figurine. Is that significant other going to feel supported in their cooking efforts? 

As we are practicing scholars, playing the role of a historian during this semester, the one question I know you are going to ask is, "How much evidence should I use?" My usual response used to be, enough to prove your thesis - but that's too trite. Instead, I will suggest that you use at least three pieces of evidence in the first paragraph of your Connections Paper to support your interpretive argument (thesis). At this level of your collegiate career, if you use three, at the least, then you have proved that you can make connections between what you read and what you write with a whole bunch of thinking in between. 

Note: Evidence should appear in each of the three paragraphs.  

Examples of Evidence in Support of a Thesis

Road to the Civil War

Last week we looked at how to create a thesis using the reading materials to the right. Here is that thesis: 

"Between 1828 and 1855, Texas and Mexico loomed large in American politics. The United States failed to merge two stalwart elements: Manifest Destiny to the institution of slavery, and the result was increased political tensions." 

Now comes the evidence. Which documents above mention the concept of Manifest Destiny, either directly or indirectly? Which documents talk about slavery? Which mention both concepts all at once? 

Certainly, Santa Ana in 1836 objected to U.S. citizens moving west into Texas and bringing their slaves with them. Mendivil stated in 1837 that Yanks would not be satisfied with Texas but would continue to move west taking California and other Mexican lands. Henry Clay stated that this movement west must not infringe upon Mexico as the end result would be war. In 1847, Wilmot argued against the expansion of slavery westward. The secondary by Kelley addresses this situation as well.

Look, the more evidence you use, the more love your thesis feels. And if your thesis is defended, the happier you will be. Zen. 


 Image Source: "Chicken or the Egg" by DonkeyHotey is licensed under CC BY 2.0

FACET CHECK - Thesis Development for Beginners

Love is stupid

Making Sure Readers Know Your Argument

A thesis in the humanities is not that much different than a science-based hypothesis: something needs to be proven. A thesis is a clear and concise statement. The image to the right is a thesis:

“Love is the stupidest thing ever.”

The biggest mistake students make with thesis development within the humanities is to overthink it. This is why this page is here, to help you realize how simple and easy it is to turn your thoughts, your argument, your observations into a simple two-part thesis.

Part I - Be Definitive

"Love is the stupidest thing ever." Now that is a definitive statement.

But I could say things like, "Baseball is better than football," or "The Beatles are overrated," or, "The South really won America's Civil War." All four of these statements are clear, concise, authoritative sentences. They are also only partial elements of what a good thesis is. There is a need to further develop these declarative ideas. If you wrote, "Love is the stupidest thing ever," bravo! ( *I think* ) However strong this statement may appear, we still don’t know why love is stupid.

Part II - Be More Precise

If you had left "Love is the stupidest thing ever," as your thesis, the statement may be powerful but let me ask: how are you going to defend it? This is where the second part of your argument comes in, precision. And in the case of "love," absolutely necessary.   

"Love is the stupidest thing ever. Throughout my dating history, I invested my time, my money, and myself in people and have gained nothing but emotional scars."

Or 

"Baseball is better than football. Really, the number of athletes that suffer from chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a rarity in baseball whereas football’s numbers are just downright inhumane."

Or

"The Beatles are overrated. Seriously, numerous artists have outsold the Fab Four in terms of record sales from Michael Jackson to Beyoncé, the Rolling Stones to Led Zeppelin, and many others."

Or

"The South really won America's Civil War, especially when we look at America in the twenty-first century and realize the great number of cultural similarities." 

What happened by inserting the second part of a thesis statement, you not only added a portion that can now be defended, but also added clarity and precision. 

Put another way: Love can be stupid in a myriad of ways, perhaps even infinite. But in the second part of the thesis statement, we now know that the author is going to pinpoint the stupidness of love by way of personal experience. 

  • In the thesis on baseball, the argument comes down to CTE head injuries.

  • In the thesis on the Beatles, the argument solely focused on record sales.

  • In the thesis on who won the Civil War, the argument is twenty-first-century cultural similarities.

Precision helps you to choose the evidence to support your thesis. Being precise means saving yourself a whole lot of time.

Thesis Development and Connections Papers

Road to the Civil War Documents

In a typical week, I ask you to read a few primary documents and perhaps a secondary. After reading, taking notes, trying to make sense of them, I then ask that you form your own observation (write a thesis).

A student might write:

"Between 1828 and 1855, Texas and Mexico loomed large in American politics." 

Now that's a fine declarative statement, but the thesis remains too broad. How did Texas and Mexico affect American politics? A precision sentence will assist. 

"Between 1828 and 1855, Texas and Mexico loomed large in American politics. The United States failed to merge two stalwart elements: Manifest Destiny to the institution of slavery, and the result was increased political tensions."

Now we have a thesis. This student will use the documents assigned for that week to defend this argument.  

If you need further guidance, I am a Zoom session away! 


Online Communities are not only Possible, but Downright Doable

Teaching college courses online can be a bit difficult, especially when attempting to get “a feel” for the class. Where are students at in the week’s lesson? How are they feeling about it? What are students thinking?

Music makes history still screenshot.png

In other words, online teachers often lose that sense of community, a sense of place that a brick and mortar classroom naturally provides. To counter this, think about the most successful communities on the web - social media. Emulating, as best as possible, the more positive aspects of what social media purports to do can create a thriving online community within your own little teaching domain.

I did this with music in my online survey course covering World History, 1500 to the present.

I created a page (screen shot to the right) that describes the purpose of sharing music reflecting the studies embedded within the course. I also created a semester-long online discussion board where students can post their found music and discuss it at length. Students get to read and listen to what other students posted, thus creating a community. The only direction I give them is to pick and write about music that were either written during the time period under study, or songs that reflect back to that past point.

The big benefit is that students are doing History. By searching for and sharing found music in conjunction with where we are at in the course, students reveal both primary and secondary documents but in music form. Additionally , students are creating a community. By sharing music and writing about it, they create their own distinct stomping ground.

The other plus is I am exposed to a great treasure trove of songs from centuries past, and exposed to living musicians and groups that reflect and write music about humanity’s past. Give it a try!