NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE

COURSE SYLLABUS

 

 

Course Title:

US History I-US History to 1865

Course Prefix & Number: HIST 1301

Section Number: 417

Semester: Fall 2018

Semester Credit Hours: 3

Lecture Hours: 3

Lab Hours: 0

Course Description (NCTC Catalog):

A survey of the social, political, economic, cultural, and intellectual history of the United States from the pre-Columbian era to the Civil War/Reconstruction period. United States History I includes the study of pre-Columbian, colonial, revolutionary, early national, slavery and sectionalism, and the Civil War/Reconstruction eras. Themes that may be addressed in United States History I include: American settlement and diversity, American culture, religion, civil and human rights, technological change, economic change, immigration and migration, and creation of the federal government.

                                                       

Course Prerequisite(s): None

Required Course Materials:

Brinkley, Alan. The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People.  8th edition.  McGraw-Hill. 2016  ISBN 978-1259969118

The web-based material is unique to NCTC. You must purchase it from the NCTC bookstore or directly through Canvas, to the McGraw-Hill publishing Connect website.

       

 

INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION

Name of Instructor:

Dr. Michael Miller

Classroom:

Corinth 368

Days/Times

Wed, 6:30 p.m. – 9:25 p.m.

E-mail Address:

mmiller@nctc.edu

 

OFFICE HOURS

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

3:00 p.m.

4:00 p.m.

3:00 p.m.

4:00 p.m.

9:00 a.m.

5:00 p.m.

5:30 p.m.

5:00 p.m.

5:30 p.m.

12:00 Noon

Email/Canvas Chat only, or by appointment.

 

GRADING CRITERIA

# of Graded Course Elements

Graded Course Elements

Point Values

10

LearnSmart (10 of 15 modules required)

100

5

Quiz (5 @ 20 Points each)

100

2

Midterm/Final

200

1

Source Analysis

100

5

*Bonus (5 LearnSmart @ 5 Points)

25

Grade based on 500 total points. A=100-90 (=>450), B=89-80 (449-400), C=79-70 (399-350), D=69-60 (349-300), <60=F (<300). Additional extra credit assignments may be offered at instructor discretion.

 

McGraw-Hill CONNECT

In addition to the scheduled exams, students will be required to complete 10 LEARNSMART modules worth 10 points each. These exercises will expire if not completed in a timely manner and points will be deducted accordingly. Completion of 10 of 15 available modules represents 20% of your overall grade. Five bonus points will be given for each module completed beyond the required number. If you do not complete ten exercises, the highest ten exercise scores will be used to calculate your main class score and any scores from remaining unfinished lessons will be added as a bonus. REQUIRED (10 points each) 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 13, 14. OTHER (5 points each): 3, 8, 10, 12, 15. Students are expected to complete ALL READING whether a LearnSmart lesson is required or not.

 

EXAMS

Two exams will be administered during the semester. The midterm and final exam consist of three parts: Twenty multiple-choice questions worth one point each (20 points); Three short answer questions worth ten points each (30); A thorough essay on one of two questions on the exam, including a thesis, argument with evidence, and a conclusion that supports your position. Possible essay topics are distributed for review prior to test day. The essay component is worth 50 points or 50% of the exam grade. Exams cover readings, lectures, and any class presentations or assignments. Multiple choice and short answer portions of the test will be administered online. For the final exam, questions may be comprehensive of ALL course material. Each exam represents 20% of your class grade.

 

QUIZZES

A portion of the semester grade is determined by the result of five online exercises or online quizzes. Each quiz is worth twenty points (20). Quizzes account for 20% of your class grade.

 

SOURCE ANALYSIS

This writing assignment will be comprised of answering a series of essay questions surrounding a reading of selected primary source documents and submitting your responses through VeriCite on the Canvas course site. Further guidelines will be discussed in class. This assignment represents 20% of the overall grade. Once the assignment deadline has passed, submissions will no longer be allowed and students will receive a zero (0) for this grade. Bring a hardcopy to class on the last day (Bonus). This assignment is expected to be a professional looking paper formatted according to the latest Chicago Manual of Style guidelines. Your final assignment must be submitted by midnight November 13. Further guidelines will be discussed in class. Written assignments must be typed and are submitted via VeriCite.

