United States History I Syllabus for 2015-2016
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Course

HIST-1301-001 United States History I

Prerequisites

Prerequisite: RDNG 0331-minimum grade of C or a score on a state-approved test indicating college-level reading skills

Course Description

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.

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Student Performance

AP US History - Syllabus

Karl Brown

Palo Duro High School

Amarillo, Texas

 

 

Course Overview

 

The AP US History course is one that covers the beginnings of North American history at the time of European exploration until the present day. Teaching materials and methods will include textbooks, excerpts, primary and secondary documentation, discussion, writing exercises, current events, debates, document-based question exercises, videos, movies. Analytical and writing skills will be emphasized.

 

Classroom Expectations and Environment

 

Behavior: Students in the AP History classroom will be treated with the same respect as students that enroll in a college level survey history course. In return, the students will have college-level expectations put upon them: they will need to show discipline, respect, responsibility, and studiousness. Students will respect the rules of the classroom as well as each other. Cheating is unacceptable and assignments that are completed dishonestly will always receive the grade of a ‘0’. Students’ level of commitment to the class will reflect itself in the level of effort they put into the classroom and demands of the course curriculum.

 

Supplies: Students will need to a three inch three ring binder, paper, pens, highlighters, pencils, and access to a textbook or reading material on a daily basis.

 

Student Performance Objectives:

1. Create an argument through the use of historical evidence.

2. Analyze and interpret primary and secondary sources.

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

 

Grades: Students will be assessed over a variety of assignments such as participation and engagement in class, homework/readings, quizzes, tests, writings, and discussions.

              

                Tests: 3 grades

                Quizzes: 1 grade

                Homework/readings: 1 grade

                Writings/Discussion: 1 grade

                Participation/engagement: 1 grade

 

Content Schedule: the following schedule is tentative and subject to change. However, this is the rough outline of what material will be presented in class and when.

 

Week 1: Pre-Columbian Civilizations and Early Colonial Contact

Week 2: English Colonization 1607-1763

Week 3: Causes of the American Revolution: 1763-1776

Week 4: Revolution Through the Articles of Confederation 1776-1783

Week 5: Creating a New Government: The Constitution 1787-1789

Week 6: The Administrations of Washington and Adams: 1789-1800

Week 7: The Administrations of Jefferson and Madison: 1800-1816

Week 8: New Nationalism: The Era of Good Feelings 1816-1828

Week 9: The Administrations of Jackson and Van Buren: Changes within Politics: 1828-1840

Week 10: Society and Economy: 1800-1860

Week 11: Westward Impulses and the Road to Civil War: 1800-1860

Week 12: Road to Civil War, continued.

Week 13: Civil War and Reconstruction

Week 14: Civil War and Reconstruction, continued. (Have a great Thanksgiving!)

 

Unit 1: Early American Indian Civilizations to the French and Indian War (2 Weeks)

 

In this unit, students will learn about the historical content of Early American Indian Civilization in North America, reasons for European exploration in the area, the Spanish and French experience in North America, the effects of Virgin Soil Epidemics on Native American peoples, and the push-pull factors that lead England to colonize in North America. Specific content includes:

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “Environment and Geography,” Peopling,” and “Work, Exchange, and Technology”

 

Specific Contents of the Unit

- Importance of agriculture in North American tribes, maize, and “three sisters” farming

- Differences between Plains Indian tribes (nomadic, dry land farming) and tribes of the   Northeast like the Iroquois and the Algonquian speaking tribes (hunter-gatherer,      permanent settlement, hunting)

- The effects of virgin soil epidemics like measles and small pox in Native America people

- The Ecomienda New World economic system and experience with Native Americans in Mesomerica and the American present-day Southwest

- The French New World economic and trade system and their experience with Native Americans in the Northeast and present-day Canada- The religious and economic push and pull factors that lead to British colonization in the New World including overpopulation, primogeniture, unemployment, the enclosure movement, the Protestant Reformation, and the Glorious Revolution,

-The culture and societies of differing colonies and the major events of the British colonies until the end of the Seven Years War, including the history of the foundation of the colonies of Massachusetts Bay, Virginia, Rhode Island, Maryland, and Pennsylvania.

