Title: DBQ Peer Edits and Evaluations
1DBQ Peer Edits and Evaluations
Created by Debbie Owens Presented at Klein Oak
High School Spring, Texas
2Edit vs. Evaluation
- Peer Editors are looking for mechanics and
structure. This is when we are sitting in the
conference tables of 6 and marking the papers. - Peer Evaluators are looking for content,
accuracy, and logic as well as organization. This
is when a peer reads your paper all the way
through looking for accuracy. The peer will give
you notes on the edit/evaluation sheet as well as
mark the AP rubric. You need this done twice.
3- Combined you will have 8 sets of eyes assessing
your papers before you rewrite and submit the
final draft for my assessment. - Be quiet.
- Stay on-task.
- This is for you, not me.
4What is a DBQ Essay?
- DBQ is the abbreviation for Document Based Essay.
- Put simply this is an analysis of
primary/secondary sources essay. - There are four instructive verbs found in these
essays analyze, assess/evaluate, discuss, and
explain.
2007 The College Board
5- Analyze determine various factors or component
parts and examine their nature and relationship. - Assess/Evaluate judge the value or character of
something appraise weigh the positive and the
negative points give an opinion regarding the
value of discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of.
6- Discuss write about consider or examine by
argument or from various points of view debate
present the different sides of. - Explain make clear or plain make clear the
causes or reasons for make known in detail tell
the meaning of.
7Skills Evaluated
- According to The College Board, the primary
purpose of the document-based essay question . .
. is to evaluate the students ability to
formulate and support an answer from documentary
evidence. - . . . Various approaches and responses are
possible, depending on the students ability to
understand the documents and ultimately to
communicate their significance. - 2007 College Board
8Tasks in DBQ
- Read and analyze the documents.
- The document-based question is an exercise in
both analysis and synthesis. It requires that
students first read and analyze the documents
individually and then plan and construct an
appropriate response to the essay question based
on their interpretation of the documentary
evidence. - 2007 College Board
9- Group the documents in order to answer the
question. - Write a thesis statement using the groupings to
answer the prompt. - Develop the paragraphs to support the thesis
statement.
10- Request an additional document that would help
answer the question and explain how this would
help create a better analysis. - In a paragraph compare two different points of
view found in the documents. - Conclude
11Documents
- Before assessing anything else, move through the
document and check for document usage. - Place a check mark next to the document numbers
at the bottom of the grading rubric when you see
the document used within the paper as evidence. - Does the writer document the source behind the
quote or paraphrase? - Every document should be used at least once.
12Students must use all Documents.
- Remember that the writer should use either facts,
paraphrase, or quotes from the documents as
evidence that what they are saying is accurate. - These paraphrases, quotes, and/or summaries must
be imbedded correctly into the text. The writer
cannot simply drop the quote into the paper.
According to ____, such and such happened (3).
13- Documentation should follow (4).
- All sources must be used correctly in a manner
that reveals understanding of the importance of
these documents in relationship to the question.
14- Assessing the Introduction
15Introduction
- Hook?
- Transitional Sentences?
- Thesis statement
- Does it answer the prompt?
- Does it answer how or why? Answering these
questions is what makes it analytical rather than
just simply expository.
16Excerpt from the 2008 AP Test Grader Comments
http//apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repos
itory/ap08_world_history_qa.pdf
17Careful Analysis of the Thesis
- Does it answer the question?
- Does the writer address groupings.
Most evident grouping for the 2008 Olympic DBQ
were Politics (Nationalism) Economics Feminism
18Ideas in Introduction
- Final step for thesis Number the ideas 1-3 as
they appear in the thesis. - Now read the introduction from beginning to end.
- Are there transition sentences between the hook
and the thesis? - Do they smoothly move the reader from the hook to
the thesis? Each sentence should propel the
reader forward.
19 20Promise Method of Writing
21Paper Organization
- Underline what you believe to be the thesis
statement and number the ideas found in the
thesis right above the idea (this is the part
about how or why something changed and also the
part about what stayed the same). - Underline the topic sentences in each paragraphs
(You are looking for the organizing sentence that
addresses the process of how the change occurred.
This essay should move chronologically.)
22- Underline the sentence that reminds the reader of
the premise in different words found in the
conclusion. - Check to make sure that the students have a point
of view paragraph that compares two different
sources perspectives. - Check to make sure that the student has addressed
the need for an additional document and how it
would help.
23Paper Organization continued
- Now read each of the sentences you underlined and
look for the following information - Do the topic sentences match up with the thesis?
- Do the topic sentences identify the groupings by
naming the documents. - Does the concluding idea match thesis? Does it
use different words?
24- Power Choices Words for Analysis
- Evidence
- Affirm
- Credit
- Discredit
25Hit List Words, First/Second Person References,
and Contractions
- Again read the paper backwards
- Now you are looking for hit list words, first and
second person references and contractions. Place
an X through these words. They ABSOLUTELY do not
belong in academic writing!
26Hit List Words
27First and Second Person References/Contractions
- FIRST PERSON including possessive
- Singular I, me, my, mine, etc.
- Plural We, us, ours, etc.
- SECOND PERSON Any form of you. This is an
academic essay. There is no time when you should
be addressing your reader directly. - CONTRACTIONS The apostrophe indicates that
letters have been left out to abbreviate. Ex
Cant instead of cannot
28To Be Verbs
- Again read the paper backwards
- Now you are looking for to be verbs. You should
limit the use of to be verbs because they usually
indicate passive sentence construction and also
are weak descriptors of action.
29To Be Verbs Continued
- Passive Sentence Construction
- Passive sentence construction is when the doer
of the action comes behind the action in the
sentence. This is confusing and destroys clarity. - Ex The pizza was eaten by us.
- Active is when the doer comes before the action
and yields clearer sentences. Notice what happens
to the to be verb. - Ex We ate the pizza.
30To Be Verbs
31 32Reading for Content
- The final task is to read for content. Your peer
evaluation sheet should reflect that two people
have read your paper for content. - When reading for content, if the evaluator
questions a fact, grammar, punctuation, or
spelling error, s/he will circle what is believed
to be the error and place a question mark in the
margin.
33Reading for Content continued
- It is NOT the evaluators responsibility to check
for accuracy or to correct the error. S/he may if
feeling particularly helpful that day, but it is
NOT the evaluators job. - Rather it is the writers job to validate and
correct possible errors.
34Content continued
- The peer evaluator should be using a different
color marker or ink color from those previously
used. S/he should write content and sign their
signature. I will be consulting with the
evaluators and the writer if inaccuracies make it
to me. - The peer evaluators should also evaluate the
essay with the appropriate rubric. Be fair and
honest in a gentle manner (constructive
criticism). Remember the writer will use your
feedback to correct the essay.
35Content Continued
- You should check double-check their organization,
logic, and facts. - Is the paper skeletal? Does it need more support?
- Has the writer addressed all parts of the prompt?
- Is the paper a DBQ? Does it use analysis and
textual evidence to answer the question?
36Logic
37Loose Generalizations Create Inaccuracies
38DBQ Rubric
39 40 AP Core Points
41Expanded Core Points
42Good Job! ?
- We have completed the peer edit.
- Now you need to have two of your peers evaluate
for content and accuracy. They should give you
detailed notes and complete the AP Rubric for the
paper as it is written. - Writers make sure you review your peer
evaluators comments before your next paper.