History 52- Role of Women in U.S. History Fall 2014 Instructor: Dr

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History 52- Role of Women in U.S. History

Fall 2014

Instructor: Dr. Ellen Joiner, On-campus Office: NEA-181, Phone: 310-233-4582 e-mail: joinere@lahc.edu

Office Hours: On-line Chat or via Private Messenger

Do You Have An Education Plan? An education plan is essential to completing your education and to insuring that every class you take counts toward your college graduation and toward getting a job. If you have not worked out an education plan with a Harbor College counselor contact the counseling office at http://www.lahc.edu/studentservices/matriculation/counseling.html

and schedule an appointment.

Course Summary: This course will survey women’s roles throughout U.S. History. Special emphasis will be placed on the construction of gender through work and family. The influence of race, ethnicity, and status on women will also be explored as well as analyzing primary documentation.

Student Learning Outcomes:

1.

Define gender and clarify its interaction with racial, ethnic, and status differences throughout U.S. Women’s History.

2.

Identify and critically analyze individuals and movements (temperance, labor, birth control, suffrage) that have contributed to changing women’s status in U.S. History.

3.

Explain the role of American institutions (law, religion, politics, slavery) in defining women’s role in American society.

4.

Differentiate between primary and secondary sources in U.S. Women’s History and correctly use evidence to create support and argument and conclusion in historical writing.

Required Materials:

1) Access to a Computer -Because this class is completely online you must have a personal computer and reliable online access. Do not plan to use your employer’s computer, a friend’s, or your hand-held device for this course. The class requires writing (three 4-page essays) and has specific dates when assignments must be submitted. You must have access to your own computer in order to put in the time that is required. If your computer breaks during the course, the LAHC Library has computers that you may use but this requires that you come to campus.

2) Textbook The textbook for the class is Ellen Carol DuBois and Lynn Dumenil, Through

Women’s Eyes: An American History with Documents, 3

Martin’s. rd

ed, Boston: Bedford/ St.

This textbook is required and may be purchased from the Harbor College Bookstore or online. If you need help paying for books and other college expenses, contact the

Financial Aid Office at http:www.lahc.edu/finaid

Course Requirements: This course surveys women’s experience in the United States as it

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develops as a nation and as a society. History 52 is completely online. On the first day of class you will be able to log onto the class which is found at http://myetudes.org

After logging on you will immediately click the Assignments, Tests, and Surveys icon and follow the instructions given there. During the first week of class several face-to-face orientation sessions for Etudes will be offered in the computer lab (NEA-126) at Harbor College. The dates and times of these sessions will be posted at the Etudes Announcements page. There will be a series of assignments the first week to orient you to the class. These assignments must be completed within the first week otherwise you will be excluded.

The class is organized on a weekly basis with assignments opened each Monday morning at 8 a.m. and closed at 11 p.m. the following Sunday night. Each week’s assignment will be found at the Assignments, Tests, and Surveys section. A weekly assignment will typically include:

1) Reading assigned pages in the text (Through Women’s Eyes). Chapter assignments do not include the Documents or Visual Source materials (green pages) unless assigned. Be sure to carefully follow the syllabus for each week’s reading assignment.

2) To help you understand and learn the reading material you will use the Modules section that lists key terms and individuals from each chapter. You are not required to submit writing on the Modules. Using these important terms from each chapter as you read it will help you review the material and prepare for exams.

3) You will also be listening to my explanation of the material in a 30-40 minute lecture at ellenjoiner.com

4) Each week you will also be taking a practice test which is required and counts toward your final grade. The practice tests are at Assignments, Tests, and Surveys. The practice tests are for practice so you may re-take the tests to improve your score. The score on the final time that you take the practice test will be the score that goes into the Etudes

Gradebook. Each practice test must be completed by the end of each week’s assignment.

Practice tests may not be made up.

5) Each week I will also post a question on the Discussion Board that we will be discussing throughout the week. You are required to participate in 10 discussions that I will initiate

(10 pts./discussion) throughout the semester. You must participate in the assigned discussion during the week it is assigned. There are no make-ups on the Discussion

Board.

6) Three 4-page essays (40 pts. each) that focus on primary source materials are required.

Written assignments will be submitted to turnitin.com where the work can be checked for grammar mistakes and plagiarism. According to LACCD and Harbor College policy, copying another person’s work or ideas without giving them credit is illegal and will not be accepted. If you have questions about plagiarism, please see http://www.glendale.edu/library/research/plagiarism.html

or ask me any question you may have. Further instructions for using turnitin.com will be provided when the first essay is submitted. Essay assignments will be assigned at least two weeks in advance to give you time to work on them.

7) Three examinations (true-false, multiple choice-40 pts. each) and a final (50 pts.) are also part of the course. The examinations will be taken online at the Etudes site. The due dates for the exams and essays are listed in the schedule below.

More specific instructions for all of the assignments will be given each week so it is very important that you carefully read and follow each week’s instructions at

Assignments, Tests, and Surveys.