- The Columbian Exchange/Three Way Trade Across the Atlantic: Europe, N. America and Africa

- The need for labor: indentured servants, the ‘head-right system” and Salt Water Slavery in the West Indies.turned servants and the “head-right system”

- The First Great Awakening: Armenianism v. Calvinism

- Dominion of New England, Edmund Andros, and the Navigation Laws

- Beginnings and Effects of the Seven Years War: The Proclamation of 1763 and the end                of “Salutory Neglect”

              

Activities

-Students will write an essay that identifies the differences between European and Native American uses of land ownership, money, trade, and agricultural practices. Emphasis will be on pre-writing organization of essays. Further, students will tie “Environment and Geography” as a theme into the essay as an explanation for how differing Native American groups lived, traveled, and gained access to food.

-Students will write an essay that identifies economic and religious push and pull factors that lead to English colonization. This activity will show students how people move around as an effect of policies and social pressures. This activity is formed to help students understand at a greater depth the theme “Peopling.”

***Student will be evaluated in the form of participation/engagement, classroom discussion, reading comprehension, a Quiz, and a Unit Test.

 

 

Primary Source Readings:

“Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” by Jonathan Edward (1741) in Nash and Schultz, Retracing the Past: Volume 1 – to 1877 (Boston: Pearson Longman, 2007), 85-89

“A Model of Christian Charity” by John Winthrop (1630). Ibid., 35-36.

“Lawes Divine, Morall, and Martiall”  (1610) hosted by the Jamestown Project  by the University of Virginia Library at http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/jamestown-browse?id=J1056.
 

Secondary Document Readings

Richter, Daniel K., Facing East From Indian Country: A Native History of Early America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001), 53-59.

à Be able to discuss how English contact with American Indians changed how native peoples changed interacted with each other and with Europeans

Kennedy, David M. et al., The American Pageant 14th Edition (Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning), Chapter 4 pages 68-87.

 

Unit 2: The Age of the American Revolution: Beginnings, the War, and Experimentations with Democracy (3 Weeks)

 

In this unit, students will how England sought to regulate their new land winnings about the Seven Years War while trying to raise the funds to do so. American colonists will reject this effort and begin to claim English violations of their rights. These sentiments will inevitably lead to the American Revolution.

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “American Identity,” “Politics and “Power,” “Ideas, Belief, and Culture”

 

Specific Contents of the Unit

- John Locke, Adam Smith, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau – beginnings of Classical Liberalism and effects of Enlightenment thought in America

- Pontiac’s Rebellion and the need for The Proclamation of 1763

- The Navigation Acts, The Sugar Act, The Stamp Act, “taxation without representation”, The        Townshend/Intolerable Acts, the Quartering Act, and the Currency Act,

- Declaration of Independence, major battles, and gaining independence from Britain

- The Sons of Liberty, the Boston Tea Party, and the Boston “Massacre”

- John Dickenson, the Articles of Confederation, its many weaknesses and one strength

- Need for new government: James Madison, the Constitution, checks and balances, and                 compromise to for a nation

 

Primary Document Readings

Thomas Paine’s Common Sense in Richard D. Hefner’s A Documentary History of the United States 8th ed. (New York: Signet, 2009), 7-10.

The Declaration of Independence in Jack P. Greene Colonies to Nation, 1763-1789: A Documentary History of the American Revolution (New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 1975), 298-300.

The Constitution, Ibid., 547-555.

The Bill of Rights, Ibid., 581-583.

Federalist Papers #10, Ibid., 568-574

 

Secondary Document Readings

 Wood, Gordon S., The American Revolution: A History (New York: The Modern Library, 2003), 17-32.

à Be able to discuss the various taxes and regulation implemented upon the American colonies by England

 Morgan, Edmund S., The Stamp Act Crisis: Prologue to Revolution (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1995), 54-65

à Be prepared to discuss and write as to whether or not Parliament had the right to tax the colonies and whether or not all members of Parliament thought a Stamp Act on the American colonies was the best method of raising revenue from the Americas for a British army in the colonies.

 

Activities

-Students will participate in a debate as to whether or not the American colonies should have acquiesced in the form of new British economic regulations and taxes for the benefit of the empire or whether the British should have been rebelled against for its attempt to use power over the colonies irresponsibly.

- Students will analyze electoral data via graph concerning Election of 1789

- Students will analyze the purpose of Revolutionary artwork as propaganda by viewing Boston “Massacre” artword (1770) and “Punishment of the Excise Man” (1774)

- Students will write an essay with the focus of new regulations for the American colonies and how these regulations specifically caused the beginnings of the Revolution in America because. Emphasis will be on generalization of a thesis from the analyzed materials and primary documents to understand cause and effect relationship and how these events help to form an “American Identity” and set of values represented in our founding documents.

