SOUTHWEST COLLEGE HISTORY 1301 UNITED STATES HISTORY TO 1877 CRN #66191 Semester: Fall 2013 Instructor: Chastity S. Holman E-mail: chastity.holman@hccs.edu Office Hours: By appointment Phone: (832) 971-3421 Location: SW-Learning Hub Rm. 324 Time: Mondays & Wednesday, 5:30pm-7:30pm Course Description History 1301 is a survey of American history from Native American cultures to 1877. It will focus on the evolution of the economic, social/cultural and political institutions which define the development of the modern United States and its people. Although this course is built around historical events and processes, it is much more than a simple recitation of facts. Students will learn and apply critical thinking and problem-solving skills and will work with historical documents, maps and economic and demographic models. History 1301 is a 16-week, 48 contact hour course which fulfills three hours of the statemandated six-hour history requirement. Completion of this class will also improve performance in reading, writing, critical thinking, communicating and computer skills. Prerequisites: must be placed into college-level reading and college-level writing. PROGRAM LEARNING OUTCOMES 1. Students will be able to create an argument through the use of historical evidence. 2. Students will be able to analyze and interpret primary and secondary sources. 3. Students will be able to analyze the effects of historical, social, political, economic, cultural and global forces on this period of United States history. 4. Students will be able to understand the importance of chronology and how earlier ideas and events shaped later events. STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES 1. Discuss the Age of Exploration 2. Explain Colonization 3. Identify the causes and effects of the American Revolution 4. Explain the origins and impact of Slavery 5. Analyze the formation of the Republic 6. Summarize the effects of Expansion and Innovation 7. Explain Nationalism and Sectionalism 8. Discuss the Civil War 9. Evaluate the effects of Reconstruction Required Books Text: Roark, Johnson, Cohen, Stage, & Hartmann, The American Promise 5th ed., Value Edition Monographs: Clinton, Plantation Mistress Jacobs, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl These books are available at the HCC Bookstores and through online sources such as Amazon.com where they are generally less expensive. Used copies may be available at Half Price Books and similar outlets. Copies may also be placed on reserve in the Southwest College libraries. If you encounter difficulty in obtaining these books, inform your instructor immediately so that she can assist you in finding copies. Course Requirements Graded Assignments: 4 major in class examinations, each worth 20% of the final grade. Book review essays on the Clinton and Jacobs monographs, each worth 10% of the final grade. Failure to turn in these essays will result in the automatic failure of the course. Grading and Grading Scale: A (90- 100%); B (80-89%); C (70-79%); D (60-69%); F (below 60%). Grades are not curved and extra credit work will be assigned at the instructor’s discretion. Exams A major in class examination will be held at the conclusion of each of the four content units that comprise History 1301. Each will be worth 20% of the final grade and will cover material presented in the unit just concluded. Every exam will consist of at least one short essay question and one major essay question. Essay questions will be selected from a list of possible essays that will be handed out a week before the exam. A short review session will be held before each exam. Exams will generally occur about every 23 weeks. Make-up exams will only be administered for excused absences and taken immediately upon the students return to class. The decision to categorize an absence as excused or unexcused will be at the instructor’s discretion. Failure to take all four exams will result in failure of the course. Book Review Essays Students will be required to read the two assigned monographs and write a 4-5-page, review essay on each. For each book, students will be expected to write a coherent essay from material that will be provided by the instructor beforehand. The Jacobs essay is due Wednesday, October 16th; the Clinton essay is due Monday, December 2nd. Late papers will have a grade deducted for each calendar day they are late. Failure to turn in these essays will result in failure of the course. Attendance It is your responsibility to be punctual for class. Students who are excessively tardy or late to class will risk having their excessive tardies counted as one or more unexcused absences. HCC policy states that students may be administratively withdrawn if they miss more than 6 hours of class. My policy is that you WILL be dropped from class if you have more than 6 hours of unexcused absences. If you have a valid reason for missing class – illness or accident, for example – and can document that, I will consider your absence excused and will not count it against the 6-hour limit. Otherwise, you will be dropped. If you stop attending class and do not complete the proper withdrawal forms, you will receive and “F” for the course. It is your responsibility to complete the necessary paper work before the official drop date. Do not ask me to give you a “W”. Only under exceptional circumstances (i. e. serious accident, illness, etc.), which are documented in writing, will late withdrawals be given. Regular attendance is essential to success in this class. Students who have excessive absences are usually those most likely to earn a substandard or failing grade. If you miss a class, you are responsible for all the information and assignments covered in that class. Students who must complete 12 hours per semester to maintain their status-international students, veterans, financial aid recipients, etc.