Guide to the Essay
The essay is a four-page analysis of a topic related to the person about
whom they wrote their biographical brief. The essay cannot be a
biography, because that would be too extensive for a four-page paper.
Instead, the assignment is to answer a specific and significant historical
question. Each student should consult the instructor regarding their
question, sources and provisional thesis before writing the final drafts.
Each essay must include two secondary sources and one primary source.
Secondary sources are those written by historians about the past. A
primary source is something written or created in the time under
consideration. The most obvious choice for most students will be
something written by the person you are focusing on. Secondary sources
cannot be taken from the internet. They must be published books or
articles either found in the library, or published sources available on the
library's website. These three sources should be cited in the text of the
essay according to the Chicago style. Click here
for citation guide.
Be sure you do the following:
1. review guidelines for thesis statements in Essay
Writing Guide
>2. Underline the thesis statement in your final copy.
3. Use two secondary and one primary source.
4. Cite your sources when you quote or paraphrase them, or when derive
significant or unique ideas from them. Ordinary, non-controversial facts
do not usually require citation.
For
more advice on essay writing, and on my grading methods, see my Essay Writing
Guide.