 

Unit 3: Experimentation in Republicanism: The Domestic and Foreign Challenges of the Early Republic and the Presidencies of Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and Madison (2 Weeks)

 

In this unit, students will learn about the nation’s and multiple president’s struggles to guide the country on its new path of democratic experimentation. Many debates will arise as to whether states or the federal government is sovereign, whether British or French make better allies, how do deal with Native Americans, the extent of powers of multiple branches of the Federal government, specifically the President and the Supreme Court, and the War of 1812.

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “American Identity,”  “Politics and Power,” and “America in the World”

 

Specific Contents of the Unit

- Settling the West: The Land Ordinance of 1785 and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787

- Effects of the Declaration of Independence in France, Haiti, and Latin America

- American Indians: a “nation within a nation” and the Constitution

- Federalist characteristics versus Anti-Federalist (Democratic Republican) characteristics

- Arguments for a strong central government including Shays’ Rebellion, a refresher on the weakness of central government under the Articles of Confederation, the Whiskey          Rebellion, Hamilton’s Economic Plan, and the Judiciary Act of 1789

- Arguments against a central government, including the Alien and Sedition Act’s role in   sparking the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, and the reason for Anti-Federalist want of a Bill of Rights

- Foreign Affairs of the Early Republic including Washington’s Declaration of Neutrality with French during their Revolution, Jay’s Treaty with Britain, Pinckney’s Treaty with Spain, and the XYZ Affair in France

-Washington’s Farewell and challenges of other presidents to come including Adam’s dodging war with France, Thomas Jefferson and the Revolution of 1800/the 12th Amendment, and the Louisiana Purchase

- The War of 1812 and how American was dragged into it including the impressment of sailors, the want and economic effects of the Embargo Act of 1807 and the Intercourse Act of 1809, including the effects of the war upon the nation.

 

Activities

- Students will write a perspective making the case that either a strong central government or a weak central government was best for the nation in the beginning. Also, they will argue as to whether or not our country currently should emphasize states’ rights or federal rights and choose a couple of topics to use as evidence for their argument.

***Students will be assessed over the material in the form of participation, engagement, and discussion as well as a potential reading/content quiz, and a test.

- Students will have to explain how the United States affected the actions of Britain and France during the Napoleonic Wars in order to place America’s spot in the world into perspective.

Primary Document Readings

Washington’s Farewell Address in Hefner’s A Documentary History of the United States, 68-77.

Marbury v. Madison court transcript hosted by Ourdocuments.com at http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?doc=19&page=transcript

 

Secondary Document Readings

Kennedy, David M. et al., The American Pageant 14th Edition (Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning), Chapter 10, pages 199-222.

Hickey, Donald R., The War of 1812: A Short History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995) 103-109.

 

Unit 4: The Era of Good Feelings and a New Sense of Nationalism (1 Week)

 

Themes of the Unit: “American Identity,” “America in the World,” “Environment and Geography”

 

In this unit, students will learn about the new sense of nationalism after the War of 1812. This unit will include expansion of land via numerous treaties with foreign powers, supremacy of the federal government as established by the Marshall Court, The Monroe Doctrine.

 

Specifics of the Unit

- The Marshall Court ruled in various ways that asserted the power of the federal government over the states. Cases to be reviewed are: Fletcher v. Peck, McCullough v. Maryland, Dartmouth College v. Woodward, Cohens v. Virginia, and Gibbons v. Ogden

- America expanded its borders in great amounts during this time via treaties which include: The Adams-Onis Treaty with Spain in 1819, the Treaty of 1818 with Canada, and the Russo-American Treaty of 1824 with Russia.

- The Monroe Doctrine, reality versus symbolism.

 

Activities of the Unit

-Students will draft a treaty with another country asking for part of their land for a price. Students will have to write reasons for wanting their land and why selling the land to the US is a good idea for both countries involved. They may be any country in the world engaging any other country in the world.

- Students will conduct a historiographical exercise that seeks to determine why two different historical sources differ in their documentation of the Era of Good Feelings. One source will be The American Pageant, 14th edition pages 257-264 while the other source will be an article found online entitled “The Era of Good Feelings and the Two Party System” at http://www.ushistory.org/us/23a.asp and hosted by The US History Online Textbook. Students must describe why one source would mention only the “good parts” about the decade after the War of 1812 while another source would seek to undermine this common theme in the American historical narrative.