 

MAKEUP POLICY

Students should take the exams on the scheduled dates. If you cannot be present for the scheduled exam, please provide evidence of conflicting personal matters or school-sponsored activity well before the exam and arrange for an alternative test time. If unforeseen circumstances should prevent you from attending the scheduled exam, please notify the instructor as soon as possible. Be prepared to provide documentation concerning the absence and reschedule a make-up exam within 72 hours. Should students fail to reschedule a test early or in a timely fashion, each portion of the exam (multiple choice or essay) is subject to a 20% penalty for each late day (excluding SAT/SUN). If you are attending a school-sponsored event or activity, you (or the event sponsor) must notify the instructor at least two weeks prior to the date of the planned absence. The instructor reserves the right to offer an alternate makeup exam or exercise. All makeup work previously due must be completed by class time on December 5, 2018.

 

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES

 

At the successful completion of this course the student will be able to:

 

Create an argument through the use of historical evidence.

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary sources.

 

Analyze the effects of historical, social, political, economic, cultural, and global forces on this period of United States history.

 

CORE CURRICULUM FOUNDATIONAL COMPONENT AREA______________________________


o         Communication

o         Mathematics              

o         Life and Physical Science

o         Language, Philosophy & Culture

o         Creative Arts

 

X         American History

o         Government/Political Science

o         Social and Behavioral Sciences

o         Component Area Option

 


 

REQUIRED CORE OBJECTIVES


X            Critical Thinking

X            Communication

o           Empirical and Quantitative

 

o           Teamwork

X            Personal Responsibility

X            Social Responsibility


COURSE TYPE

o           Academic General Education Course (from ACGM but not in NCTC Core)

X         Academic NCTC Core Curriculum Course

o  WECM Course

 

DISABILITY SERVICES

The Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) provides support services for students with disabilities, students enrolled in technical areas of study, and students who are classified as special populations (i.e. single parents). Support services for students with disabilities might include appropriate and reasonable accommodations, or they may be in the form of personal counseling, academic counseling, career counseling, etc.  Furthermore, OSD Counselors work with students to encourage self-advocacy and promote empowerment. The Counselors also provides resource information, disability-related information, and adaptive technology for students who qualify. For support, please contact the counselors at (940) 498-6207 or (940) 668-4321.  Alternatively, students may stop by Room 170 in Corinth or Room 110 in Gainesville.

 

ATTENDANCE POLICY                                                                                                                         

Regular and punctual attendance is expected of all students in all classes for which they have registered. All absences are considered unauthorized unless the student is absent due to illness or emergencies as determined by the instructor.  It is the student responsibility to provide documentation as to the emergency for approval and judgement by the faculty member. Approved school sponsored activities are the only absences for which a student should not be held liable and only when provided by a college official ahead of the absence.  Valid reasons for absence, however, do not relieve the student of the responsibility for making up required work.  Students will not be allowed to make up an examination missed due to absence unless they have reasons acceptable to the instructor.  A student who is compelled to be absent when a test is given should petition the instructor, in advance if possible, for permission to postpone the exam.  Student will be dropped from a class by the Registrar upon recommendation of the instructor who feels the student has been justifiably absent or tardy enough times to preclude meeting the course’s objectives.  Persistent, unjustified absences from classes or laboratories will be considered sufficient cause for College officials to drop a student from the rolls of the College. Regular attendance, note-taking, participation, and reading the assignments will guarantee your success in this class and is highly recommended. Attendance will be checked.

 

STUDENT HANDBOOK

Students are expected to follow all rules and regulations found in the student handbook and published online.

 

CHEATING/PLAGIARISM/ACADEMIC DISHONESTY                                                                           

Scholastic dishonesty shall include, but is not limited to cheating, plagiarism, academic falsification, intellectual property dishonesty, academic dishonesty facilitation and collusion.  Faculty members may document and bring charges against a student who is engaged in or is suspected to be engaged in academic dishonesty.  See Student Handbook, “Student Rights & Responsibilities: Student Conduct.”

 

Copying another person’s work, such as homework, class work, or a test, is a form of cheating. Plagiarism will also be considered cheating and the student will be subject to academic disciplinary action that may include loss of credit for the work in question. Students found to have engaged in academic dishonesty will be subject to disciplinary penalties as well, according to the Student Code of Conduct.

 

Examples of Plagiarism

1. Turning in someone else's ideas, opinions, theories, or work as your own; 2. Unintentionally or inadvertently turning in someone else's ideas, opinions, theories, or work as your own as the result of failing to document sources in the text, notes, or bibliography; 3. Copying words, ideas, or images from someone without giving credit; Failing to put a quotation in quotations marks; 4. Giving incorrect information about the source of information, quotations, or images; 5. Changing words but copying the sentence structure of a source without giving credit; 6. Copying so many words, ideas, or images from a source that it makes up the majority of the student's work, whether or not the student gives credit.