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8) 15 extra credit points are also available in the class. Students may watch 3 films (5 pts. each) that are listed on the class schedule at ellenjoiner.com

and submit a short film summary (.rtf file at the top of the schedule) to me at the Etudes Private Messenger. All extra credit submissions must be submitted in the week they are assigned. 15 pts. extra credit is also available for participation in a Service Learning Civic Project. Details on

Service Learning are explained at Modules- Service Learning. You must notify Lori

Minor, Service Learning Director, during the first week of class if you are interested in participating it the Service Learning project. Credit for participation in both activities is not allowed. Students must select one or the other. No extra credit will be given if assigned class work has not been completed.

The course requirements for online History 52 are not that different from the face-to-face version. This is not a self-directed class. You will have specific assignments each week that will need to be finished by the Sunday (11 p.m.) deadline. After the deadline, the assignment will close and you will not be able to access it. The primary difference between online and face-toface is that you are not required to physically come to a class and within the week time frame y decide when you will complete the assigned work. I also hold a weekly “office hour” on

Wednesday evenings at 8 p.m. when I will be in the Chat Room to directly answer questions that you may have. If you have other questions contact me through Private Messenger and I will get back to you as soon as possible. Don’t hesitate to also post questions in the Chat Room or at

Questions? on the Etudes site. Other students in the class are very willing to help you.

Grades for History 52 are determined on a percentage of the total points. The total points for the practice tests, exams, and essays will be available to you at the Etudes grade book. I will keep a separate record of the discussion participation plus any extra credit that you may complete and add those points at the end of the semester. At the end of the semester I will tally your total points and determine your grade based on the following percentages. 90% of the total= A,

80%=B, 70%=C, 60%= D. If at any point throughout the semester you would like to know your grade just ask me via Private Messenger. Grades are private information so I won’t discuss your grade in an open forum of the Discussion Board or Chat Room.

Semester Schedule:

Wk. 1 Sept. 2-7 Survey Table of Contents & pp. xxviixxxv

Wk. 2

Wk. 3

Sept. 8-14

Sept. 15-21

Course Introduction

Women of the New

World

European Settlement in the New World

c. 1

Wk. 4 Sept. 22-28 Women in the

Revolutionary Era

Wk. 5 Sept. 29-Oct. 5 Exam 1 (c.1-3)

Women’s Work c.2 + Documents: Letters & Newspaper

Advertisements (92-95)

Review General Essay Instructions &

Essay Example; Listen to “Analyzing a Primary Source” at ellenjoiner.com

c. 3+ Documents: Education and

Republican Motherhood ( 173-179) c. 4 + Visual Sources: Godey’s Lady’s

Book (233-238)

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Wk. 6

Wk. 7

Wk. 8

Oct. 6-12

Oct. 13-19

Oct. 20-26

National Expansion and Reform Activism

The Civil War and

Reconstruction

Wage Labor and

Women of Leisure

Wk. 9 Oct. 27-Nov. 2 Exam 2 (c. 4-6)

Immigration, Cities, & a Maternal

Wk.

10

Nov. 3-9

Commonwealth

Faces of Progressive

Reform

Wk.

11

Wk.

12

Nov. 10-16

Nov. 17-23

The Great Depression and A Women’s New

Deal

Women at War- World

War II

Wk.

13

Wk.

14

Nov. 24-30

Dec. 1-7

Women in Post-war

America

Exam 3 (c. 7-10)

The Second Wave

Wk.

15

Wk.

16

Dec. 8-14

Dec. 15-19

Feminism

Reconfigured

Exam 4 (c. 11-12)

The final must be completed by Friday

(Dec. 19) at 11 p.m. not Sunday. p. 252-277

Essay 1 due-See Modules c.5 + p. 320-333

c.6 c.7

c. 8 + Parades, Picketing, and Power:

Women in Public Space (493-500) p. 522-545 c. 9

Essay 2 due-See Modules

c.10 + Women in the Civil Rights

Movement ( 656-663)

c.11 c. 12 + Documents: Clinton, Palin,

Obama (779-787)

Essay 3 due-See Modules

Completion of History 52

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Chronology: In order to address SLO#2 which deals with historical chronology we will be working on the following dates throughout the class. On each of your practice tests and exams you will have multiple choice questions that ask you to identify which of these events came first and which came last. On the final exam there will be five questions that review over all of the dates again asking you identify “which comes first” and “which comes last”

History 52- Chronology Assessment

1620-21 “tobacco brides” arrive in Jamestown

1692 Salem witchcraft hysteria

1765 Women begin to produce homespun

1776 Declaration of Independence

1788 U.S. Constitution adopted

1823 First textile mill opens - Lowell, Massachusetts

1848 Seneca Falls women’s rights convention / Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

1860-65 American Civil War

1874 Woman’s Christian Temperance Union formed

1889 Hull House formed

1908 Supreme Court ruling Muller v. Oregon

1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Fire

1920 Nineteenth Amendment (woman’s suffrage) ratified

1933 Initiation of New Deal

1942 Women recruited in World War II industries

1955 Rosa Parks arrest sparks Montgomery Bus Boycott

1960 Formation of Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)

/ Birth Control Pill introduced

1972 Title IX of Education Amendments Act bans sex discrimination in federally funded education

1973 Supreme Court ruling Roe v. Wade

1981 Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings

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