***Students will be graded on their participation, engagement, discussion and assessment over material via quiz and Test

 

Primary Source Readings

The Monroe Doctrine text hosted at Ourdocuments.com at http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?doc=23&page=transcript

Case text of McCullough v. Maryland hosted by Ourdocuments.com at http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?doc=21&page=transcript

 

Secondary Source Readings

Kennedy, David M. et al., The American Pageant 14th Edition (Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning), Chapter 12, pages 255-258 and 263-271.

 

Unit 5: Issues of the Jackson and Van Buren Presidencies (1Week)

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “Peopling,” and “Politics and Power”

 

In this unit, students will understand how many of the nation’s issues came to a head during Jackson’s presidency, including the powers of the president while in office, role of the bank in America’s economy, how Native Americans fit into an American society, and the sovereignty of states in the face of federal power. Jackson will deal with these issues while leaving a depressed economy in the hands of his successor, Martin Van Buren.

 

Specific Contents of the Unit:

-Students will be given a biographical background of Andrew Jackson so that his politics are better understood; content concerns his rise to power including his history in Tennessee, his roles in the army during the Battle of New Orleans and the First Seminole War in Florida.

- The “Corrupt Bargain” of the 1824 election and how Jackson was elected in 1828

- The key issues and debates of the time under Jackson, including the battle for the bank, the Indian Removal Act, the Trail of Tears, the Worcester v. Georgia case, and the Blackhawk War, the Tariff of Abominations and how it sparked the Nullification Crisis

- Students will understand how Jackson expanded the powers of the presidency by studying the “spoils system,” the power of the legislative veto, expansion of campaigning by presidential nominees.

- Students will understand how Jackson’s opponents viewed his actions as unconstitutional

- The election of 1836 and the failures of Van Buren to handle the Panic of 1837

 

Activities

-Students will analyze political cartoons of Andrew Jackson and write an essay as to how the average person might have perceived Jackson as a president via popular cartoons.

- Students will discuss how the Indian policies of Andrew Jackson caused a transfer of Indian populations from the American Southeast to Oklahoma in an effort to understand how laws and policies can transfer people around the country.

- Students will write a perspective essay as to whether or not Jackson overstepped his presidential powers when removing Indians from Georgia.

***Students will be graded on their participation, engagement, discussion and assessment over material via quiz and Test

 

Primary Source Readings

Worcester v. Georgia text hosted by DigitalHistory.com at http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/disp_textbook.cfm?smtID=3&psid=3922

Packet of political cartoons depicting Jackson in various ways hosted by Tim Spalding at http://www.isidore-of-seville.com/jackson/6.html

 

Secondary Resource Readings

Meacham, Jon, American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House (New York: Random House Trade Paperbacks, 2008), 198-204.

Kennedy, David M. et al., The American Pageant 14th Edition (Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning), Chapter 13, 277-293.

à Students should be prepared to discuss whether or not Jackson violated the Constitution in his response to Worcester v. Georgia, whether or not closing the Bank of the United States was good or bad for the country, and whether or not Jackson had the Indian’s best interest in mind when he removed them from Georgia.

 

Unit 6: American Society from 1800-1860 (1 Week)

 

In this unit, students will understand the changes in American society with an emphasis on advances in technology, farming in the South, the transportation revolution/The American System, the communications revolution, attempts at reformation of women’s and African Americans’ role in society, religious revivals, exploration of the western lands,  and the differences between Northern and Southern economics and society.

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “Work Exchange and Technology,” “Identity,” “America in the World”

 

Specific Content of the Unit:

- The boom of “king cotton” in the South and the increase demand for slave labor

- Role of canals, roads, turnpikes, and railroads in the growth of the American economy

- Increase of manufacturing in the North to make mass-produce goods on a cheaper scale

- The Second Great Awakening and its effects on society

- The birth of the suffragette movement and women’s role in social reformation

- The abolition movement including Frederick Douglas and William Lloyd Garrison

- Lewis and Clark Expedition, William Pike’s exploration, and the Gold Rush of 1849

- The birth of sectionalism between the North and South

 

Activities of the Unit:

- Students will create a compare and contrast graph analyzing the differences between the North and South as it relates to tariffs, types of labor, social values, role of government, urban and infrastructural development, manufacturing, technological advancements, and other areas of comparison

- Students will write a thesis essay concerning the factors that made American economic growth during the first half of the 19th Century possible

- Students will research the status of African Americans/slaves in American society compared to that of the rest of the world and argue as to whether or not we were ahead or behind the rest of the world in justice for Africans.

