History 202: U.S. History II (Survey, 1877-Present)

Colorado State University -Pueblo, Fall 2009, Section 2.

Professor Jonathan Rees
Office: Psychology 124
Office Phone: 549-2541
Office Hours:
MWF 10-11AM, MW 2-3PM
E-Mail: Jonathan [dot] Rees [at] colostate-pueblo [dot] edu

 

Note:  Don't look for this or anything connected to this course on Blackboard as I don't use that program.  All the information you will need for this class is on the World Wide Web linked from this syllabus.

Objectives

This course will introduce students to American history from 1877 to the present.  It will explore aspects of political, social, economic and cultural history.  By the end of the semester you should:

  • Acquire a basic knowledge of American history during this period so as to gain a deeper understanding of this country's past and present.

  • Develop the ability to think critically and construct your own historical arguments.

  • Be prepared for the possibility of taking further history courses.

Logistics

Turn off and put away your cell phones before class begins.  If I see you typing into a cell phone on your lap or even if it is sitting on the table in front of you, I will stop the lecture and ask you to put it away.  After that, I will ask you to leave.  Those absences will count against you with respect to the attendance policy outlined below. 

Also in the interests of courtesy, keep your headphones out of your ear during class time.  I will follow the same procedures as outlined above with respect to cell phones. The taping of class lectures/discussions or the taking of notes on a laptop computer is not permitted unless you have my explicit permission. 

In order to facilitate communication between you and I, having an e-mail is a requirement of this course.  I will be collecting e-mails from you on the first day of the course.  You will want to give me an address that you check fairly frequently because I will use it if I need to get a hold of you for course-related business.  All correspondence with me should go through the university e-mail listed above.  All assignments (including draft papers, but excluding final papers) should be sent to reesassignments@gmail.com.  Your final paper on the biographies should be handed to me in paper format in class on the day it is due.

This University abides by the Americans with Disabilities Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which stipulates that no student shall be denied the benefits of an education "solely by reason of a handicap."  If you have a documented disability that may impact your work in this class and for which you may require accommodations, please see the Disability Resource Coordinator as soon as possible to arrange accommodations.  In order to receive accommodations, you must be registered with and provide documentation of your disability to:  the Disability Resource Office, which is located in the Psychology Building, Suite 232.

Required Reading

Foner, Eric.  Give Me Liberty!  (Seagull Edition), Volume 2.

Frank, Thomas.  What's the Matter with Kansas?

Hays, Samuel P.  The Response to Industrialism, Second Edition.

Rauchway, Eric.  The Great Depression & the New Deal: A Very Short Introduction.

Assignments and Grades

Your grade will be based on four out of five quizzes (25%), a midterm (20%), a paper (20%), two out of three reading tests on the books your paper is based upon (5% each) and a final exam (25%).  Completing all of the assignments for the class is a requirement for passing the class.  Failure to complete any of the above assignments will result in your failing the entire course.

Grading will be done on an A-F scale with pluses and minuses with the exception of the exception of the grade C- which has been banned across the University. Your final grades will be recorded the same way. I will do my best to explain the criteria by which each assignment is graded before you undertake them.

The quizzes will be based on terms listed on the first slide of the PowerPoint presentation each lecture.  These words will be the entire universe of possible ID terms.  For the quizzes, you will identify five out of eight terms listed.  Four out of five quizzes will count towards the quiz section of your final grade.  I will do my best to confirm the timing of each quiz a week before it occurs, but the quiz dates are list on the schedule below and I hope to stick to them.  These are not intended to be and will not be surprise quizzes.

We will have three 15-minute reading tests on the biographies over the course of the semester that are given immediately before we discuss them.  These tests are not arbitrary assignments, but rather a tool to get students to do a good, close reading of the books.  I do not expect you to remember everything you read, but I do expect you to read for content and to think critically about what you're reading.  Developing these skills may be the most important thing you learn in college. 

Each reading test will consist of three short answer questions about the biography that we'll be discussing that day.  Demonstrate a clear knowledge that you have read the book by answering two of the short answer questions correctly and you will receive an "A" grade for that test.  Fail to do this and you will get an "F."  Recognizing that things happen, only two of the three grades on your reading tests will count towards your final grade (so you're free to fail one, even though you'll still need to read the book eventually in order to have any hope to get a good grade on your paper).  Fail to show up for two reading tests and I will treat it as you not completing the assignment and fail you from the course.

Your paper assignment is related to the three biographies books I have assigned the class.  The question is, "What do the Hays, Rauchway and Frank books tell us about how Americans deal with difficult economic times?  In answering this question please try to draw connections between books that reveal timeless qualities about the American mindset."  The final paper should be 4-6 pages long.

It is highly recommended that you send me a draft of your paper that is at least one page long via e-mail to reesassignments@gmail.com at the recommended date below.  No research or footnotes are needed for the final paper assignment, but I do expect parenthetical references to page numbers each time you quote a book directly.

