Syllabus

NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS COLLEGE

COURSE SYLLABUS

 

 

Course Title:

United States History II

Course Prefix & Number: 

1302

Section Number: 

842

Semester/Year:

Fall

2020

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 Civil War/Reconstruction era to the present.  United States History II examines industrialization, immigration, world wars, the Great Depression, Cold War and post-Cold War eras.  Themes that may be addressed in United States History II include:  American culture, religion, civil and human rights, technological change, economic change, immigration and migration, urbanization and suburbanization, the expansion of the federal government, and the study of U.S. foreign Policy.

 

Course Prerequisite(s): U.S. History 1301

Required Course Materials:

Brinkley, Alan. The Unfinished Nation: A Concise History of the American People.  9th edition.  2019. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-1264031924

The web-based material is unique to NCTC.  You must purchase it from the NCTC bookstore or directly through your Canvas course.

 

 

INSTRUCTOR INFORMATION

Name of Instructor:

Professor Amber Sultanov

Campus/Office Location:

Marcus High School/D203

Telephone Number:

469-948-7132

E-mail Address:

sultanova@lisd.net       asultanov@nctc.edu

 

OFFICE HOURS

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

7:40-8:15 AM

7:40-8:15AM

 

 

 

4—4:45 PM

4—4:45 PM

4—4:20 PM

4—4:45 PM

 

Or by Appointment

 

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES (From Academic Course Guide Manual/Workforce Education Course Manual/NCTC Catalog

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.

 

 

GRADING CRITERIA

# of Graded Course Elements

Graded Course Elements

Percentage or Point Values

10

Assignments

15%

10

Quizzes

20%

2

Research Paper/

Family History Project Presentation

25%

1

Midterm

20%

1

Final

20%

 

TOTAL

100

 

Grading Scale: 100-90=A        89-80=B     79-70=C      69-60=D          59 and below=F

**Assignments MUST be turned in on time. Late assignments are not accepted, only under special circumstances**

**If you score below a 70% on a quiz, you have the option to retake the quiz for up to a 70%**

 

COURSE SUBJECT OUTLINE (Major Assignments, Due Dates, and Grading Criteria)

 

Week 1: Origins of Democracy/Reconstruction

Tocqueville and Democracy in America page 205

Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South p352

1st Quiz: Origins of Democracy/Reconstruction Quiz (200 points)

 

Week 2: Gilded Age/Progressive Era

Chapter 16: Conquest of the Far East (parts of chapter)

Chapter 15: Industrial Supremacy (parts of chapter)

Chapter 18: The Age of the City (parts of chapter)

Chapter 20: The Progressives

Quiz: Gilded Age/Progressives

 

Week 3: Expansionism, World War I, Roaring Twenties

Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire

Chapter 21: America and the Great War

Chapter 22: The New Era

Quiz: Imperialism/Expansionism

Quiz: Roaring 1920s

Quiz: WWI

 

Week 4/5: Great Depression/New Deal/World War II

Chapter 22: The Great Depression

Chapter 23: The New Deal Era

Chapter 24: America in a World at War

New Deal Children's Book (200 points Partner Quiz Grade)

Quiz: World War II

Midterm: November 18

 

Week 6/7: Cold War American Foreign and Domestic Policy

Chapter 26: The Cold War

Chapter 27: The Affluent Society (parts of it)

Chapter 28: The Turbulent Sixties 

Chapter 29: The Crisis of Authority (parts of it)

Chapter 30: From "The Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan

Quiz: Civil Rights Movement

Quiz: Early Cold War until McCarthyism 

Quiz: American Foreign Policy 1945--1991

Final Research Paper Due December 4

 

Week 8: Modern America

Chapter 31: The Age of Globalization

Quiz: Modern Era

Final Exam December 10

Family History Project Due: December 9

 

This class will be conducted online. If your grade is a 75% or below, you may be required to attend virtual tutoring (face-to-face tutoring when in-class learning resumes).

Online Classroom Guidelines and Procedures for Canvas/Webex:

  • Be respectful by understanding the viewpoints of others and that the classroom is a learning environment and there should not be any disruptions (rude or inappropriate comments, foul language, or racial slurs) between the teacher’s ability to teach and the students’ ability to learn. Students should talk only when appropriate and should stay seated unless instruction states otherwise. 
  • Be responsible by being on time, ready to learn with the materials that are necessary to be successful, and being productive with the time in class.

Academic Dishonesty Policy/Student Code of Conduct:

The class will be conducted under an honor code. All students will be expected to do their own work. If a student breaks this code by cheating—obtaining information for homework assignments, tests, or other class activities in a dishonest way (copying, cheat notes, plagiarism, cell phone use during testing, etc) the consequence will be a zero on the assignment. If another student assisted them, that student will also receive a zero.

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 ([FLB(LOCAL)]”.  