-should make special note of my attendance policy. You should be aware that under most circumstances a withdrawal that brings you below the 12-hour minimum could result in a potentially damaging change in status. Disability Policy Any student with a documented disability (e.g. physical, learning, psychiatric, vision, hearing, etc.) who needs to arrange reasonable accommodations must contact the Disability Support Service Counselor, Dr. Becky Hauri (713 718-7909) at the beginning of the semester. Faculty members are authorized to provide only the accommodations requested by the Office of Disability Support Services (DSS). Students who are requesting special testing accommodations must first contact the office. Academic Dishonesty Plagiarism, cheating and other forms of academic dishonesty are prohibited by HCCS policy and the rules of this class. Plagiarism is the use of the ideas or words of another person (either in whole or in part) without crediting the source. Plagiarism amounts to the theft of another person’s intellectual property. It is the most common form of academic dishonesty. If you are unclear as to what constitutes plagiarism, you should seek clarification before beginning an assignment. Cheating involves fraud and deception for the purpose of violating legitimate testing rules. Cheating excludes, but is not limited to: copying from another student’s test paper, using during an exam materials or resources not authorized by the instructor; collaborating with another student during a test; knowingly using, buying, selling whole or part of an unadministered test. Academic dishonesty constitutes a severe violation of HCC policy and rules and is subject to stringent penalties. Violations of these policies will result, at a minimum, in the automatic failure of this course. Severe violations could result in suspension or expulsion from HCC. Classroom Etiquette Please adhere to the following below listed guidelines; Cellphones must be kept on the silent or off position during class. If you habitually have to be excused from class to answer your cellphone, that will be counted as an unexcused absence and you will be asked to leave for the remainder of the class session on that evening. Please dress modestly when coming to class. Students who are revealing ANY body parts or undergarments, will be asked to cover themselves appropriately or leave class for the evening. Computers are allowed in class ONLY for the purpose of taking notes. Any student caught using their computer for any other purposes during class time will not be allowed to bring their computer to class for the rest of the semester. Taping lectures is permitted as needed by individual students. Please inform the instructor if you will be taping lectures. Class Calendar (subject to change) th August 26 -Course Overview & Introduction August 28th-Chapter 1: Ancient America, Before 1492 September 2nd-LABOR DAY HOLIDAY September 4th-Chapter 2: Europeans Encounter the New World, 1492-1600 September 9th- Chapter 3: The Southern Colonies in the Seventeenth Century, 16011700 September 11th- Chapter 4: The Northern Colonies in the Seventeenth Century, 16011700 September 16th-Chapter 5: Colonial America in the Eighteenth Century, 1701-1770 -First Examination Review Session September 18th- First Examination September 23rd-Chapter 6: The British Empire and the Colonial Crisis, 1754-1775 September 25th-Chapter 7: The War for America, 1775-1783 September 30th-Chapter 8: Building a Republic, 1775-1789 October 2nd- Chapter 9: The New Nation Takes Form, 1789-1800 October 7th - Video & Discussion, “Africans & America: America’s Journey Through Slavery” -Second Examination Review Session October 9th-Second Examination October 14th –Chapter 10: Republicans in Power, 1800-1824 - Discuss essay criteria on “Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl” October 16th - Submit Book Essay on “Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl” October 21st –Chapter 11: The Expanding Republic, 1815-1840 October 23rd –Chapter 12: The New West and the Free North, 1840-1860 October 28th –Chapter 13: The Slave South, 1820-1860 - Third Examination Review Session October 30th -Third Examination Review Session November 4th- Third Examination November 6th- Chapter 14: The House Divided, 1846-1861 November 11th - Video & Discussion, “Gone with the Wind” November 13th- Chapter 15: The Crucible of War, 1861-1865 November 18th -Video & Discussion, “Gone with the Wind” November 20th - Chapter 16: Reconstruction, 1863-1877 November 25th - Discuss essay criteria for “Plantation Mistress” December 2nd- Submit Book Report on “Plantation Mistress” December 4th-Final Exam Review December 9th-13th - Final Exam (TBA) ** All Students will attend a Mandatory Library Orientation in September**