HIST105: US History-Beginnings to 1890

A winter battle

Washington Crossing the Delaware, a copied version of the original by: Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze. Taken from this website: https://www.navytimes.com/news/your-navy/2019/12/23/a-winter-battle/

 

Welcome to History 105: US History- Beginnings to 1890. Please watch the following video to learn more about this course and how to navigate Canvas. 

VIDEO

 

HIST-H 105 American History I– Fall 2020

Perry Central Jr.-Sr. High School

Credits

3

General Education Breadth of Inquiry

Social & Historical Studies S&H

Instructor

Ty Guillaume

Office

Room F215

Email

tguillaume@pccommodores.org

Office Hours

7th Period (2:12-3:00)

Meeting Times

10:34am-11:22am

Meeting Location

HS Library

Prerequisite(s)

None

Lab fees

N/A

Course Description

Colonial period, Revolution, Confederation and Constitution, national period to 1890?. Evolution of American society: political, economic, social structure; racial and ethnic groups; sex roles; Indian, inter-American, and world diplomacy of the United States; evolution of ideology, war, territorial expansion, industrialization, urbanization, international events and their impact on American history.

This course introduces students to the discipline of history and to major debates over how to tell the story of the United States. Endeavoring to prepare students for the rigor of college reading, writing, and analysis, the focus of the course is on the investigation of primary and secondary sources. Each unit will include a number of history labs and observation papers which lead to a major essay. 

Core Transfer Library Course

Yes, CTL Name: American History I

Textbook Title & Author

Recommended/ Preferred Textbook:

Roark, Johnson, et al., The American Promise: A History of the United States

Stanford University Press Edition, The American Yawp

Important Deadlines

Registration window:  Monday, August 17, 2020 – Friday, September 11, 2020

Drop dateFriday September 11, 2020.

Withdrawal Date: Thursday December 3, 2020 or two weeks before the final exam (must be passing – ACP withdraw form required.)

Learning Objectives

A successful student will, by the end of the semester, demonstrate:

  • Distinguish between primary and secondary sources
  • Identify appropriate sources to help explain historical change, including:
    • The origins of the American Revolution
    • the role of Westward Expansion (including Indian Removal and the Conquest of Mexico) in the impending crisis
    • the causes and consequences of the Civil War
  • reflect on historical problems, including perennial conflicts along lines of race, class and gender
  • Synthesize primary and secondary sources in addressing a historical question

How IU Grade will be Calculated

  • Class Participation, Discussion Forums, and Observation: 10%
  • History Labs (aka Microthemes,etc.) : 20%
  • Analytical Papers: 30%
  • Research Related Assignments: 20%
  • Exams: 20%

How High School Grade will be Calculated

Same as above.

IU Grading Scale

A+: 98-100%

C+: 77-79.9%

A: 93-97.9%

C: 73-76.9%

A-: 90-92.9%

C-: 70-72.9%

B+: 87-89.9%

D+: 67-69.9%

B: 83-86.9%

D: 63-66.9%

B-: 80-82.9%

D-: 60-62.9%

Schedule of Assignments

We will be doing discussion forums, history labs, research assignments, analytic papers, book discussion, and exams.  Click on the link for specific tasks. 

Classroom Policies & Information

We will create a Classroom Policy Constitution the first week of class that will outline our policies, procedures, rules, and expectations. 

Attendance Policy

Students should do their best to attend class. In the event a student is unable to participate in class due to school-related events, travel or illness, students will be held responsible for any work missed. Students will be expected to meet deadlines and take exams on scheduled dates regardless of an absence unless the student and teacher make other arrangements. 

Late Work Policy

Students will lose 10% each day an assignment is missing after the due date.

Make-up/

Retake Exam Policy

If students miss an exam, they are to make-up the test upon their return to school either utilizing a study hall, 8th period, or during class. Students can retake an exam but must accept the score of the most recent exam.

Dual Credit-High School Credit Policy Statement

The rigor of this course will be periodically reviewed by Indiana University faculty in an effort to maintain the high quality of education that each student receives. Due to the unique format of this course, students must decide during the IU enrollment period whether they wish to receive dual credit (high school and IU credit) or only high school credit. Students who choose to take the course only for high school credit and receive a passing grade may not register at a later date or repeat the course (while in high school) for college credit.

IU Academic Misconduct Statement

The Indiana University Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities, and Conduct describes types of misconduct for which students may be penalized, including cheating, fabrication, plagiarism and interference with other students’ work, as well as actions which endanger the University and the University community and possession of firearms. The Code also indicates the procedures to be followed in these cases. All students are required to adhere to the responsibilities outlined in the Code. http://www.iu.edu/~code/ 

Academic dishonesty can result in a grade of F for the class (an F for academic dishonesty cannot be removed from the transcript). Significant violations of the Code can result in expulsion from the University.
Plagiarism is using another person's words, ideas, artistic creations, or other intellectual property without giving proper credit. According to the Code of Student Rights, Responsibilities, and Conduct, a student must give credit to the work of another person when he does any of the following:

  • Quotes another person's actual words, either oral or written; 
  • Paraphrases another person's words, either oral or written; 
  • Uses another person's idea, opinion, or theory; or 
  • Borrows facts, statistics, or other illustrative material, unless the information is common knowledge. 

Use the following links for more information: 

https://studentcode.iu.edu/responsibilities/academic-misconduct.html 

https://wts.indiana.edu/writing-guides/plagiarism.html 

If a student is suspected of violating the academic code of conduct, please contact Jim Johnson in the ACP office at jkjohnso@iu.edu and we will proceed to create a file.

