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1 Spring 2015 History 2: World Civilizations since 1500 CE Section #79594, Tuesday and Thursday 7:00 PM - 10:30 pm, FNFC- 113 Final Exam: Tuesday, March 3, 7:00—10:30 pm, FNFC- 113 Class Website: www.profgunderson.com Text: The Heritage of World Civilizations: Volume Two Since 1500 (9th Edition) by Albert M Craig, et al, 2011. ISBN: 9780205803477 Available at Chaffey College Bookstore. An older edition is available in the Library, but cannot be checkout out! This Syllabus is amendable by written change or verbal notice of change accessible through the Class Website. Instructor Professor Luke Gunderson [email protected] Voicemail: (909) 652-7240 “Office” Hours immediately after class or by appointment Chaffey College Course Description Prerequisite: Eligibility for English 1A as determined by the Chaffey assessment process, or satisfactory completion of English 475 or English as a Second Language 475. Cross-cultural study of all the major civilizations of the world since 1500. The unifying theme is understanding the causes of the rise of the West, the reaction of the non-Western world to it, and the ongoing dynamics of the “West versus the Rest” dialectic. History 2 Student Learning Outcomes Upon successful completion (grade C or higher), student will analyze competing historical interpretations of modern world history by finding and using sources. Upon successful completion (grade C or higher), student will appraise the factors that shape history by explaining cause and effect (significance) of historical events in modern world history. Upon successful completion (grade C or higher), student will demonstrate the connections between events in modern world history and how events influence the course of history by explaining the chronology and context of historical events in modern world history. Instructor’s Description “World history” only became a reality with the European exploration and colonization of other world cultures beginning in the late 1400s CE. From this time on, decisions made in one part of the world have increasingly impacted societies and cultures over distances not previously experienced. This class will focus on such “globalization,” along with several other major changes in world history and culture since 1500 CE: mercantilism, imperialism, racism, absolutism, revolutionary philosophy, the tensions between revolutionary stability and absolutist terror, industrialization, nationalism, and the growth of terrorism and the use of “state terror.” 2 Course content will include major political events of the period, the main intellectual arguments that provoked them, the arts that represented and popularized them, and the military conflicts that decided their outcomes. Course materials will include PowerPoint presentations, comparative timelines, and exposure to various excerpts of music, literature, and paintings of each era under study. Students will also learn two of the most important abilities for further success in collegiate study, time management and organization, through the creation of Study Calendars from which they can allocate study time along with the impact of their various outside, personal, familial, and professional responsibilities. Three major exams and a short research paper will be given to assess student learning. Students completing this course will be informed of the major political, intellectual, and artistic questions that heavily impact their everyday life. Students will learn to recognize the differences between political rhetoric, observed action, and utopian political theory. Open questioning of political motivations and critical thinking will be emphasized. Instructor’s Advice on Studying History Most introductory students in history find the subject extremely frustrating because they see much of it as being the memorization of “names, dates, and places.” These students are quickly overwhelmed by the amount of information being given on a daily basis. Names, dates, and places are merely the examples and evidences of larger historical trends and ideas. Make sure you understand these larger ideas BEFORE trying to memorize things at the level of names, dates, and places. In essence, do not lose sight of the forest in the obsession with its trees. This policy will save you much blood, sweat, and tears! Even at the highest levels, history is taught as the interaction and interrelation of concepts. Experts are always analyzing books and the historical movements they describe in