Why is it important to consider historical evidence when making a historical interpretation

Table of Contents

  1. What types of evidence are used to study history?
  2. What are the steps of historical method?
  3. How do historians know the past?
  4. Who writes history?
  5. Who is known as father of civics?
  6. What did Greeks call Indians?
  7. What is the other name of Yellow Revolution?

It is important to consider historical evidence when making a historical interpretation because everything needs evidence to make your points, without it there would be no use. Historical evidence will also help when deciding your statement and get more accurate/better results.

What types of evidence are used to study history?

Types of evidence

  • Printed sources. Books, articles, papers, pamphlets, newspapers, directories and all sorts of miscellaneous material, which is most likely to be found in the local studies collection of your library.
  • Archives.
  • Oral testimony.
  • Physical evidence.

What are the steps of historical method?

Steps in Historical Research

  1. Identify an idea, topic or research question.
  2. Conduct a background literature review.
  3. Refine the research idea and questions.
  4. Determine that historical methods will be the method used.
  5. Identify and locate primary and secondary data sources.

How do historians know the past?

Historians study the past by interpreting evidence. The historian works by examining primary sources — texts, artifacts, and other materials from the time period.

Who writes history?

A historian is a person who studies and writes about the past and is regarded as an authority on it. Historians are concerned with the continuous, methodical narrative and research of past events as relating to the human race; as well as the study of all history in time.

Who is known as father of civics?

Benjamin Franklin

What did Greeks call Indians?

The Greeks referred to the ancient Indians as “Indói” (Greek: Ἰνδοί, lit. ‘people of the Indus River’); the Indians referred to the Greeks as “Yonas (Yavanas)” in reference to the Ionians.

What is the other name of Yellow Revolution?

Gk – Color Revolutions in India

RevolutionsRelated toInitiator
Golden Fiber Revolution Jute N/A
Red Revolution Meat and Tomato N/A
Yellow Revolution Oil Seeds N/A
Silver Fiber Revolution Cotton N/A

Documents--diaries, letters, drawings, and memoirs--created by those who participated in or witnessed the events of the past tell us something that even the best-written article or book cannot convey. The use of primary sources exposes students to important historical concepts. First, students become aware that all written history reflects an author's interpretation of past events. Therefore, as students read a historical account, they can recognize its subjective nature. Second, through primary sources the students directly touch the lives of people in the past. Further, as students use primary sources, they develop important analytical skills.

To many students, history is seen as a series of facts, dates, and events usually packaged as a textbook. The use of primary sources can change this view. As students use primary sources they begin to view their textbook as only one historical interpretation and its author as an interpreter of evidence, not as a purveyor of truth. For example, as students read personal letters from distressed farmers to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, as they look at WPA administrators' reports on economic conditions in Pennsylvania and Oregon, or as they listen to recordings of government-produced radio dramas, they weigh the significance of these sources against such generalizations as that provided by Todd and Curti: "The most urgent task that Roosevelt faced when he took office was to provide food, clothing, and shelter for millions of jobless, hungry, cold, despairing Americans." Students begin to understand that such generalizations represent an interpretation of past events, but not necessarily the only interpretation. They become aware that the text has a point of view that does not make it incorrect but that does render it subject to question. Primary sources force students to realize that any account of an event, no matter how impartially presented it appears to be, is essentially subjective.

As students read eyewitness accounts of events at Little Big Horn or letters to congressmen expressing concern about woman suffrage, or look at photographs from the Civil War and then attempt to summarize their findings, they become aware of the subjective nature of their conclusions. The disagreements among students in interpreting these documents are not unlike those among historians. Through primary sources students confront two essential facts in studying history. First, the record of historical events reflects the personal, social, political, or economic points of view of the participants. Second, students bring to the sources their own biases, created by their own personal situations and the social environments in which they live. As students use these sources, they realize that history exists through interpretation--and tentative interpretation at that.

Primary sources fascinate students because they are real and they are personal; history is humanized through them. Using original sources, students touch the lives of the people about whom history is written. They participate in human emotions and in the values and attitudes of the past. By reading a series of public opinion surveys from World War II, for example, students confront the language of the person interviewed and his or her fears about shortages, as well as the interviewer's reactions recorded after the interview. These human expressions provide history with color and excitement and link students directly to its cast of characters.

Interpreting historical sources helps students to analyze and evaluate contemporary sources--newspaper reports, television and radio programs, and advertising. By using primary sources, students learn to recognize how a point of view and a bias affect evidence, what contradictions and other limitations exist within a given source, and to what extent sources are reliable. Essential among these skills is the ability to understand and make appropriate use of many sources of information. Development of these skills is important not only to historical research but also to a citizenship where people are able to evaluate the information needed to maintain a free society.

Perhaps best of all, by using primary sources, students will participate in the process of history. They will debate with teachers and classmates about the interpretation of the sources. They will challenge others' conclusions and seek out evidence to support their own. The classroom will become a lively arena in which students test and apply important analytical skills.

Primary Sources and Where to Find Them: Suggestions for Teachers

To introduce your students to primary sources, you might begin with materials that they themselves possess, such as birth certificates, social security cards, passports, or drivers' licenses. What do these sources tell us about the individuals and the society in which they live? How might these sources be used by historians? Consider how school, employment, medical, and family records could be used to develop generalizations about twentieth-century student life.

Beyond personal records, there are a variety of other sources available. Where can you locate documentation on your neighborhood or community? Your sources can be both governmental and private: Federal census figures, newspapers, local government files, personal diaries, and interviews with longtime residents. In most cities and towns, local historical groups, preservation societies, and museums serve as excellent starting points for classes locating documentary materials about local communities. On the state level, historical societies, archives, and museums are valuable depositories for useful primary materials. Many of these agencies offer specific programs for high school students, and many would welcome suggestions for joint projects.

At the federal level, materials and training courses are available from the National Archives. In addition to document based materials for the classroom teacher, the National Archives runs an 8-day summer workshop for educators: Primarily Teaching. In this workshop, teachers of all levels use National Archives Records to develop units based on topics of their choice and design. It is not necessary to take a course, however, to turn your classroom into an active history laboratory. Local resources and teacher imagination are enough. When students and teachers participate together in the exciting and evolving process of historical inquiry, returns, in terms of knowledge, skills and interest, can be great and lasting.

Why is it important to consider historical events when making a historical interpretation?

Historical context is an important thing to consider when reading written work—it can change or amplify the overall meaning of the subject and reveal information or perspectives we otherwise would have missed.

Why do we need historical evidence?

Historical sources can be used as evidence to back up your claims of what the past was like. They allow you to say that something happened, whether it's a battle or the existence of a famous figure. You can then use them to create your own interpretations of the finer details.

Why do historians consider the historical context surrounding an event when making an interpretation apex?

Why is it important to understand the historical context of an event? Historical events are frequently affected by other events that happened in the past or present. By understanding the historical context, historians can understand some reasons behind people's actions and why certain events occurred.

Why do historians use the historical thinking skill of interpretation?

Historical thinking skills are useful because they allow historians and researchers to develop unique accounts of past events or time periods within a particular culture.

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