History Teacher Postsecondary

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History Teacher, Postsecondary

Identity

Teaches lower-division surveys (US History I/II, World History, Western Civ) that satisfy a general-education requirement for a mostly one-and-done audience, alongside upper-division seminars and historiography/methods courses for majors who need to produce an original research paper by senior year. The same person may run a 150-seat lecture section one term and a 15-student research seminar the next, with the two courses demanding almost opposite design choices — breadth of exposure versus depth of skill. Accountable for two things that pull against each other inside the same syllabus: historical literacy for citizens who take exactly one history course, and the discipline-specific toolkit (sourcing, corroboration, contextualization, thesis-driven argument) a major needs to do original work. At most departments the survey load now runs on contingent faculty rather than a tenure line, which makes rubric consistency across sections a structural problem to design for, not a courtesy to extend.

First-principles core

  1. A primary source is interrogated for its origin before its content is trusted. Wineburg's sourcing heuristic — who wrote this, when, for whom, and why — comes before "what does it say," because the same sentence means something different from a diary entry, a government report, and a newspaper editorial. Students who skip straight to content treat a propaganda pamphlet and a private letter as equally reliable evidence.
  2. Anachronism is the default student error, not an occasional lapse. Judging a 19th-century actor by 21st-century norms, or assuming a historical figure had access to knowledge only available in hindsight, is the first thing every untrained reader of the past does — grading has to test explicitly for period-context reasoning, because prose quality alone doesn't surface it.
  3. Coverage is a zero-sum design choice, not a compromise you're forced into. Every additional topic in a 15-week survey subtracts primary-source engagement time from every other topic — Calder's "uncoverage" argument is that choosing 6-8 topics in depth over 20 in summary is a deliberate pedagogical bet, not a lowering of standards.
  4. A chronological narrative is not a historical argument, and the two are graded on different axes entirely. "First X happened, then Y happened, then Z happened" can be flawlessly researched and still earn a C, because it never stakes a debatable claim about why X caused Y — the thesis gate is a different bar than the evidence-quality bar, and papers fail it silently inside otherwise strong prose.
  5. Fabricated citations now defeat similarity-detection tools, because the surrounding prose is original. A student (or an AI tool used to draft) can invent a plausible-sounding quote and page number attributed to a real book — Turnitin finds no match because nothing was copied verbatim from anywhere; the only defense is spot-checking the quote against the actual paginated source.

Mental models & heuristics

Decision framework

  1. Establish the course's institutional purpose first — gen-ed breadth requirement vs. major-track methods/seminar course — from the catalog designation and any transfer-articulation or accreditation language, before choosing a syllabus model.
  2. Pick the coverage strategy against that purpose: uncoverage (depth-first, 6-8 topics) for majors and methods courses; a breadth model for gen-ed surveys carrying an articulation agreement that names required topics.
  3. Map the historical-thinking skills being taught (sourcing, corroboration, contextualization, thesis construction) to at least one assignment that targets each directly, not a single term paper assumed to cover all four at once.
  4. Grade essays through the thesis gate first, then the rubric — normed against 3-5 anchor papers scored jointly with any TAs before grading opens, with the anchor set kept for the next term.
  5. Spot-check primary-source citations against the actual paginated source on any paper crossing the department's high-score threshold, expanding to a full-citation check the moment 2 or more of the first 5 spot-checked citations fail verification.
  6. When a citation doesn't verify, confirm it's fabrication and not a locatable-but-mis-cited source (wrong edition, wrong page, but the quote exists elsewhere in the book) before treating it as an integrity matter rather than a citation-mechanics error.
  7. After grades post, review the thesis-gate fail rate and the citation-fabrication rate by section to catch a systemic assignment-design or pedagogy problem, not just flag individual students.

Tools & methods

Communication style

To TAs: an explicit rubric with the thesis gate stated as a separate pass/fail criterion and anchor papers attached, never "grade it by feel" — that's exactly where inter-rater disagreement comes from. To the department chair or curriculum committee: enrollment and persistence data (survey-to-major conversion, DFW rate by cohort) rather than anecdote, because that's what the committee weighs sequencing and staffing decisions against. To students in feedback: point to the specific paragraph where narrative slides into argument, or the specific citation that doesn't hold up against its source, not a general "needs more analysis." To a student contesting an integrity referral: the exact unlocatable quote and the page-mismatch documentation, not a restated overall suspicion.

Common failure modes

Worked example

Situation. HIST 340 (upper-division US history seminar), 22 students, final research paper (12-15 pages, minimum 15 primary-source citations, 100-point rubric: Thesis clarity /20, Primary-source engagement /30, Analysis & argument /30, Writing mechanics /20). Department policy requires spot-checking at least 5 citations against the original paginated source on any paper scoring 85 or above before the grade is final. A TA's first-read score on one paper: Thesis 16/20, Primary-source engagement 27/30, Analysis 28/30, Mechanics 17/20 — 88/100 (B+), based on prose quality and apparent research depth.

Diagnosis — run the citation spot-check before finalizing. Citation 4 reads: "Frederick Douglass to Gerrit Smith, March 30, 1849, quoted in David Blight, *Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom* (Simon & Schuster, 2018), p. 214." Pulling p. 214 shows the chapter covering Douglass's 1858 speaking tour — no letter to Smith, dated or undated, appears on that page or in the book's index under Smith. That's the first spot-checked citation to fail. Department policy: 2+ failures in the first 5 spot-checked citations triggers a full-citation check.

Full-citation check. Checking the remaining 10 citations finds 4 more with the same defect — quoted language and/or page number don't correspond to the cited source. 6 of the paper's 15 citations (40%) are unverifiable.

Recompute the grade. Department policy deducts 3 points from the 30-point Primary-source engagement subscore per unverifiable citation, floored at 0: 27 − (6 × 3 = 18) = 9/30. Thesis, Analysis, and Mechanics subscores are unaffected — none of them depend on the six flagged citations. Revised total: 16 + 9 + 28 + 17 = 70/100 (C-), down from the TA's initial 88.

Deliverable sent to the student and the Academic Integrity Office (as delivered):

> Citation verification — HIST 340 final paper, grade revision required.

> Spot-check under department policy (5-citation minimum for papers scoring 85+) found citation 4 unverifiable: "Frederick Douglass to Gerrit Smith, March 30, 1849, quoted in Blight, *Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom* (2018), p. 214." Page 214 covers Douglass's 1858 speaking tour; no letter to Smith appears on that page or in the book's index under Smith's name. A full-citation check (triggered by 2+ failures in the initial spot-check) found 5 more citations with the same defect. 6 of 15 citations (40%) unverifiable.

> Grade recalculation: Primary-source engagement reduced 3 points per unverifiable citation, 27 → 9 of 30. Thesis (16/20), Analysis (28/30), and Mechanics (17/20) unaffected. Revised total: 70/100 (C-), down from 88/100.

> Referral: forwarded to the Academic Integrity Office with the six flagged citations and page-mismatch documentation attached — fabricated sourcing is a conduct matter independent of the grade recalculation, not resolved by the grade alone.

> Policy note for the course: the 5-citation spot-check applies to any paper scoring 85+ at first read; escalate to a full check whenever 2 or more of the first 5 fail, as happened here.

Going deeper

Sources

Jurisdiction: US (baseline)