 

Examples of Plagiarism

1. Turning in someone else's ideas, opinions, theories, or work as your own; 2. Unintentionally or inadvertently turning in someone else's ideas, opinions, theories, or work as your own as the result of failing to document sources in the text, notes, or bibliography; 3. Copying words, ideas, or images from someone without giving credit; Failing to put a quotation in quotations marks; 4. Giving incorrect information about the source of information, quotations, or images; 5. Changing words but copying the sentence structure of a source without giving credit; 6. Copying so many words, ideas, or images from a source that it makes up the majority of the student's work, whether or not the student gives credit.

 

OTHER EXPECTATIONS

  • Silence MOBILE PHONES in class completely, including vibrate. Do not talk, text, or use any mobile phone services and applications during class without instructor clearance.
  • Use of electronic devices to access social media and other non-course content during class is distracting to other students and the instructor. It is forbidden. Use computers for class-related purposes only. Absolutely NO headphones/earbuds in class. Violators may be instructed to turn off their media device or to leave the classroom.
  • Take notes during lectures, discussions, and media presentations. Ask questions! Do not carry on unrelated conversations with the person next to or near you during lectures or other class presentations.
  • Keep up with the readings, LEARNSMART exercises, and exams.
  • Be on time. If you must come late or leave early, be discreet.
  • Assignments will be clear and available in a timely manner.
  • Standard black or blue pens are required for written exam short answers and essays. Ignoring this instruction may result in up to a 10% deduction on that portion of the exam.
  • Exams will be graded as promptly and accurately as possible.
  • If you have concerns about the course, or your work in it, do not wait until it is too late. Please contact me by email or during class to discuss them. Privacy laws limit the distribution of grade information via email.

 

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE

NOTE:

It is understood that remaining in this class constitutes students’ agreement to abide by the terms outlined in this syllabus and an acceptance of the requirements outlined in this document. This syllabus is subject to change at the instructor’s discretion. All changes will be announced in class and online. The schedule below is for general guidance and is subject to changes at any time.

 

SCHEDULE:

Lecture/Date/Topic

01 Aug 29 Course Description/The Americas Before Columbus; Europe, Africa, and Asia in 1492; Columbus and the Columbian Exchange

 

September 3, 2018 - Holiday – Labor Day

 

02 Sep 05 Spain and France in the New World; The English and the New World/Virginia and the Tidewater Region; Servitude and Slavery in the Americas (LS 1, 2 due by class time)

 

Official Date of Record - September 10

 

03 Sep 12 *Quiz 1 due, 9/11, 11:59 p.m.*; Pilgrims and Puritans - New England; Other Colonies, other Colonists; Indigenous and Imperial North America (LS 4 due by class time)

 

04 Sep 19 Seven Years War/Pontiac and the West; Seeds of Revolution

 

05 Sep 26 *Quiz 2 due, 9/25, 11:59 p.m.*; The American Revolution; The Articles of Confederation (LS 5 due by class time)

 

06 Oct 03 The Constitution of the United States of America; Banks, Capitals, and The Bill of Rights (LS 6 due by class time)

 

07 Oct 10 *Midterm Exam, Multiple Choice/Short Answer due, 10/9, 11:59 p.m., Essay 1st hour of class*; Emergence of Political Parties; Adams and the Last Federalist administration; *PDA Assignment Available 10/10, midnight*

 

08 Oct 17 Decision 1800 – The Election of Thomas Jefferson; Expansion and Exploration, Jefferson’s Second Term (LS 7 due, by class time)

 

09 Oct 24 *Quiz 3 due, 10/23, 11:59 p.m.*; The War of 1812; Madison, Monroe, Adams, and American Nationalism; Good Feelings End, the Election of 1824

 

10 Oct 31 The Jacksonian Era; Indian Relations (LS 9 due by class time)

 

11 Nov 07 *Quiz 4 due, 11/6, 11:59 p.m.*; Texas and western expansion; The U.S. - Mexico War (LS 11 due by class time)

 

Last day to withdraw from a class with ‘W’ - November 8

 

12 Nov 14 *PDA due 11/13 11:59 p.m., hardcopy to class*; Sectionalism and the Road to Civil War; Fighting the Civil War – 1861-1863 (LS 13, 14 due by class time)

 

Thanksgiving Holiday - November 21-24

 

13 Nov 28 *Quiz 5 due, 11/27, 11:59 p.m.*; Fighting the Civil War – 1861-1863; The Civil War Homefront

 

14 Dec 05 The End of the Civil War; Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction

 

*Final Exam, Multiple Choice/Short Answer/Essay due, 12/11, 11:59 p.m.*

Final Meeting, 7 p.m. 12/12/2018

In your regular classroom unless otherwise notified.

