Getting Started
Step One: Read the Rules
Before you begin work on an entry for competition, you, your teacher, and your parents should carefully read the Contest Rule Book.
Step Two: Understand the Theme
Each year your research must connect to the NHD theme. The theme changes each year so if you do NHD every year, you will not repeat a theme. The themes are chosen to be broad enough to encourage investigation of topics ranging from local history to world history, and from ancient time to the recent past. To understand the historical importance of your topic you need to ask questions about time, place and context, cause and effect, change over time, and impact and significance. You must consider not only when and where events happened, but also why they occurred and what factors contributed to their development.
Step Three:
Topics for research are everywhere! Think about a time in history or individuals or events that are interesting to you. Start a list.
For example, if you’re interested in Native Americans and the theme is Leadership and Legacy in History, a natural topic would be treaty rights. Now from there, you would consider the resources you have available to you—perhaps your local historical society—and possibly choose a Native American/U.S. treaty based in your affiliate’s history.
Example:
Theme: Leadership and Legacy
Interest: presidential power
Topic: Andrew Jackson and the removal of the Cherokee Nation
Issue: the refusal of a president to enforce a Supreme Court ruling
- Read books, newspapers or other sources of information and add to your list.
- Talk with relatives, neighbors, or people you know who have lived through a particular time in history that interests you and add more ideas.
- Keep thinking, reading and talking to people until you have many ideas that are interesting.
For example, if you’re interested in Native Americans and the theme is Leadership and Legacy in History, a natural topic would be treaty rights. Now from there, you would consider the resources you have available to you—perhaps your local historical society—and possibly choose a Native American/U.S. treaty based in your affiliate’s history.
Example:
Theme: Leadership and Legacy
Interest: presidential power
Topic: Andrew Jackson and the removal of the Cherokee Nation
Issue: the refusal of a president to enforce a Supreme Court ruling