Topic (Challenges Jews daces when living in the Treblink ghetto in polland rather than just ghettos)
For your discussion of your chosen subject you should consult several books and articles and if possible one or more primary sources.
Write 12-15 pages (double spaced, 12 points, Times New Roman). Do not forget to insert page numbers!!! Don’t forget your name and the course title.
Find a title for your paper, which is short, catchy, and describes what your research is about. Artificial evidence like chat dpt etc. will be detected.
Give a short introduction first that describes briefly the historical context, talks about existing research, describes your use of sources and raises your research question.
Separate the introduction from the main body of the paper. (insert 2 blank spaces underneath the introduction or write a subtitle)
In the main part discuss your topic and develop your argument based on arguments and evidence from the readings, and the primary sources. You can use subtitles to structure your main text.
Separate the main part from the conclusion. (insert 2 blank spaces underneath the main section or use the term conclusion)
Finish the paper with a conclusion that summarises your investigation and discussion of the topic, formulates your main argument, and/or answers your research question.
Cite other author’s ideas and facts they provided (that is their property) properly:
Citing text
When you use the exact wording put it “in quotation marks” and give a reference for the book or article with a page number.
You could use either footnotes with full title of books and articles (see footnote ) or references within the text such as: (Smith 2006, pp. 201-202) plus a bibliography with the full title of the books used at the end.
Whatever format you chose, whether in text references or footnotes, use one style!
Using facts or paraphrasing text of other authors
When you use an idea or some facts from another author or several ones in a sentence or paragraph, do end the sentence or the paragraph with a footnote or a reference such as (Smith 2006, pp. 201-202).