 

H105: Schedule of Assignments

Unit 1: European Conquest and Colonization

Readings:

-From The American Yawp:

  • Chapter 1: The New World
  • Chapter 2: Colliding Cultures
  • Chapter 3: British North America
  • Chapter 4: Colonial Society

-Selected Readings from American Promise

Assignments:

-History Labs

  1. History Lab #1: Why European Exploration of the New World? HL#1
  2. History Lab #2: What was Spanish colonialism like for indigenous peoples? What sustained slavery? HL#2
  3. History Lab #3: How were the British colonies settled? HL #3
  4. History Lab #4: How should we tell the story of slavery? HL #4
  5. History Lab #5: What can we learn from the rebellions of the 17th century? HL#5
  6. History Lab #6: Whom did mercantilism benefit? Whom did it hurt? (includes the mercantilism game) HL#6

-Discussion Forums

Complete a response to each History Lab question by providing evidence from the sources found in each lab (using especially the lab report you completed). (See Canvas for details)

-Research Related Assignment #1

Group Research Worksheet on 17th century rebellions

Unit 2: Revolution and A New Nation

Readings: 

-From The American Yawp:

  • Chapter 5: The American Revolution
  • Chapter 6: A New Nation
  • Chapter 7: The Early Republic

-Selected Readings from American Promise

Assignments:

-History Labs

  1. History Lab 7: What were the main grievances among Americans on the eve of the Revolution? To what extent were they segmented by class? HL#7
  2. History Lab 8: Was the New Republic committed to slavery? HL#8
  3. History Lab 9: To what extent did the Constitution support the interests of the poor (tenant farmers, slaves, apprentices)? HL#9
  4. History Lab 10: Who had a better vision for the future of America: Thomas Jefferson or Alexander Hamilton? HL#10

-Discussion Forums

Complete a response to each History Lab question by providing evidence from the sources found in each lab (using especially the lab report you completed). (See Canvas for details)

-Research Related Assignment #2: The Constitution

Unit 3: Reform Movements and Jacksonian Democracy

Readings: 

-From The American Yawp:

  • Chapter 8: The Market Revolution
  • Chapter 9: Democracy in America
  • Chapter 10: Religion and Reform

-Selected Readings from American Promise

Assignments:

-History Labs:

  1. History Lab 11: Was the Jacksonian Era characterized by an expansion in “American democracy”? HL#11

-Discussion Forums

Complete a response to each History Lab question by providing evidence from the sources found in each lab (using especially the lab report you completed). (See Canvas for details)

-Analytic Paper #1:  How democratic was American society during the early to mid 1800s? Think about the reform movements, Jacksonian Democracy, and the status of minorities. 

-Midterm Exam (Covers items from Units 1-3 and consists of Identification Terms, Short Essay, Long Essay)

End of 1st 9-week grading period

Unit 4: Expansion: Slaves and Westward Ho!

Readings:

-From The American Yawp:

  • Chapter 11: The Cotton Revolution
  • Chapter 12: Manifest Destiny

-Selected Readings from American Promise

Assignments:

-History Labs:

  1. History Lab 12: How and why did the US “win” the Mexican Cession? HL#12
  2. History Lab 13: Was the Cotton Kingdom a throwback to feudalism or a pioneer in industrialization? HL#13
  3. History Lab 14: How was the midwest transforming in the 1840s and 1850s? HL#14
  4. History Lab 15: To what extent did the conditions of "free labor" give liberty? HL#15

-Discussion Forums

Complete a response to each History Lab question by providing evidence from the sources found in each lab (using especially the lab report you completed). (See Canvas for details)

-Research Related Assignment #3: Indiana Constitutional Changes

Unit 5: Civil War: the Build-Up, the Conflict, and the Aftermath

Readings:

-From The American Yawp:

  • Chapter 13: The Sectional Crisis
  • Chapter 14: The Civil War
  • Chapter 15: Reconstruction

-Selected Readings from American Promise

Assignments:

-History Labs

  1. History Lab 16: Do people have the right to resist unjust laws? HL#16
  2. History Lab 17: What was the Civil War about? HL#17
  3. History Lab 18: What was accomplished in the Civil War? How should we remember it? HL#18
  4. History Lab 19: What did the Civil War change? For former slaves? The myth of black misrule and contentment under Jim Crow HL#19

-Discussion Forums

Complete a response to each History Lab question by providing evidence from the sources found in each lab (using especially the lab report you completed). (See Canvas for details)

-Book Discussion: Celia, A Slave Link

Unit 6: The Growth of American Capitalism 

Readings:

-From The American Yawp:

  • Chapter 16: Capital and Labor
  • Chapter 18: Life in Industrial America

-Selected Readings from American Promise

Assignments:

-History Labs

  1. History Lab 20: How did life change for small business owners? (The Myth of the Self-Made Man) HL#20
  2. History Lab 21: How did the late nineteenth century accelerate changes for farmers and wage workers? (Myth of a Producerist Republic) HL#21

Note: The book, Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy is connected to History Lab 21 but you will complete the book assignment for the second semester. It will be due in January. 

-Discussion Forums

Complete a response to each History Lab question by providing evidence from the sources found in each lab (using especially the lab report you completed). (See Canvas for details)

-Analytic Paper #2: Should monuments of famous Americans be removed due to the subject’s view on race and other minorities? Link

-Final Exam (Covers items from Units 1-6 and consists of Identification Terms, Short Essay, Long Essay)

End of Semester 1