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Exercises in Assessment for World History Classrooms Patrick Manning University of Pittsburgh April 23, 2011.

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Presentation on theme: "Exercises in Assessment for World History Classrooms Patrick Manning University of Pittsburgh April 23, 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Exercises in Assessment for World History Classrooms Patrick Manning University of Pittsburgh April 23, 2011

2 PRIMARY DOCUMENTS About 10 minutes of work. Select one of the two documents provided, read it, and write responses to these points: 1.List historical events and processes (with approximate dates) that are referred to in the document. 2.Identify world historical arguments (or interpretations) that are presented.

3 PRIMARY DOCUMENTS – 2. Up to 5 minutes, on your own: Self-assessment: How did you do in interpreting the document? (Write comments that you will keep to yourself)

4 PRIMARY DOCUMENTS – 3. Discussion (10 minutes): What criteria do you use to assess world- historical interpretation of a primary document?

5 ESSAYS (COLLEGE-LEVEL) MATERIALS: 1.Rubric announced to students for Midterm exam in World History course at Pitt, 2011. 2.Essay topic given to students in introductory World History course at Pitt, 2011. Basically, “put a recent event in world-historical context.” 3.Essays written by students in response to the topic above.

6 ESSAYS – 2. ASSESSMENT (up to 30 minutes): 1.Read the two student essays distributed to you. 2.Create a rubric for evaluating the essays: it should emphasize both general historical skills and world-historical interpretation 3.Choose one essay and evaluate it according to the rubric.

7 ESSAYS – 3. DISCUSSION (up to 30 minutes): 1.Discuss the rubrics you have created. 2.Discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the student essays. 3.Discuss “world-historical thinking”: How do you identify it? How do you encourage it? What difference does it make?


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