terms of “threads” that are present throughout. Understanding these larger, overarching concepts will GREATLY assist you in learning the importance of smaller names, dates, and places that are the nuts and bolts. If you learn the concepts first, memorization of names, dates, and places will come much easier! Graded Assignments All students will be required to take three in-class examinations on the four major portions of the course. The Final Exam will be non-cumulative. Learning how to adequately study for and take such hours-long exams will be a fundamental need for the vast majority of students pursuing higher education; the professor will therefore be stringent in examination rules in order to prepare students for their “upper division” future. Students are HIGHLY advised to be present for all four exams; ANY make-ups or other alternative testing dates will ONLY be granted by the professor’s judgment. As a result, there IS NO GUARANTEE that such make-ups will be permitted. Please plan accordingly. As a major factor in lower division collegiate education is the learned ability to write effectively, all students are required to submit a mini-research paper approximately 5 3 pages in length. Students will work on this project throughout the summer, with separate due dates for deciding on a topic, submitting sources, creating an outline, and submitting a Rough Draft. Students will work on their rough drafts by completing Essay Formatting Assignments through the course website and participating in a Rough Draft Peer Review. Students may submit several drafts to the professor, but at least one Rough Draft MUST be turned in by the Rough Draft Due Date. Students are also required to submit their response to TWO reading assignments. These Reading Responses should address the following questions: 1. What questions/criticisms does the writer raise? 2. What do YOU think is most important or effective about the reading? 3. What impact did the reading have on general society? Why is it important to discuss? 4. Do similar problems persist today? How or why? Response length can range from two to three pages. See the Course Schedule for due dates of each response. The grade is based on a total of twenty points for each of the questions above and the ability to use quotes to PROVE ideas. Students are also required to submit thoughts on lectures. These Lecture Critiques can focus on student questions regarding lectures or what worked (or did not work) in the lecture to help their understanding of the topic. They can be submitted to the professor on paper after class. Critiques will be graded on a Credit or No Credit basis; students must receive credit for 20 Critiques throughout the semester to receive the full 2% for the course grade. As 25 lectures are planned for the summer, students may miss up to 5 Critiques and still receive full credit. Because a major factor in collegiate success is the ability to manage time effectively, students in this class are assigned Study Calendars in an effort to teach and assess student organization. Students will create these calendars and turn them in to the professor on the designated date. These calendars should not only contain due dates of all assignments for all classes taken this semester, but also any important personal or professional dates that may impact study time. Students are asked to compile a list of instances which they see US patriotism being used as an advertising tool. This is intended to show students how much the ideas of “good and evil” permeate American culture. Any assignment turned in or taken after the due date or testing date will be punished by a 10% point reduction for every class session it is received late. Any assignment turned in via e-mail after class begins on the due date will be regarded as late and therefore face the 10% point reduction. If you need to miss a test date, inform the professor AHEAD OF TIME to avoid this reduction. Extra Credit will be offered at the end of the semester ONLY to students that have turned in ALL other assignments. 