Violations of the Student Code of Conduct shall include aiding, abetting, conspiring, soliciting, inciting of, or attempting to commit the following:

1. Academic Dishonesty:

a. Cheating:

(1) Copying from or reviewing another student’s examination prior to or during the examination.

(2) Copying from another student’s paper, laboratory report, presentation, computer program, or other assignment.

(3) Using or possessing unauthorized notes, books, test materials, electronic devices, or other aids in any academic exercise or activity.

(4) Submitting the same paper, report, or other assignment for more than one course without the expressed permission of the faculty member.

(5) Collaborating with or seeking aid from another student during a test without permission from the test administrator.

(6) Knowingly using, buying, selling, stealing, or soliciting, in whole or in part, the contents of a paper, another assignment, or test, whether it has been administered or not.

(7) The unauthorized transporting or removal, in whole or in part, of the contents of a test, whether it has been administered or not.

(8) Substituting for another student, or permitting another student to substitute for one’s self, to take a test.

(9) Bribing another person to obtain a test or information about a test, whether it has been administered or not.

b. Plagiarism:

(1) Appropriating, buying, receiving as a gift, or obtaining by any means another’s work and the unacknowledged submission or incorporation of it into one’s own written work.

(2) Copying or using the ideas, writings, paraphrases, data, reports, graphic designs, or computer codes of published or unpublished work of another person without appropriate citation or acknowledgments.

(3) Reproducing or using the ideas, materials, works, paraphrases, data, reports, graphic designs, or computer codes prepared by another person or agency without authorization, permission or acknowledgment.

c. Collusion: Unauthorized collaboration with another person in preparing written work for fulfillment of course requirements including a presentation, laboratory report, quiz, homework, take-home examination, project, or other work expected to be completed as an individual or independently.

d. Academic Falsification:

(1) Providing false, altered, or fabricated information or documentation in the context of an academic assignment, examination, or obligation, such as creating a false source for an assignment or citing a source one did not use.

(2) Altering grades on an assignment, examination, laboratory report, quiz, or other academic work and submitting such to a faculty member or College District employee.

(3) Using false or altered information, data, or identification in the context of an academic obligation.

e. Intellectual Property Dishonesty:

(1) Altering, removing, or defacing College District library or educational materials.

(2) Selling, electronically posting, publishing, or distributing course lecture notes, handouts, recordings, or other materials or information from the faculty member of the course without the expressed permission of the faculty member.

(3) Removing or intentionally damaging the academic property of a faculty member or another student, including projects, books, papers, notes, laboratory assignments, clinical forms, or electronic hardware or software.

(4) Obtaining or using the password of a faculty member or another student to access course hardware or software.

(5) Taking credit on a group assignment when one did not contribute toward completion of the assignment.

(6) Violating the ethical standards of practices in professional programs (i.e., health sciences, nursing, emergency medical assistance, and the like).

f. Academic Dishonesty Facilitation: Assisting any person in the commission of academic misconduct, including but not limited to:

(1) Aiding, abetting, or attempting to commit an academic misconduct violation.

(2) Allowing another student to copy or use one’s answers during an examination or in the completion of an assignment.

(3) Taking, completing, or attempting to take an examination or complete assignment for another student.

(4) Listing another student on a group assignment when the student did not contribute in any manner toward completion of the assignment.

***Research Essays MUST be submitted through turnitin.com (Links to an external site.) before grading can occur.***

***Midterm and Final Exams will utilize the LockDown Browser and the Respondus Monitor which decrease the likelihood of cheating because testing is being recorded while it disables the ability to open browsers during testing.***

 

Electronic Policy

Students are responsible for having access to proper technology, including electronics, internet, software and any other resources needed for successful completion of this college online course. A computer or laptop crashing, the internet going down or any other issue is not an adequate reason for failing to complete assignments fully, accurately and by the due date. This electronics policy is non-negotiable. Students are required to manage their time effectively.

FERPA

You are responsible for tracking your progress in your class and if there are any concerns you will be the direct contact as this is a college course. Parents will not be informed of your progress due to FERPA. Your academic progress such as your grade can not be discussed with your parents due to FERPA. You have to give express permission if you wish to have your grade disclosed with your parents. If your grade dips is a 75 or below, I will let your counselor know. The counselor can then inform your parents.

ATTENDANCE POLICY

Regular attendance is expected of all students in all classes for which they have registered. All absences are considered to be 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 college 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 a sufficient number of 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. From Board Policy FC (LOCAL)

Additional Instructor-specific Absence Policy:

Students MUST sign-in using the Google form on Canvas, everyday or be login completing assignments, participating in Webex meetings, making course progress, tutoring.

Last day to withdraw from a course with a “W” is _November 23.

 

SYLLABUS LAW

Any event or issue that arises during the semester that is not defined in this syllabus is left up to the discretion of the instructor and this is non-negotiable.

