378 Chapter 16 | prosperity and reform | period seven 1890 –1945
Putting it All togEthEr
revisiting the Main Point
•
What were some of the positive and negative economic and social effects of
the Second Industrial Revolution that were experienced during the late nine-
teenth and early twentieth century?
•
Analyze the ways in which reformers and government programs sought to
control the negative effects. To what extent were these reformers and pro-
grams successful? What accounted for their lack of success?
•
Trace the continuities and changes in Americans’ sense of themselves as a
nation throughout this period. How did immigrant assimilation and the rise
of a consumer economy shape Americans’ self-identity?
evaluating evidence: discovering turning Points
In writing historical argument, selecting evidence is a discrete process. You find
the examples that best support the prompt, and you organize this evidence in a
way that will help support your position.
Finding evidence is more than just an automatic, fill-in-the-blank procedure,
and reviewing carefully selected evidence may influence the direction of your
essay. Past chapters, for example, have looked at the notion of a working thesis,
which is an initial claim that the evidence might help confirm as the essay con-
tinues. You also have studied the role that is played by the outlier, or marginal
example, which can provide a qualification or exception to the norm and there-
fore increase an argument’s credibility.
There is an additional move you can make to create a fuller argument, and
that is to incorporate actual turning points and periodization in prompts that do
not explicitly ask for periodization. Consider the following prompt:
Trace the continuities and changes in Americans’ sense of themselves as
a nation throughout this period. How did immigrant assimilation and
the rise of a consumer economy shape American identity?
At first glance, the period is defined for you in this prompt—“immigrant assimi-
lation” and “the rise of a consumer economy.” But the actual turning points are up
to you to decide. Additionally, you may choose to create a new period to address
this prompt more fully.
BuilDing AP®
writing sKills
putting it all together 379
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