NO MAKEUPS.

 

Name of Chair/Coordinator:

Crystal Wright

Office Location:

Gainesville Campus, Room 824

Telephone Number:

940-668-7731, ext. 4320

E-mail Address:

cwright@nctc.edu

Name of Instructional Dean:

Dr. Bruce King

Office Location:

1500 North Corinth St, Corinth, TX 76208-5408

Telephone Number:

940-498-6464

E-mail Address:

bking@nctc.edu

 

Unit 1 [unit]

Syllabus

 

NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE

COURSE SYLLABUS

 

Course Title:

US History I-US History to 1865

Course Prefix & Number: HIST 1301

Section Number: 408

Semester: Fall 2017

Semester Credit Hours: 3

Lecture Hours: 3

Lab Hours: 0

Course Description (NCTC Catalog):

A survey of the social, political, economic, cultural, and intellectual history of the United States from the pre-Columbian era to the Civil War/Reconstruction period. United States History I includes the study of pre-Columbian, colonial, revolutionary, early national, slavery and sectionalism, and the Civil War/Reconstruction eras. Themes that may be addressed in United States History I include: American settlement and diversity, American culture, religion, civil and human rights, technological change, economic change, immigration and migration, and creation of the federal government.

                                                       

Course Prerequisite(s): None

Required Course Materials:

Brinkley, Alan. The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People.  8th edition.  McGraw-Hill. 2016  ISBN 978-1259969118

The web-based material is unique to NCTC. You must purchase it from the NCTC bookstore or directly through Canvas, to the McGraw-Hill publishing Connect website.

       

 

INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION

Name of Instructor:

Dr. Michael Miller

Campus/Office Location:

 

Telephone Number:

 

E-mail Address:

mmiller@nctc.edu

 

OFFICE HOURS

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

12:30 p.m.

10:00 a.m.

12:30 p.m.

10:00 a.m.

 

1:30 p.m.

12:00 Noon

1:30 p.m.

12:00 Noon

 

Email only, or by appointment.

 

GRADING CRITERIA

# of Graded Course Elements

Graded Course Elements

Point Values

10

LearnSmart (10 of 15 modules required)

100

5

Quiz (5 @ 10 Points)

50

1

Process Paper (Rough Draft=25/Final=75)

100

2

Mid-Term/Final

50/100

5

Bonus (5 LearnSmart @ 5 Points)

25

Grade based on 400 total points. A=100-90 (=>360), B=89-80 (359-320), C=79-70 (319-280), D=69-60 (279-240), <60=F (<240). Additional extra credit assignments may be offered at instructor discretion.

 

McGraw-Hill CONNECT

In addition to the scheduled exams, students will be required to complete 10 LEARNSMART modules worth 10 points each. These exercises will expire if not completed in a timely manner and points will be deducted accordingly. Completion of 10 of 15 available modules represents 25% of your overall grade. Five bonus points will be given for each module completed beyond the required number. If you do not complete ten exercises, the highest ten exercise scores will be used to calculate your main class score and any scores from remaining unfinished lessons will be added as a bonus. REQUIRED (10 points) 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 11, 13, 14. OPTIONAL (5 points): 3, 8, 10, 12, 15. Students are expected to complete ALL READING whether a LearnSmart lesson is required or not.

 

EXAMS

Two exams will be administered during the semester. The midterm exam consists of three parts. Ten multiple-choice questions worth one point each (10). Three short answer questions worth five points each (15). A thorough essay on one of two questions on the exam, including a thesis, argument with evidence, and a conclusion that supports your position. Possible essay topics are distributed for review prior to test day. The essay component is worth 25 points or 50% of the exam grade. Exams cover readings, lectures, and any class presentations or assignments. Multiple choice and short answer portions of the test will be administered online. For the final exam, questions may be comprehensive of ALL course material. The format of the final is identical to the midterm except all points double. The midterm represents 12.5% of the course grade. The final represents 25%.

 

QUIZZES

A portion of the semester grade is determined by the result of five online exercises or online quizzes. Each quiz is worth ten points. Quizzes account for 12.5% of your class grade.

