5 min read•june 18, 2024
Minna Chow
Minna Chow
Welcome to Big Idea 3: Evaluate Multiple Perspectives! In this Big Idea, we'll discuss how to work with different perspectives. These are skills you started working on when you took AP Seminar.
**Research Tip: You can find the study guide for AP Seminar's Big Idea 3 here, if you'd like to refresh. **
Big Idea 3 is a rather short Big Idea, with only two Topic Guides under it, but that doesn’t mean it’s an easy one.
To recap: perspective is not only the viewpoint that someone has on a particular argument but also the particular lens, or way, that someone has chosen to look at an idea. Two people might have the same or similar viewpoints on an argument, but choose to look at it from two different lenses.
In AP Research, every research paper you read will have a different perspective on the same topic. You’ll need to be able to synthesize these multiple perspectives in order to write your research paper. It’ll be necessary for your literature review section, but also to help make sense of your research results.
** Research Tip: In order to succeed in Big Idea 3, you’ll need a good grasp of Big Idea 2’s skills. It might be helpful to review that big idea.**
So, let’s get started. First, let's look at Big Idea 3's Essential Questions!
Whereas in Big Idea 2 we looked at each Essential Question, let's take a closer look at each skill for Big Idea 3.
** Learning Objective: Identifying, comparing, and interpreting multiple perspectives on or arguments about an issue.**
This is really three skills bundled into one: Identifying multiple perspectives, comparing multiple perspectives, and interpreting multiple perspectives.
** Learning Objective: Evaluating alternate, opposing, or competing perspectives or arguments, by considering their implications and limitations.**
Again, multiple skills bundled! This Learning Objective tackles how to handle perspectives that don’t work with each other or come into conflict.
** Research Tip: All of us come into a topic with our own preconceived notions. It can be tempting to prefer the perspectives that support those preconceptions. However, it's important as fair and impartial researchers to do our best to keep an open mind, and to let the works we're analyzing speak for themselves.**
<< Hide Menu
5 min read•june 18, 2024
Minna Chow
Minna Chow
Welcome to Big Idea 3: Evaluate Multiple Perspectives! In this Big Idea, we'll discuss how to work with different perspectives. These are skills you started working on when you took AP Seminar.
**Research Tip: You can find the study guide for AP Seminar's Big Idea 3 here, if you'd like to refresh. **
Big Idea 3 is a rather short Big Idea, with only two Topic Guides under it, but that doesn’t mean it’s an easy one.
To recap: perspective is not only the viewpoint that someone has on a particular argument but also the particular lens, or way, that someone has chosen to look at an idea. Two people might have the same or similar viewpoints on an argument, but choose to look at it from two different lenses.
In AP Research, every research paper you read will have a different perspective on the same topic. You’ll need to be able to synthesize these multiple perspectives in order to write your research paper. It’ll be necessary for your literature review section, but also to help make sense of your research results.
** Research Tip: In order to succeed in Big Idea 3, you’ll need a good grasp of Big Idea 2’s skills. It might be helpful to review that big idea.**
So, let’s get started. First, let's look at Big Idea 3's Essential Questions!
Whereas in Big Idea 2 we looked at each Essential Question, let's take a closer look at each skill for Big Idea 3.
** Learning Objective: Identifying, comparing, and interpreting multiple perspectives on or arguments about an issue.**
This is really three skills bundled into one: Identifying multiple perspectives, comparing multiple perspectives, and interpreting multiple perspectives.
** Learning Objective: Evaluating alternate, opposing, or competing perspectives or arguments, by considering their implications and limitations.**
Again, multiple skills bundled! This Learning Objective tackles how to handle perspectives that don’t work with each other or come into conflict.
** Research Tip: All of us come into a topic with our own preconceived notions. It can be tempting to prefer the perspectives that support those preconceptions. However, it's important as fair and impartial researchers to do our best to keep an open mind, and to let the works we're analyzing speak for themselves.**
© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.