SPRING 2001
Professor: Dr. Donald E. Wilson, DBH 114, 726-2005
Office Hours: Monday & Wednesday, 1:30-4:00 p.m.; Tuesday & Thursday, 3:00-4:00 p.m.HISTORY 218
U.S. HISTORY SINCE 1865
This course is an historical survey of United States history since 1865 with major emphasis on the Twentieth Century. The course is designed to help you understand major themes of U.S. History and its culture, and to be able to interpret, organize, and communicate your knowledge in writing and in class discussion.TEXTS: Markman, Marsha, The American Journey, Vol. II; Hersey, John, Hiroshima;
Wilson, John M., Forging the American Character, Vol. II; Neal, Arthur G., National Trauma and Collective Memory; Green, Bob, Duty, A Father His Son and the Man Who Won the War.ATTENDANCE POLICIES (CLASS): In order to understand the continuity of history and the cause and effect relationships of one period to another, it is essential that students attend class. Students are held responsible for the material presented in every lecture along with the reading assignments. Students must attend class on time and will be penalized for lateness. Every two lates will be counted as an absence. Any student with an excess of 4 absences will not pass the course. Any student who must leave class prior to the end of the class session must receive permission prior to the beginning of the class.
ATTENDANCE POLICIES (EXAMS): Exams are crucial to the course and students are expected to make every effort to complete them as scheduled. A student will be excused from a scheduled exam only in the most unusual circumstances and only with a written excuse. Examples of acceptable excuses would be: (1) illness requiring a doctor or nurse's attention. The nature of the medical problem must be included in the excuse and a recommendation that the student not go to class. A simple note from a nurse or doctor indicating that the student visited the clinic or office is not acceptable; (2) approved school functions with an excuse request from the Registrar's office; (3) a death in the immediate family, with a note from the parent or guardian.
Examples of unacceptable excuses are, oversleeping, forgetting to come to class, forgetting the exam, car trouble, traffic problems, fear, nervousness, broken romances, etc.
MAKE-UP POLICY (EXAMS): Students missing an exam with an acceptable excuse will be permitted to make-up the missed exam during the last week of the course, in the Dwight Beeson Hall auditorium. Students missing an exam without an acceptable excuse will receive an automatic "F" on the exam missed and will receive a numerical score no higher than a 50% or 10 points below the lowest score in the class, whichever is lower.
QUIZZES: Short daily quizzes will be given regularly throughout the course, as announced. These quizzes will come from assignments given in advance and will be given at the beginning of a class session. Students will be permitted to drop the two lowest quiz grades at the end of the semester. Make-ups will not be given for missed quizzes.
FINAL GRADE: The final grade will be derived from examination and quiz grades. It will consist of 1200 points as follows:
Mid-Term Exam 300 points March 16 Quizzes or Specific graded assignments 300 points As Scheduled Term Project:World War II 200 points As Scheduled Exams on Hiroshima and Duty 200 points As Scheduled Final Exam 300 points May 18 *1300 points *Final Grades will be computed using the following grade scale:
A 91.1-100 B- 80-81.9 D+ 68-69.9 A- 90-91 C+ 78-79.9 D 62-67.9 B+ 88-89.9 C 72-77.9 D- 60-61.9 B 82-87.9 C- 70-71.9 F 59.9 or below
| Topic |
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| I | Post Civil War America | Journey, pp. 1-16, 22-47
Wilson, Ch. 1, 3 Neal, Chapter 1 |
| II | Industrial America and Changes of the American Landscape | Journey, pp. 17-21, 60-82
Wilson, Ch. 4, 5, 8 |
| III | Search for Empire, 1870-1905 | Wilson, Ch. 6 |
| IV | World War I | Journey, pp. 89-102
Wilson, Ch. 7 |
| V | Between the Wars | Journey, pp 103-125
Wilson, Ch. 9 Neal, Chapters 2, 3 |
| VI | World War II | Journey, pp 126-163
Hiroshima, Entire Book Wilson, Ch. 10, Neal, Ch. 4 Green, Entire Book |
| VII | Post World War II America | Journey, pp 165-205
Wilson, Ch. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 |