For the midterm, you will answer one of two essay questions.  You will receive three possible essay questions from which the two on the midterm will be drawn one week before the scheduled test date.

For the possible questions on your midterm, click here.

The final exam will require you to answer one of two essays on the last half of the course (50%) and ten out of eighteen IDs drawn from any point in the course (50%). 

Any form of academic dishonesty will result in a failing grade for the entire course.  This includes plagiarism, the taking of words and/or ideas of another and passing them off as your own.  If another person's work is quoted directly in a formal paper, this must be indicated with quotation marks and a citation.  If you do not understand this definition of plagiarism, it is your responsibility to have me discuss this topic with you further.

Attendance, Absence and Make-Up Policy

It is assumed that students will make every effort to attend each class period, arrive on time and stay for the entire class.  Because the lectures will include additional analysis and ID material not in the textbook, reading will not serve as a sufficient substitute for attending class.  You are responsible for all material included in class, including changes in the schedule and ID terms.  ID terms will always be available on this web site, but you may have to find the definitions yourself.

An attendance sheet will be passed around near the beginning of each class (if I forget to do it, remind me).  If you arrive late to class, make sure your name is on the attendance sheet before you leave.  Otherwise, you will be counted as absent.  You will be permitted FOUR unexcused absences over the course of the semester (to account for random mishaps, mistakes and burdens of every day life).  After that, 20 points will be subtracted from a midterm grade for each period missed without an excuse.  If you miss six or more classes, I reserve the right to drop you from the course.

Your midterm may not be scheduled early.  You must arrange work schedules and travel plans in order to take tests on the scheduled dates.  Make-up exams will only be given to students who have compelling reasons, such as severe illness or university-sponsored activities.  No excuses will be accepted more than 24 hours after the scheduled test time.  There will be no make make up quizzes or reading tests for ANY reason.  [That's part of the rationale for you being able to drop one grade on either.]

Weekly Topics, Readings and Assignment Due Dates

ID terms and arguments are linked from the titles of the lectures.

Lecture #

Date  Subject/Notes Weekly Readings Assignments
1. 8/24 Introduction/Historical Arguments

Foner, Preface and Chapter 16.

Begin Hays

 
2. 8/26 Industrialization    
3. 8/28 The Ideology of Industrialization    
4. 8/31 The Labor Question

Foner, Chapter 17.

Continue Hays

 
5. 9/2 The Closing of the Frontier
6. 9/4 Immigration    
7. 9/7 Urbanization Foner, Chapter 18.

 

Finish Hays

 
8. 9/9 Hays Reading Test and Discussion   Hays Reading Test
9. 9/11 Outsiders   Quiz #1
10. 9/14 Populists and Progressives

Foner, Chapter 19.

 
11. 9/16 World War I    
12. 9/18 Versailles and Postwar America    
13. 9/21 The 1920s, Part I Foner, Chapter 20.

Start Rauchway
 
14. 9/23 The 1920s, Part II    
15. 9/25 The Great Crash   Quiz #2
16. 9/28 The Great Depression


Foner, Chapter 21.

Continue Rauchway

Read Possible Midterm Questions.
 
17. 9/30 The New Deal, Part I  
18. 10/2 Review for Midterm Exam    
19. 10/5 Midterm Exam Finish Rauchway  
20. 10/7 Rauchway Reading Test and Discussion   Rauchway Reading Test
21. 10/9 Class Cancelled    
22. 10/12 The New Deal, Part II Foner, Chapter 22.  
23. 10/14 World War II Abroad    
24. 10/16 Class Cancelled    
25. 10/19 World War II at Home Foner, Chapter 23.  
26. 10/21 Origins of the Cold War   Quiz #3
27. 10/23 Baby Boom/Postwar Prosperity    
28. 10/26 Anti-Communism

Foner, Chapter 24.

 
29. 10/28 Eisenhower and Kennedy  

 

 
30. 10/30 The Social History of the 1950s    
31. 11/2 The Civil Rights Movement

Foner, Chapter 25.

Begin Frank.

 
32. 11/4 The Sixties, Part I    
33. 11/6 Vietnam    
34. 11/9 How Do You Write a Good Paper? Foner, Chapter 26.

Continue Frank
Quiz #4
35. 11/11 The Sixties, Part II    
36. 11/13 Watergate and the 1970s   Draft Paper due via e-mail. (optional)
37. 11/16 Frank Reading Test and Discussion Foner, Chapter 27. Frank Reading Test
38. 11/18 The Reagan Years    
39. 11/20 The Big Eighties    
40. 11/30 Bill Clinton and the Age of Indulgence Read Possible Final Exam Questions  
41. 12/2 Optional Day - Quiz Only  

Quiz #5

42. 12/4 Review for Final   Paper Due

Return to Rees courses page

 

Jonathan Rees
Associate Professor of History
Colorado State University - Pueblo
2200 Bonforte Boulevard
Pueblo, CO 81001
(719) 549-2541

E-Mail: Jonathan [dot] Rees [at] colostate-pueblo [dot] edu

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