2-4 Module 2 Short Responses
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Module 2 Short Responses – Question 1
What
types
of primary and secondary sources will you need to use to support the topic
you are examining in your essay? You don't need the actual sources yet, but you should
have an idea of what they might be (such as an eyewitness account of an event, for
example).
Sources are key and provide valuable information for those doing research or writing a paper.
Sources can be divided into primary and secondary source, as they have important
differences. While completing research, I'll want to include both types of sources to ensure
my paper is well rounded view of my historical event. Some examples of primary sources I'd
like to find are first hand accounts such as letter from suffragettes as well as those who may
have been opposed to the woman's movement. Also, photos of these remarkable woman
would be amazing to find. Another item I'd love to get a look at is the original 19th
amendment and discover the language within the document that made voting legal for
women. The suffragettes clothing, such as the sashes they wore really stood out in history
books as I recall. I'd like to see if this "uniform" had significance or perhaps find a recount of
how the sashes came about.
Secondary sources are just as important as primary as it helps fill in the blanks. I love a good
biography and would really like to find one. I also plan on finding articles about the
suffragette movement using The Shapiro Library.
Module 2 Short Responses – Question 2
What are two or three keywords you could use to look for sources to answer this
question?
Keywords I would use to look for sources to answer the subject question would be:
sandhogs
Brooklyn Bridge construction
Irish immigrant laborers
Module 2 Short Responses – Question 3
What subject terms can you use to continue your search?
Subject terms I could use to continue my search could be:
Laborers of the Brooklyn Bridge
New York construction development in the late 1800's
Working conditions of the Sandhogs
Module 2 Short Responses – Question 4
When you search for "construction," you get a lot of extraneous answers. What
[?]Boolean operators[/?] and corresponding search terms could you use to narrow your
search?
The sole word "construction" is very vague and would return many search terms, too many.
The use of operators would be key in order to narrow down the results to what I'd really want
to see. I would use a Boolean operators with words such as:
construction NOT new construction
construction AND Brooklyn Bridge
construction AND Sandhogs
construction OR designing
construction OR building
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