***Students will be graded on their participation, engagement, discussion and assessment over material via quiz and Test

 

Primary Source Readings:

“William Swain’s Letter from the California Gold Fields” 1850 in Nash and Schultz, Retracing the Past: Volume I – To 1877 (Boston: Pearson Longman, 2007), 255-258.

“The Meaning of the Fourth of July for the Negro” by Frederick Douglass (1852) hosted by PBS at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4h2927t.html

Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s Keynote Speech at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, hosted by greatamericandocuments.com at http://www.greatamericandocuments.com/speeches/stanton-seneca-falls.html

 

Secondary Source Readings:

Howe, Daniel Walker, What Hath God Wrought” (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 211-236

à Students should be able to discuss how new modes of transportation increased the number of jobs and products while decreasing the price of goods

à Students should be able to discuss how the increase of printed material unified the country and increase political and social participation

 

Unit 7: Sectionalism and the Coming of the Civil War (2 Weeks)

 

In this unit, students will understand the political and economic factors that led to the rise of sectionalism in the United States and how slavery brought with it issues concerning the power of the federal government in relation to state’s right and personal rights.

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “Politics and Power,” “Work, Exchange, and Technology,” Environment and Geography”

 

Specific Contents of the Unit:

- The debate between free versus slave labor; The Tallmadge Amendment and the Missouri Compromise of 1820; The Annexation of Texas; The Compromise of 1850; The Mexican American War of 1848; The Kansas Nebraska Act; The Actions of John Brown; The Dred Scott case; The Lincoln Douglas Debates: the Election of Abraham Lincoln, secession of the Southern states

 

Activities

- Students will write an essay that attempts to seek compromise between the Northern and Southern states on the eve of the Civil War.

- Students will write an essay evaluating the motivations of John Brown and his actions at Harper’s Ferry. Students must take a side as to whether or not his actions were justified.

- Students will write an essay summarizing Lincoln’s attitude towards slavery and his position on immediate emancipation of slaves and why he took this position. Students will take into account Lincoln’s prior stance about not wanting to free slaves during the war or not wanted to end slavery it places it already existed. Students will have to accommodate for the two different attitudes in their paper in order to persuade the reader as to why these two opinions of different times are actually not a contradiction, but a needed change in policy.

- Students will compare historical interpretations of Lincoln’s decisions, comparing Thomas DiLorenzo’s book The Real Lincoln (Three Rivers Press) to David Herbert Donald’s biography Lincoln (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995). Students will have to discern as to why Lorenzo is so critical of Lincoln’s war-time administration decisions while Donald take a different route by trying to understand the man that is Lincoln and justify the actions of the president.

 ***Students will be graded on their participation, engagement, discussion and assessment over material via quiz and Test

 

Primary Source Readings

-Transcript of the Dred Scott v. Sanford case hosted by ourdocuments.com at http://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?doc=29&page=transcript

- Letters to and from John Brown after Harper’s Ferry hosted by PBS at http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/brown/filmmore/reference/primary/

- Lincoln in the first Lincoln-Douglass debate on slavery hosted by the National Park Service at http://www.nps.gov/liho/historyculture/debate1.htm

- “William Jay Mocks and Dismissed the Proslavery Argument” (1836) in Wilentz and Earle Major Problems of the Early Republic, 1787-1848 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2008), 394-396

- “J. H. Hammond Defends Slavery” (1836) in Ibid.

 

Secondary Source Readings

Donald, David Herbert, Lincoln (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995).

DiLorenzo, The Real Lincoln (New York: Three Rivers Press, 2003).

McPherson, James, The Battle Cry of Freedom (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988) 201-207

Kennedy, David M. et al., The American Pageant 14th Edition (Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning), Chapter 19, pages 437-459.

à Students should be able to discuss the key events that lead to the disunion of the nation and be able to argue them from the perspectives of both the Northern and Southern states

 

Unit 8: Civil War and Reconstruction (2 weeks)

 

Key Themes of the Unit: “Politics and Power,” and “Ideas, Beliefs, and Culture”

 

Specific Contents of the Unit

- The events and effects of various major battles of the Civil War including The First Bull Run, Antietam, Gettysburg, and Sherman’s “March to the Sea”

- The Various plans for Reconstruction including the Lincoln Plan, the Wade-Davis Bill, Johnson’s plan, and the plan of the Radical Republicans and Thaddeus Stevens in Congress, and the Reconstruction Act

- The 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendment, the Freedmen’s Bureau, the Civil Rights Bill, and their failure in the South due to Black Codes and the Rise of the Ku Klux Klan

- Johnson’s Battle with Congress and his near impeachment<

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