Documenting United States History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Putting It All Together 143

Step 1 Understand the prompt, and identify the key words


As you remember from Chapter 1, you must first understand your question.
Draw a square around your topic (“two of the major sides in the political debates
of the 1780s and 1790s”), draw a line underneath your task (“Determine the
extent to which one had a greater claim to fulfilling the ideals of the Declara-
tion of Independence”), and draw a circle around the categories in the question
(“Antifederalists/Jeffersonian Republicans” and “Federalists”).

Step 2 Brainstorm and organize your evidence


In debate, a good starting point is to organize your evidence by two sides. The
following graphic organizer will help you to identify the reasons that each side
believes its position.

Document Federalists Reasons

Antifederalists/
Jeffersonian
Republicans

Reasons

Doc. 5.11, Federalist
No. 10

For greater
national power

A stronger
national
government
will lead to
greater
security and
prosperity

Doc. 5.10, “The Ad-
dress and Reasons of
Dissent of the Minor-
ity of the Convention
of Pennsylvania to
Their Constituents”

Suspicious of
federal
power

The “iron-
handed
despotism”
of a single
government

Review the historical thinking skills exercises in this chapter that provide
other reasons that influenced both sides of the debate.

Step 3 Outline your response


As you will recall from earlier chapters, a working thesis provides a starting point.
With a prompt that lends itself to two sides, it is helpful to use a point-by-point
comparison, with the first point being the first side (in favor of a strong central gov-
ernment) and the second point being the opposite side (in favor of states’ rights).

Working thesis: One side had a greater claim to fulfilling the Declaration.


I. Point 1 (claim): Antifederalists/Jeffersonian Republicans


A. Supporting evidence


B. Supporting evidence


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