History
H106 (Sect.
C368): Fall, 2003
Location: Lecture Hall 105
Time: M W
Instructor: Robert Barrows
Teaching Assistant: John
Beeler
Office: Cavanaugh Hall
532
Office: Cavanaugh Hall 540
Phone:
274-2457/381
Phone: 274-2571
E-mail: rbarrows@iupui.edu [send direct, not via Oncourse] E-mail: jwbeeler@iupui.edu
Office Hours: M W
and by appointment
and by appointment
REQUIREMENTS: Regular class attendance; completion of assigned
reading; two mid-term exams and a non-comprehensive final exam (essays and
short-answer IDs, covering both reading assignments and lectures); two short
written assignments based on the supplemental reading. Completion of all exams and all
written assignments is required of all students, including those taking
the class on a Pass/Fail basis. If you do not take all three exams
and submit both written assignments, you will fail the course.
COURSE
OBJECTIVES:
Lectures, reading and writing assignments, and exams are designed, in part, to
convey and test factual knowledge. But they also ask students to comprehend and
analyze historical texts, synthesize information, and effectively communicate
facts and ideas to others in a variety of written formats. And, of course,
History H106 should deepen your understanding of the society and culture of
modern
GRADING: Each exam will count for one-fourth of the
final grade; the written work will comprise the other fourth. Improvement counts. So does literacy. In cases where the semester grade comes down
to a borderline decision (between a C+ or a B-, for
example), regular attendance and improvement will be taken into account.
Papers are due, and exams will be given, on the
dates indicated. Unless prior
arrangements have been made, we will schedule make-up exams or accept late
papers only in cases of documented
illness or other unanticipated emergency.
University policy is that grades of
"Incomplete" should be assigned only to students who have
successfully completed most of the course work and who have been prevented by
significant and unanticipated circumstances from finishing all
requirements. Removal of
"Incomplete" grades is often troublesome for both student and
instructor, and I shall be reluctant to assign them.
Plagiarism (which
includes the use without attribution of materials found on the Internet),
cheating on exams, and other forms of intellectual dishonesty will result in a
failing grade on the work in question and may lead to disciplinary action by
the university. Consult the IUPUI
Campus Bulletin, 2002-2004, pp. 37-38.
MISCELLANEOUS: The ability to take good notes is a useful
skill, and one that improves with practice.
I therefore ask that students not record my lectures. If a hearing impairment or physical
disability prevents you from taking notes without a tape recorder, please visit
the office of Adaptive Educational Services in CA-001E and have them contact
me.
Both of us have voice mail that is on twenty-four
hours a day. You are welcome to call either
or both of us should you need to do so.
Note, however, that we will not play "phone tag." If you leave a phone message, speak slowly
and clearly, provide a phone number where you can be reached, and state when
you will be at that number.
Class begins promptly at
I welcome questions at any time (although I may
sometimes put you "on hold" until I conclude a particular point or
topic). I do not, however, welcome private conversations between class members
while I am lecturing. In addition to
being rude, such conversations are distracting for other members of the class.
Unless you anticipate receiving a call that
qualifies as a true emergency, please turn off or mute cell phones and pagers
before class begins.
TEXTS:
BRINKLEY Alan Brinkley, The Unfinished Nation,
vol. 2 (4th
ed.)
ROBERTS Roberts/Olson, American Experiences,
vol. II (5th ed.)
RIIS Jacob Riis, How
the Other Half Lives (
TERKEL Studs Terkel, Hard
Times
KENNEDY Robert Kennedy, Thirteen Days
Tentative Course Outline and Assignments
August
20
Introduction to the Course
25
Reconstruction (Brinkley, 397-419)
27 The
"Wild" West (
September
1 NO CLASS
(Labor Day)
3 The "New" South (Brinkley, 419-427;
Roberts, 4-15)
8, 10 The Rise
of Industry (
15, 17 The Rise of the City (
as for Writing Assignment #1)
(Writing
Assignment #1 due September 17}
22 Gilded
Age Politics (
24 EXAM #1
29 Progressivism - I (Brinkley, Ch. 21 + 581-593)
October
1
Progressivism - II (Roberts, 91-99;
begin Terkel, do same
reading as for Writing Assignment #2)
6
8,
13 World War I & Its Aftermath (
15, 20 Prosperity
Decade/Depression Decade (
Roberts, 134-145, 183-203; Terkel, any 200 pages)
22 New Deal - I (
{Writing Assignment #2 due October 22}
27 New Deal - II (Roberts,
172-182)
29
EXAM #2
November
3 Interwar Diplomacy (
5 World War II (
10 Cold War: At Home and Abroad (
12 The Affluent Society
(Brinkley, 779-799, 803-805, 813-819;
Roberts, 261-270)
17 Foreign Policy, 1960s-1980s
(Brinkley, 805-809, 824-827; Kennedy, entire)
{Writing Assignment #3 due November 17}
19 Civil Rights (Brinkley,
799-803, 819-824; Roberts, 234-244)
24
26 NO CLASS (Thanksgiving Break)
December
1,
3
8 Watergate, etc. (
10 FINAL EXAM
H106 (Barrows/Beeler)
Fall, 2003
Writing Assignments
Each student will complete two short written
assignments for this course, both based on the supplemental reading. The two assignments will combine for
one-fourth of your grade, the equivalent of one of the exams. The two assignments combined will be worth
200 points. The grading scale will be
the familiar 90=A-,
80=B-, etc.