DISABILITY SERVICES (Office for Students with Disabilities)/504s/IEPS


I
f you have a 504 or an IEP (Individual Education Plan) you MUST have it filed with NCTC so that your accommodations can be used during this college course. The student must request accommodations through the Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) at NCTC.  This is true even if the class is on a high school campus.This means that the Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) must approve all accommodations and the Dual Credit Student must present a letter from OSD (you can e-mail this to Professor Sultanov). If a student is getting college credit, they do not get course modifications like they do in High School.  Modifications are for secondary schools, not post-secondary schools, as different Federal Laws apply.  Modifications may include reduced tests, additional time on exams, less homework, extended due dates on out of class assignments, etc. Again, if a dual-credit student has requested accommodations and/or “modifications,” they must have authority for any accommodations (not modifications) through the Office for students with Disabilities at NCTC.

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.

 

COVID-19 Specific Syllabi Statements Fall 2020

 

Syllabi statement regarding potential Conversion of Onsite Classes to Online/Remote Format: North Central Texas College students should be aware that in the event of a college closure due to COVID-19, onsite classes will be converted to an online/remote format. Students should plan ahead to ensure they have access to the computer equipment (either PC, MAC, or tablet), webcam, and internet connectivity to continue their classes in an online/remote format. Please read all your official North Central Texas College student emails as the transition from onsite to online/remote might require a reorganization in your personal situation. Students will be granted a 72-hour transition and grace period. Online classes will continue as scheduled without disruption. Wear a mask, stay safe, and contact your Instructor as the situation arises. These policies and procedures were updated on July 30, 2020 and are subject to change.

 

Syllabi Statement Regarding Face Coverings: Per the North Central Texas College guidance on face coverings on campus, in the instructional setting, faculty and students must wear face coverings, such as masks or face shields. Students without coverings, or those who do not comply with the rules relating to face coverings, will not be able to participate in on-campus classroom activities. To request an exception to this requirement, students should contact the NCTC HR Office of Enrollment Management (ccove@nctc.edu). Failure to comply with the face coverings requirement may result in the Instructor directing the student to leave the classroom. Any student asked to leave the classroom may be referred to the student conduct officer. These policies and procedures were updated on July 30, 2020 and are subject to change.

 

Temporary COVID-19 Attendance Policy for Face-to-Face Meetings: We are facing an unprecedented situation in which all of us must be flexible and make prudent decisions in the best interest of our families, our campus, and our community. In light of this, North Central Texas College is temporarily establishing the requirement that faculty keep records of student attendance for face-to-face course meetings as well as a documented seating chart. In addition, students who are sick or need to quarantine should not attend classes. Students will not be required to provide formal documentation from a health care provider and will not be penalized for COVID-19 related absences when proper notification to campus health officials is made in accordance with the guidelines stated below.

 

Faculty will:

 

  • Notify students about important course information and delivery changes through Canvas and campus email.

 

Students should:

  • Provide notification to campus officials (via NCTC Daily Health Check protocol through Canvas) if they have tested positive for COVID-19 or have to quarantine so we can confirm reported absence with instructors, monitor, and assist the campus community.
  • Notify instructors in advance of the absence.
  • Connect with that class through Webex if the class session is being transmitted in a hybrid fashion.
  • Keep up with and/or make up missed classwork or assignments.
  • Submit assignments digitally through Canvas or other means as announced by your instructor.
  • Work with their instructors to reschedule exams, labs, and other critical academic activities described in the course syllabus.
  • Check Canvas and campus email daily to receive important announcements pertaining to the course.

During this period, faculty with face-to-face meetings will establish assigned seating/work stations to facilitate roll-taking, and, if necessary, contact tracing. Additionally, we ask all members of the College community to be attentive to their health, and safeguard others, by following the CDC’s guideline to “stay home when you are sick.” You should stay home if you have symptoms. More information on what to do if you are sick is available at the CDC’s website.

Additional NCTC information is available at http://www.nctc.edu/coronavirus/index.html (Links to an external site.)

 

CORE CURRICULUM FOUNDATIONAL COMPONENT AREA (For classes in the Core___________

 

□ Communication

□ Mathematics

□ Life and Physical Science

□ Language, Philosophy & Culture

□ Creative Arts

 

□ Government/Political Science

□ Social and Behavioral Sciences

□ Component Area Option

✠ History

 

 

REQUIRED CORE OBJECTIVES (For classes in the Core)

 

✠ Critical Thinking

✠ Communication

□ Empirical and Quantitative

 

□ Teamwork

✠ Personal Responsibility

✠ Social Responsibility

COURSE TYPE

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

 Academic NCTC Core Curriculum Course

 WECM Course

 

STUDENT HANDBOOK

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

 

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 ([FLB(LOCAL)]”. 

 

The class will be conducted under an honor code. All students will be expected to do their own work. If a student breaks this code by cheating—obtaining information for homework assignments, tests, or other class activities in a dishonest way (copying, cheat notes, plagiarism, cell phone use during testing, etc) the consequence will be a zero on the assignment. If another student assisted them, that student will also receive a zero.

 

QUESTIONS, CONCERNS, or COMPLAINTS

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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