 

PROCESS PAPER

Each student will select an historical topic (upon instructor approval) and write a three- to five-page paper outlining and analyzing the topic by providing a thesis, argument, and conclusion assessing its historical significance. Papers must include citations for at least four separate sources, one of which must be a primary document. This is expected to be a professional looking paper formatted according to the latest Chicago Manual of Style guidelines. Email your topic choice by September 7. A rough draft will be due October 12 and final papers must be submitted by midnight November 16. Further guidelines will be discussed in class. This paper represents 25% of the overall grade. Written assignments must be typed and are submitted via VeriCite.

 

MAKEUP POLICY

Students should take the exams on the scheduled dates. If you cannot be present for the scheduled exam, please provide evidence of conflicting personal matters or school-sponsored activity well before the exam and arrange for an alternative test time. If unforeseen circumstances should prevent you from attending the scheduled exam, please notify the instructor as soon as possible. Be prepared to provide documentation concerning the absence and reschedule a make-up exam within 72 hours. Should students fail to reschedule a test early or in a timely fashion, each portion of the exam (multiple choice or essay) is subject to a 20% penalty for each late day. If you are attending a school-sponsored event or activity, you (or the event sponsor) must notify the instructor at least two weeks prior to the date of the planned absence. All makeup work previously due must be completed by midnight on December 5, 2016.

 

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES

 

At the successful completion of this course the student will be able to:

 

Create an argument through the use of historical evidence.

 

Analyze and interpret primary and secondary sources.

 

Analyze the effects of historical, social, political, economic, cultural, and global forces on this period of United States history.

 

CORE CURRICULUM FOUNDATIONAL COMPONENT AREA______________________________

 

o         Communication

o         Mathematics              

o         Life and Physical Science

o         Language, Philosophy & Culture

o         Creative Arts

 

X         American History

o         Government/Political Science

o         Social and Behavioral Sciences

o         Component Area Option

 


 

REQUIRED CORE OBJECTIVES

 

X            Critical Thinking

X            Communication

o           Empirical and Quantitative

 

o           Teamwork

X            Personal Responsibility

X            Social Responsibility

 

COURSE TYPE

o           Academic General Education Course (from ACGM but not in NCTC Core)

X         Academic NCTC Core Curriculum Course

o  WECM Course

 

DISABILITY SERVICES

Students who have a documented disability should provide appropriate notification to the instructor in a timely fashion.

 

ATTENDANCE POLICY                                                                                                                         

Attendance in class is mandatory. Regular attendance, note-taking, participation, and reading the assignments will guarantee your success in this class and is highly recommended. Attendance will be checked.

 

CHEATING/PLAGIARISM/ACADEMIC DISHONESTY                                                                           

Copying another person’s work, such as homework, class work, or a test, is a form of cheating. Plagiarism will also be considered cheating and the student will be subject to academic disciplinary action that may include loss of credit for the work in question. Students found to have engaged in academic dishonesty will be subject to disciplinary penalties as well, according to the Student Code of Conduct. See aubreyisd.net and nctc.edu, “Student Conduct Code.”

 

Examples of Plagiarism

  1. Turning in someone else's ideas, opinions, theories, or work as your own; 2. Unintentionally or inadvertently turning in someone else's ideas, opinions, theories, or work as your own as the result of failing to document sources in the text, notes, or bibliography; 3. Copying words, ideas, or images from someone without giving credit; Failing to put a quotation in quotations marks; 4. Giving incorrect information about the source of information, quotations, or images; 5. Changing words but copying the sentence structure of a source without giving credit; 6. Copying so many words, ideas, or images from a source that it makes up the majority of the student's work, whether or not the student gives credit.

 

OTHER EXPECTATIONS

  • Silence MOBILE PHONES in class completely, including vibrate. Do not talk, text, or use any mobile phone services and applications during class without instructor clearance.
  • Use of computers or the internet to access social media and other non-course content during class is distracting to other students and the instructor. Use computers for class-related purposes only. Violators may be instructed to turn off their computer or to leave the classroom.
  • Take notes during lectures, discussions, and media presentations. Ask questions! Do not carry on unrelated conversations with the person next to or near you during lectures or other class presentations.
  • Keep up with the readings, LEARNSMART exercises, and exams.
  • Be on time. If you must come late or leave early, be discreet.
  • Assignments will be clear and available in a timely manner.
  • Standard black or blue pens are required for exam short answers and essays. Ignoring this instruction may result in up to a 10% deduction on that portion of the exam.
  • Exams will be graded as promptly and accurately as possible.
  • If you have concerns about the course, or your work in it, do not wait until it is too late. Please contact me by email or during class to discuss them. Privacy laws limit the distribution of grade information via email.

LOGON to you CANVAS account for a detailed course schedule.

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