Nov 23, 2024  
2023-2024 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2023-2024 Undergraduate Catalog [ ARCHIVED CATALOG VERSION ]

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HIST 214 - Women/Family in Am. History From 1876


Number of Credits: 3
Women and the Family in American History from 1876 surveys the second section of American History from the view of women, children, families, and the working class American. The course will cover the ways that the larger events of American political history affected the everyday lives of Americans in their homes, schools and workplaces. It will focus on such areas as the rise of a social safety net, child labor, women’s rights, and the social impact of the rise of American power. The course will cover the uniquely American impact of this time period on the lives of the families living through World War I, the Great Depression, World War II, the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War and the gay rights movement. Credit by exam available. Three hours lecture each week. Three Credits. Three billable hours.

Pre-requisite(s): eligibility for ENGL 101 .
Course Objectives: Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
  1. Summarize and explain the impact of historical events on the daily lives of women, children, and families in America. (GE1,GE2,PG1,PG2,PG4)
  2. Communicate orally, by discussing readings that offer various interpretations of key issues in American History as they affect women, children, and family life in America through the American Civil War and Reconstruction. (GE1,GE2,PG1, PG2,PG4)
  3. Effectively demonstrate information literacy by knowing when there is a need for information and by identifying, locating, evaluating, and effectively using that information of the issue or problem at hand. (GE2, GE4,PG1,PG4)
  4. Effectively express themselves in formal writing, by authoring an analysis of period documents, diaries, newspapers, books, and a research paper that offers a clear supportive position on a complex aspect of this period.
  5. Think critically, by analyzing the successes and failures of the past to explain and predict how people with different values and mindsets handle similar circumstances. To explain how history has shaped a uniquely American view of women, family life, and the lives of American children. (GE1,GE6,GE7,PG1,PG2,PG3,PG4)
  6. Make historical connections by recognizing contemporary behaviors, actions, and policies that can be traced to the historical events of this period, analyzing the success and failures of these changes. (GE2,GE7,PG1)
  7. Identify and expand their view of gender, world perspective, modern day gender and age issues that affect families in all regions of the world. (GE6,GE7,PG2,PG3)



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