4 Grading Scale Exam One: The Newly Integrated World (1492-1690): 100 Points = 10% Exam Two: Europe’s Leap Ahead (c. 1600-1880): 150 Points = 15% Final Exam: Globalized Politics and Economics (1880-Present): 150 Points = 15% Term Paper on Topic of Student’s Choice: 200 Points = 20% Term Paper Rough Draft (topic, website evaluation, sources, and outline due dates) 40 Points (10 points each) = 4% Rough Draft Peer Review: 50 Points = 5% Essay Formatting Assignment: 50 Points = 5% Reading Response 1: 50 Points = 5% Reading Response 2: 50 Points = 5% Study Calendars: 50 Points = 5% Map Quiz 1: 30 Points = 3% Map Quiz 2: 30 Points = 3% Lecture Crtitiques: 20 Points = 2% Patriotism in Advertising List: 20 Points = 2% Syllabus Quiz : 10 Points = 1% Total 1,000 Points = 100% Term Grading Scale: A+ = 97-100% (970-1000 points) A = 93-96.9% (930-969 points) A- = 90-92.9% (900-929 points) B+ = 87-89.9% (870-899 points) B = 83-86.9% (830-869 points) B- = 80-82.9% (800-829 points) C+ = 77-79.9% (770-799 points) C = 70-76.9% (700-769 points) D+ = 67-69.9% (670-699 points) D = 63-66.9% (630-669 points) D = 60-62.9% (600-629 points) F = 59.9% and below (599 and less points) Course Schedule: T 1-13: Class Introduction: Syllabus, Views of History, Europe at 1500 Height of the Muslim Empires, c. 1350-1700 Th 1-15: Library Visit on Finding Academic Sources (meet in regular classroom!) European Discovery and Conquest of the Americas, 1492-1598 Term Paper Topic Due T 1-20: The European Reformation and the Wars of Religion, 1517-1648 China in the Ming and Qing Empires, 1369-1793 Syllabus Quiz Study Calendars Due Patriotism in Advertising List Due Th 1-22: Japan in the Tokugawa Era, c. 1500-1868 Exam One: The Newly Integrated World 5 Reading Response 1 Due T 1-27: The First Challenge to European Absolutism: The English Civil Wars, 1625-90 The Scientific Revolution in Europe, 1543-1748 Map Quiz 1 Evaluating Online Resources DLA Due Th 1-29: The European Enlightenment, c. 1670-1792 Enlightenment Political Philosophy, 1690-1776 Term Paper Annotated Sources Due T 2-3: The Second Challenge to European Absolutism: American Revolution, 1763-89 The Third Challenge to European Absolutism: The French Revolution, 1763-99 Th 2-5: The Industrial Revolution and Marx’s Critique, c. 1780-1867 Exam Two: Europe’s Leap Ahead Reading Response 2 Due T 2-10: Europe in the 1800s: Restoration, Mass Politics, Revolution, Consolidation Crash Course in Essay Writing Essay Formatting Assignment Due (will be completed in class) Th 2-12: The “New Imperialism”, c. 1800-1911 The Muslim World Under the Ottoman Empire, 1700-1914 Term Paper Outline Due LAST DAY TO DROP THIS CLASS!!! T 2-17: Europe’s Great War and Its Worldwide Consequences, 1914-19 Rough Draft Peer Review Map Quiz 2 Th 2-19: Three 20th Century Ideologies: Liberal Democracy, Communism, and Fascism World War Two: The Merging of Two Regional Wars, 1932-45 T 2-24: The Cold War: Ideology, Empire, Hypocrisy, 1945-91 Decolonization of the European Empires and the Rise of Nation States Term Paper Final Draft Due (also turn in Rough Draft!) Th 2-26: The Chinese Revolution and Economic Power, 1926-2012 The Rise of anti-American Terrorism and the “War on Terror,” 1953-2015 T 3-3: Final Exam: Globalized Politics and Economics 7:00—10:30 pm in the same room Textbook Reading Schedule for 2011 (Ninth) Edition: T 1-13: Chapter 20 (pages 612-635) Th 1-15: The Discovery of a New World (pages 461-463) and Chapter 17 (pages 496-527) T 1-20: Chapter 16 (pages 463-492) LATE IMPERIAL CHINA (pages 530-546) Th 1-22: JAPAN (pages 547-564) T 1-27: Toward Parliamentary Government in England and The “Glorious Revolution” (pages 577-580) The Scientific Revolution (pages 638-645) Th 1-29: The Enlightenment and The Enlightenment and Religion (pages 645-653) The Enlightenment and Society and Enlightened Absolutism (pages 653-664) 6 T 2-3: Revolutions in the British Colonies in North America (pages 668-672) Revolution in France (pages 672-686) Th 2-5: The Eighteenth-Century Industrial Revolution: An Event in World History (pages 601-605) and Chapter 24 (pages 731-764) T 2-10: The Congress of Vienna and the European Settlement (pages 686-689) and Chapter 23 (pages 699-729) Th 2-12: THE AFRICAN EXPERIENCE (pages 810-819), Expansion of European Power and the “New Imperialism” (864-872), and Chapter 27 (pages 824-861) THE ISLAMIC EXPERIENCE (pages 802-810) T 2-17: Chapter 28 (pages 877-884 and 886-892) Th 2-19: The Russian Revolution (pages 884-886) and Chapter 29 (pages 895-921) Chapter 30 (pages 923-949) T 2-24: Chapter 31 (pages 951-981) Chapter 33 (pages 1019-1054) Th 2-26: China (pages 1000-1008) and Taiwan (pages 1008-1010) Middle-Eastern Oil, The Rise of Militant Islamism, The Modern Middle Eastern Background, and Iraq: Intervention and Occupation (pages 1050-1054) Textbook Reading Schedule for 2003 (Sixth) Edition: T 1-13: Chapter 22 (pages 605-616) Th 1-15: The Discovery of a New World (pages 422-424) and Chapter 18 (pages 485-486 and 488-509) T 1-20: Chapter 16 (pages 426-446) LATE IMPERIAL CHINA (514-527) Th 1-22: JAPAN (pages 527-545) T 1-27: Chapter 20 (pages 557-565) The Scientific Revolution (pages 529-538) Th 1-29: Writers and Philosophers (pages 450-453) and The Enlightenment (pages 638-641) The Enlightenment and Society (pages 641-651) T 2-3: Revolutions in the British Colonies in North America (pages 655-658) Revolution in France (pages 658-668) Th 2-5: The Eighteenth-Century Industrial Revolution (pages 594-599) and Chapter 26 (pages 725-749) T 2-10: The Congress of Vienna and the European Settlement (pages 675-677) and Chapter 25 (pages 689-715) Th 2-12: THE AFRICAN EXPERIENCE (pages 798-807), Expansion of European Power and the “New Imperialism” (pages 853-857), and Chapter 29 (pages 814-840) THE ISLAMIC EXPERIENCE (pages 794-798) and Islamic Reform Movements (page 800) T 2-17: Chapter 30 (pages 857-68 and 872-878) Th 2-19: The Russian Revolution (pages 868-872) and Chapter 31 (pages 881 and 883-899) 7 Militarism and War (pages 840-843) and Chapter 32 (pages 907-929) T 2-24: Chapter 33 (pages 937-942 and 949-962) Chapter 35 (pages 997-1007 and 1011-1022) Th 2-26: China (pages 980-985) and Taiwan (pages 985-986) Middle-Eastern Oil, Islamism and Politics, Iran, and Central Asia (pages 1007-1011) Course Policies Chaffey College does not permit eating, drinking (other than water), or smoking inside any classroom. This includes gum, chewing tobacco, and other such sloppiness! The instructor will take roll at every session in the first few days of class. Students missing sessions in the first four days of the course must inform the instructor; any unannounced absences during this time may result in the student being dropped in order to create room on the roster for potential students on the registration “wait-list.” Students are expected to attend all class sessions, and are responsible for all information given in each session whether they attended that day or not. Students are responsible for dropping the class. Never assume that you were dropped by the instructor or by the registrar until you have obtained written evidence! Poor assumptions can lead to dramatic consequences on your academic transcript! Your professor is no fan of having cellular phones in the classroom. However, as this is a community college, he accepts the fact that many people must be on call for professional reasons. If this is the case, a student may keep their cell phone on as long as it is set to silent, vibrate, or a similarly non-disruptive task. The student may leave the room quietly and courteously if they receive a call. This policy is subject to amendment by the instructor if cell phones become a consistent disruption to classroom activities, with the professor deciding what is to be defined as a “consistent disruption.” However, cell phones and ALL other electronic devices are not permitted to be on and/or functioning while the class is taking a test or quiz. Any type of communication amongst students is strictly forbidden at these times, so any type of communication will be immediately regarded as the pursuit of cheating and will be severely punished. Chaffey College considers plagiarism to be “academic dishonesty.” The professor MUST report any instance of suspected plagiarism, exam cheating, or other types of academic dishonesty to the Dean. See the Chaffey College policy on Academic Dishonesty for more information. Students are HIGHLY advised to be present for all four exams; ANY make-ups or other alternative testing dates will ONLY be granted by the professor’s judgment and the concurrence of the Department Chairperson. As a result, there IS NO GUARANTEE that such make-ups will be permitted. Please plan accordingly. 8 Chaffey College rules prohibit students from bringing young children to class. This is an issue of legal liability; consult one of the Deans or the President of the College for more information. Rubric for Term Paper Student papers will be graded according to three criteria. Students MUST turn in their final draft by the Final Draft Due Date. These final drafts will be graded for Content (historical information on the student’s chosen topic) and Writing (clarity of thesis, paragraph construction, connection between argument and evidence, citation, and grammar). Content and Writing are worth 100 points each, making the final draft worth 200 points (20% of the student’s final grade). Please see the rubric on the class website’s “Documents” page for explication of an “A” paper, followed by all other results.