Sample Student Essay Outlining Process

Introduction: I start the year by walking kids through the outlining steps below, on the board or a screen. For this activity, I provide students with an essay prompt (could be long or DBQ). I give them 10 minutes and over the first semester, cut that to 5 minutes to complete the process. Some days I just ask for the blank chart; other days, the completed chart; completed chart and thesis; etc. We look at one or two student examples and critique them (I have the luxury of a document camera for this.) On testing days, I remind them of the steps.

Outlining Steps:

  1. Analyze the prompt.
  2. Determine the historical thinking skill;
  3. Chart the prompt (see table below) including all aspects of the prompt.
  4. Brainstorm historical information and jot it into the appropriate cells.
  5. Develop an outline.
  6. Review the prompt.
  7. Develop a one-sentence thesis statement.
  8. Develop claim sentences that elaborate on the thesis, using evidence from the appropriate cell.

Prompt: Evaluate the causes and consequences of religious and intellectual movements[1] on American reform during the mid-nineteenth century.

Historical Thinking Skills: Causation

Causes / Consequences[2]
Second Great Awakening / Reaction against deism, industrialism / Diversified Protestant denominations; encouraged work ethic, reform movements
Transcendentalism / Reaction against materialism, rationalism; European Romanticism / Spawned artistic and spiritual pursuits, communalist movements
Utopian Socialism[3] / Reaction against growing economic inequality and insecurity / Mostly failed communalist attempts[4]

Outline:

●Thesis: The Second Great Awakening, Transcendentalism, and Utopian Socialism developed out of the thrust toward rationalism, industrialization, and wage labor, having profound religious, intellectual, and social impacts.

○Claim 1: The Second Great Awakening and Transcendentalism’s causes are murky, but an argument can be made that they were reactions against deism and industrialization, strongly influenced by European movements.

■European influence evidence: British ministers, e.g. Finney, and Romanticism

■Both movements coincided with the societal chaos of industrialization; Slater’s Mill, textiles, putting-out system, etc.

■Emerson on the over-soul and transcendentalism

■Thoreau: Walden, “Simplify, simplify, simplify.”[5]

○Claim 2: Protestantism, and thus American society became more diverse, and somewhat more tolerant.

■Shakers, Millerites, Mormons (big exception to tolerance!)

○Claim 3: Emerson and Thoreau influenced American thought immediately in their advocacy of communalism, ethics, respect for nature, simple living, nonviolence, etc.

○Claim 4: Utopian socialist communities (New Harmony) sought to resolve the problems of industrialization and wage labor in a humane way.

○Conclusion: These movements’ influences continued throughout United States history.[6]

■Utopian socialism influenced late 19th c. labor movement

■Margaret Fuller and women’s rights

■Transcendentalism’s influence on modern environmental movement (conservation, Thoreau and ecology).

■Civil Disobedience: Gandhi, MLK, Jr.

[1]As the reader, I underline the key words in the prompt that might become column or row headings in the charting of the prompt.

[2]Next I plot those key words into the chart as columns.

[3]Next, I brainstormed these movements as rows.

[4]These cells represent my brainstorming of evidence and explanations.

[5]For this outline, the causes column will become one body paragraph, begun with this claim sentence. Each cell of the "Consequences" column will become a claim sentence at the start of a corresponding body paragraph. (Each outline will vary.)

[6]Synthesis point?