COURSE DESCRIPTION:
This course will survey the history of the United States from the end of the Civil War.
REQUIREMENTS:
Students are required to attend and to participate in class and to complete all reading and writing assignments and exams. REQUIRED READINGS:
Tindall-Shi, America: A Narrative History, v. II
Additional internet readings will be assigned on a Daily basis. If you do not have a PC, you may use the facilities available on campus, especially the Humanities Lab BO 448.
ATTENDANCE POLICY:
Students are required to attend all classes. I will allow three absences. Upon the third absence ten points (one letter grade) will be deducted from the student’s final grade with an additional ten point deduction for each further absence. Tardiness will not be tolerated. Students who are habitually late will be informed by me as such after which time their late arrivals will be counted as absences. If you have an extraordinary reason for missing class, you must notify me in advance of the absence (or after in cases of emergency) and have supporting material, e. g., doctor's notes, etc.
SPECIAL NEEDS:
If you have special needs related to physical or learning disabilities, please make arrangements through the Office of Academic Enrichment.
ASSIGNMENTS:
Students will be required to read all assignments, write a short paper, a final term (research) paper, and take a mid-term and a final exam. Additional internet readings and e-mail assignments may be required. Weekly assignments consist of a one to three paragraph summary of the weekly reading and a list of key terms. Those are due at 12:00 a. m. on the Thursday of the week.
MAKE-UP TESTS AND EXTENSIONS:
Make-up tests and/or extensions will be allowed only in extraordinary circumstances. There will be no extensions for papers. Late papers will be accepted with a 10-point penalty for each day late. Papers are due IN CLASS on the due date of the assignments. Papers slipped under my door during class will be considered one day late and receive a 10-point penalty.
GRADING:
Grades will be assessed on a standard ten point scale (90-100=A, 87-89=B+, 80 86.9=B, etc., 59 or below = F). The short paper will be worth 10% of your final grade; class participation will be worth 10%, the exams will be worth 60% (30% each) of your final grade, the final research paper will be worth 20% of your final grade. Any additional assignments will be considered as part of your class participation grade.
INTEGRITY OF SCHOLARSHIP AND GRADES:
Please read the “Integrity of Scholarship and Grades” statement on pp. 45-46 of the Undergraduate Bulletin. Any student caught plagiarizing or cheating will receive an “F” for the entire course and the incident will be reported in writing to the Dean. PLAGIARISM WILL NOT BE TOLERATED!
DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY STATEMENT ON PLAGIARISM
“Plagiarism—the use of another person’s ideas or wording without giving proper credit—results from the failure to document fully and accurately. Ideas and expressions of them are considered to belong to the individual who first puts them forward. Therefore, when you incorporate ideas or phrasing from any other author in your paper, whether you quote them directly or indirectly, you need to be honest and complete about indicating the source to avoid plagiarism. Whether intentional or unintentional, plagiarism can bring serious consequences, both academic, in the form of failure or expulsion, and legal, in the form of lawsuits. Plagiarism is a violation of the ethics of the academic community.”
William G. Campbell, Stephen V. Ballou, and Carole Slade, Form and Style: Thesis, Reports, Term Papers, 6th Edition (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1982), p. 52.
For more information on plagiarism and how to avoid it, go to :
http://www.indiana.edu/~wts/wts/plagiarism.html
REVISION OF SYLLABUS:
I reserve the right to revise this syllabus at any time during the semester.
Students are responsible for meeting assignments and deadlines. Any changes, additions, or amendations to this syllabus made orally in class are also the responsibility of the student. If you miss a class, be sure to check with a classmate to see if any revisions of the syllabus have been made.
Specific reading assignments, deadlines, and test schedules will be posted on the web site shortly.
N. B. Students may submit a rough draft of the short paper or the research paper to me at any time in the semester with the exception of the week before the deadline.
ASSIGNMENTS:
January 13-15 Tindall, ch. 18
January 20-22 Tindall, ch. 19
January 27-29 Tindall, ch. 20
February 2-4 Tindall, ch. 21
February 9-11 Tindall, ch. 22
February 16-18, Tindall, ch. 23
February 24, short paper due -- choose a book relevant to your research topic and write a 3-5 pp. analysis of its major themes.
March 2-4 ch. 24 test Week
March 6-7 ch. 25
March 16-18 ch. 26
March 23-25 ch. 27
March 30-April 2 ch. 28-29
April 5-7 HAPPY EASTER!
April 13-15 chs. 30-31
April 20-22 chs. 32, 33, 34
April 27-29 chs. 35-36
May 4 ch. 37 Final Paper Due