Please print/type double-spaced with 1" margins
on 8 1/2" x 11" white paper. Add the attached cover sheet and staple
in the upper left-hand corner. Do not put the paper in any sort of binder,
folder, or cover. It is expected
that papers will be neatly typed/word processed and employ correct English
spelling and grammar.
Writing Assignment #1 (due September 17)
Read the following in Jacob Riis,
How the Other Half Lives:
Introduction (pp. 1-2),
chapters 1, 2, 6, 12, 17, 20, 24, 25 plus any other four chapters. In 2-4 double-spaced, typewritten pages,
discuss this classic description of slum life in
Writing Assignment #2 (due October 22)
Read any 200 pages of your choice in Hard Times
(they need not be the first 200 pages) and then prepare a 2-4 page,
double-spaced review of the book. The
first one-third should be a summary that tells the person reading the review
what the book is about. The remaining
two-thirds of the review should be an analysis of the book in which you
give your opinion of what Terkel has done and how
well he has done it. You should state explicitly your evaluation of
oral interviews as a technique for historical research.
Writing Assignment #3 (due November 17)
Read Robert F. Kennedy's Thirteen Days. (You are only required to read RFK’s text; you may, of course, read the
"Foreword" by Schlesinger and the "Afterword" by Neustadt and
Allison if you wish.) In 2-4
double-spaced, typewritten pages, discuss the response of the
Option
Students who wish to do so may complete all three of
the writing assignments, rather than just the two that are required. In that
case we will average the two highest grades in order to determine your overall
grade on the written work. Papers remain due on the date indicated for that
particular writing assignment. You do
not need to decide until toward the end of the semester whether you wish to
exercise this option. Note, however, that if you wish to preserve
this option you must complete Writing Assignment #1.
Fatal Errors
The following errors are not acceptable. (Lots of other things are not acceptable
either, but we have to start somewhere.)
If we encounter these errors in your papers (not exams), we will circle
them and return the paper ungraded for correction and
resubmission within one week.
Improper use of its or it's (or the nonexistent its')
Improper use of to or too
or two
Improper use of there or their
or they're
Improper use of who's or whose
Any use of would
of or could
of or should
of
(If you don't understand why these are never
correct, please ask for an explanation.)
Any use of alot (as if it were one word)
If you know you have problems with these usages, we
strongly recommend a visit to the
H106 (Barrows/Beeler)
Fall, 2003
________________________________
PRINT YOUR NAME
Writing Assignment Cover Sheet
Circle one: Writing Assignment #1(due 9/17) #2 (due 10/22) #3 (due 11/17)
Quotations from the books being discussed
Quotations from the books you are writing about are
not required, but are certainly permitted. (Be careful not to over-quote,
however; most of the paper should be in your own words.) If you do quote from
the book, formal footnotes are not necessary. Simply put the appropriate page
number(s) in parentheses at the end of the quotation. For example:
As Riis
observes in his concluding chapter, "there is abundant evidence . . . that
it can be made to pay to improve and make the most of the worst tenement
property, even in the most wretched locality" (p. 224).
Statement on Plagiarism
If you quote from, or even paraphrase, a source other than the
book you are writing about, you must
provide a footnote/endnote that indicates the source. Not to do so is
intellectual theft. It also amounts to lying, since you are implicitly telling
us that the work you are submitting is your own. This rule includes the use of
materials found on the Internet. And note that simply changing a few words in a
sentence or passage is not adequate, since you are still using the main thrust
of someone else’s work.
Here is the plagiarism explanation from the IUPUI
All-Campus Bulletin, 2002-2004 (p. 38):
"A student must not adopt or reproduce ideas,
words, or statements of another person without an appropriate acknowledgment. A
student must give due credit to the originality of others and acknowledge an indebtedness whenever he or she does any of the
following:
a. Quotes another
person’s actual words, either oral or written;
b. Paraphrases
another person’s words, either oral or written;
c. Uses another
person’s idea, opinion, or theory; or
d. Borrows facts,
statistics, or other material, unless the information is common
knowledge."
Mark Hellstern et al., in The
History Student Writer’s Manual (p. 121) put it this way:
"Plagiarism is the use of someone else’s words
or ideas without proper credit. While some plagiarism is deliberate, produced
by writers who understand that they are guilty of a kind of academic thievery,
much of it is unconscious, committed by writers who are not aware of the varieties
of plagiarism or who are careless in recording their borrowings from sources.
Plagiarism includes
>>
Quoting directly without acknowledging the source
>>
Paraphrasing without acknowledging the source
>>
Constructing a paraphrase that closely resembles the original in language and
syntax."
I have read and understand the statements above
regarding quotations and plagiarism.
_____________________________________________________
SIGN YOUR NAME