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HIST: History

113-L01
Early Am/Global Perspective
 
Online
J. McCutchen
EdTrnCore 
01/05 - 01/29
25/21/0
Lecture
CRN 10291
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 21
Waitlisted: 0
01/05 - 01/29
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: History (HIST)

CRN: 10291

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Historic Analysis

Other Requirements Met:
     School of Ed Transfer Course
     Writing to learn

  Jennifer McCutchen

Introduces students to historical reasoning. Students learn to analyze evidence from the past in context in order to explain how the past produced the ever-changing present. This course surveys the social, political, cultural, and economic history of North America in global context, from the European-American encounter through the aftermath of the U.S. Civil War. It examines relations among Native Americans, Africans, Europeans, and their descendants. Major themes include: empires and colonization, race and slavery, the American Revolution, nation building, territorial expansion, the origins of American capitalism and democracy, sectionalism, and the Civil War.

4 Credits

114-L01
Mod Us/Global Perspective
 
Online
M. Ceric
CGLCCore 
01/05 - 01/29
25/13/0
Lecture
CRN 10179
4 Cr.
Size: 25
Enrolled: 13
Waitlisted: 0
01/05 - 01/29
M T W Th F Sa Su
             
+ asynchronous coursework

Subject: History (HIST)

CRN: 10179

Online: Asynchronous | Lecture

Online

Core Requirements Met:
     [Core] Historic Analysis

Other Requirements Met:
     FYE CommGood/Learning Comm
     Writing to learn

  Meliha Ceric

Introduces students to historical reasoning. Students learn to analyze evidence from the past in context in order to explain how the past produced the ever-changing present. The course introduces students to social, political, cultural, and economic developments from the American Civil War to the present day. It not only traces how ideas and lived experiences within each of those categories of historical analysis changed over time, but also shows how developments in each realm of American life shaped
the others. It pays special attention to how American politics, institutions, and cultural norms emerged from—and produced—a changing role for the United States in its global context. It also interrogates how efforts to define American identity have both provided the terrain for inclusion and been used to justify the exclusion of various people, including racial, ethnic, and immigrant groups, people of different genders and sexual identities, and people of diverse religious and political beliefs.

4 Credits


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