Modern
World History Research Paper
The
Task: Each
of you will produce an original research paper on a topic of your choice from
world history. The list of possible research questions/topic suggestions below
is meant to both give you ideas and to help you to understand what I am looking
for with respect to a potential topic’s relevance.
The
Process: You
will need to have a topic approved by Mr. Ames by the beginning of class on Friday, September 19.
Once you have selected a topic, you will need to complete research in order to
write intelligently about your topic. You will need to form a research question
that is answerable in a solid thesis statement. You should support your thesis
with both your ideas and documented support, and you should also include
concessions to another viewpoint. Your final product should be a well-written,
thoroughly documented research paper that describes the topic and your theories
about its impact on the world today or policy implications for the
international community.
You will have
at least one night each week, between now and the project due date, that will
be “homework free,” which you are expected to use to work on this project.
Paper
Specifics: This
is a major piece of research work, and counts heavily toward your third quarter
and course grades. Therefore, you should put some serious effort into all
phases of the project. The paper must be a minimum of 4 pages long, not including your Works Cited page, cover page, or
any illustrations.
Acceptable Page Format:
10 or 12
point font, Times New Roman. 1" margins top and bottom and both sides. The
paper should be double-spaced, printed in black ink, spell checked, proofed,
and THOROUGHLY documented in accordance with MLA guidelines, and YES, YOU DO
NEED A WORKS-CITED page. The paper should have all MLA required page headers
and number - in the proper format.
Sources: Minimums - 2 primary
sources and three secondary sources
All of you
may use one encyclopedia (NOT Wikipedia) as a reference source only. It will not count toward either primary or
secondary source totals.
Applicable Due Dates:
Topic Selection and
Research Question: Friday,
September 19
Annotated Bibliography
Due: Friday,
October 10
Thesis Paragraph Due: Monday,
October 13
Outline of the Paper Due: Monday,
October 27
Rough Draft Due: Friday,
November 14
Final Paper Draft: Monday,
November 24
Potential Topics/Research Questions – see
next page:
J
The causes, course, and consequences of
the actions at
J
The AIDS epidemic in
J
What happened to
J
Is there a viable
J
What happens when the oil runs out? What
are other countries doing about finding alternative energy sources?
J
Genocides in the 20th century,
and their implications for countries today - especially the Holocaust,
J
What should the world do about atrocities
or injustices being done in another country? If it is to react, what should be
done and who should do it?
J
The whole issue of reparations - for the
Holocaust, for slavery, for the environment, etc.
J
Extreme poverty in some countries - is it
inevitable? What can and/or should be done about it in
J
The Kyoto Environmental treaty - is it a
good one that the
J
Can the European Union work, given the
vast differences and history between some of its member nations?
J
Is NATO obsolete?
J
Is the UN relevant to the modern world?
J
The impact of the media on politics in
various countries?
J
Alternative education - does another
country have a better system than we do?
J
Which
is more responsive to the needs of the people, American style republican
democracy or European Parliamentary government?
Guide Questions: These
are fairly generic, and your research should suggest other, more topic specific
questions.
J
What is your specific research question?
J
What is your answer - your thesis?
J
What are the specific issues at stake?
(This can be answered in a summary of your topic.)
J
Why is this a relevant topic for the
world, or at least the major players in the topic?
J
Who are the major players and why do they
(or should they) care about your topic? Who benefits from the status quo? Who
might benefit if the system/process were to change?
J
Whom does the issue affect? What do they
feel about it?
J
What is the impact to any solution that
you prescribe? Think in terms of culture, money, and practicality.
J
What might be a good solution - based on
your research?