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History is an attempt to understand the stories of the past. We must not ignore dates and facts, but interpretations define the way we view the world around us.
Course
Information:
Course: |
Modern
Western Civilization |
Section: |
Hist 102 |
Semester: |
Spring 2020 |
Date/Time: |
Tuesday/Thursday 12:30 - 1:45pm |
Location: |
LC
315 |
Name: |
John
(Kinch) Kincheloe |
|
What is this
Course? |
Email: |
jkincheloe@nvcc.edu |
What do I
need to do? |
|
Phone |
(703)948-7571
|
How do I
do Assignments? |
|
Office
Location: |
HEC
316-A |
What
are the course rules? |
|
Website: |
-By focusing on the expansion of ideas
and the use of those ideas, we will probe into the nature of
human society as it acts and reacts to new ideologies and
movements.
-Instead of
studying development in every corner of Europe, we will focus on
the most representative examples to illustrate the wider
movements leading to the modern western mindset that exists
today. In the end,
our search will focus on one phrase:
Dare to Know.
-We will examine
the history of modern Europe by focusing on the history of the
expansion of free thought, the development of new ideas, and how
those ideas have changed the world for the better and worse. In this course you
will be asked to question each other, the textbook, the primary
sources, and even ME, so as to develop your own ideas.
By the end of
the semester you should:
-Be able to
explain how the power of ideology and knowledge has impacted
the western world and continues to reshape the world.
-Be able to
devise original arguments about historical trends and events
and prove them using both primary and secondary information.
Course
Description
Surveys the general
history of the Western world from about 1600 CE to the present
and allows students to reach a basic understanding of the
characteristic features of the Western world's historical
development in that span of time. Students will learn about
some of the important political, economic, social,
intellectual, cultural and religious changes that shaped the
development of West in this period of time.
Objectives
- Establish a chronology
of historical events in the Western world since 1600 CE.
- Explain the changing
geopolitical structures of the Western world up since 1600 CE.
- Define the importance of
key individuals and developments in Western civilization
before 1600 CE.
- Identify the social,
economic and political forces at work in the evolution of
modern Western history.
- Recognize and describe
the significance of some of the cultural achievements of
modern Western Civilization.
There are no
pre-requisites, but this is a writing intensive course so an
introductory English course is highly recommended.
There are no books to purchase for this class. All
textbooks and monographs are free Open Online Resources linked
below:
-Textbook= - BWH=Boundless
World History course
draws textbooks housed by 'lumen learning"
-Additional books =
- The Prince, Niccolo Machiavelli
-
Heart of Darkness, Joseph
Conrad
Spring 2020 His 102 Course
Schedule
Class
Date
|
Topic:
Face-to-Face
Meeting
|
Tuesday
|
Thursday
(to be completed before the class)Read primary sources/Discussion/paper's due |
|
(Jan. 14 & 16) |
|
|
Read Primary SourcesLuther, 95 Theses (1517)Louis
letter to his son (1661)
|
|
EARLY MODERN ERA | ||||
(Jan. 21 & 23) |
|
|
-Read BWH: "The Renaissance" & "The Age of Discovery"Read Primary SourcesColumbus (1494)Vasco da Gama
(1498)
|
|
(Jan. 28 & 30) |
|
|
-Read BWH: "The
Rise of Nation-States"
Read:
The Prince
|
|
|
|
|
-Read BWH: "The Age of Enlightenment" & "Enlightened Despots"==Paper 1 Due==
Read
Primary Sources
|
|
The Transition | ||||
(Feb. 11 & 13) |
|
|
-Read BWH: "French
Revolution" & "Napoleon"
|
|
(Feb. 18 & 20) |
Industrial Revolution 1789-1815 |
Group 7-Vid |
-Read BWH: "Industrial
Revolution"
|
|
Week 7 (Feb. 25 & 27) |
|
|
||
19th
Century |
||||
(Mar. 3 & 5) |
and the Expansion of Revolution (19th Century) |
-Read BWH: "Change in the Americas" |
Read Primary SourcesMill: Liberalism Evaluated, 1873British Reformation Act of 1832 |
|
Mar. 10
& 12 |
Spring Break |
|||
(Mar. 17 & 19) |
Reactions:
Romanticism, Socialism, and Communism ( 19th Century) |
-Read BWH: "Post-Napoleonic Europe"Watch Videos:1-Age of Revolutions Kinch
|
Complete Unit 9 Discussion on Canvas |
|
Week 10 (Mar. 24 & 26) |
Europe
squares off: |
-Read BWH: "European Imperialism in Asia" & "Scramble for Africa"Watch Videos:
|
|
|
20th Century | ||||
(Mar. 31 & Apr. 2) |
|
-Read BWH: "World War I"Watch Videos:1-The Great War
(begins)
|
Read: Heart of Darkness |
|
(Apr. 7 & 9) |
1918-1942 |
-Read BWH: "Interwar Period"Watch Videos:1-1918
Influenza (Dr. Campbell)
|
Complete Unit 11 Discussion on Canvas |
|
(Apr. 14 & 16) |
WWII 1938-1945 |
Complete Unit 12 Discussion on Canvas |
||
(Apr. 21 & 23) |
The Cold War 1945-1993 |
-Read BWH: "Cold War "Watch Videos:1-Cold War Origins Kinch video
|
|
|
(Apr. 28 & 30) |
|
-Read BWH: "The Long Decade" & "The 21st CenturyWatch Video:1-Globalism Kinch video
|
|
|
Week
16 |
Due Tues. May 5 (Midnight) |
|
==Cumulative Paper Due==
|
All assignments
are graded on a 100 point scale and averaged accordingly to the
percentages listed below.
Assessment
|
Percentage
|
|
||
Participation &
Discussion posts |
25 |
Grading
Scale |
|
|
Group Presentations |
5 |
A |
90-100 |
|
2- 3 page papers |
30 |
B |
80-89 |
|
Cumulative Essay |
20 |
C |
70-79 |
|
|
|
D |
60-69 |
|
|
|
F |
59 and below |
o
Group Work (Cancelled
for the rest of the semester after March 12th)
§ You
will
be assigned a group that you will work with throughout the
semester.
·Your group will be assigned on Canvas by the
beginning in week 2 of the semester.
*Video Group
Research Presentations --Click Here for
detailed instructions.
· Your group will produce a publicly posted
five minute research presentation to be shown in class.
*Discussion lead --Click Here for detailed instructions.
·Your
group will
present on and lead a class discussion of the primary
sources assigned for your week.
§ Based
on
attendance and active engagement in daily discussions.
o
2- 3pg. argumentative
papers
o
Utilizing
readings from primary sources, and the textbook.
o (All
papers
should be submitted via attachment on Canvas before
class of the assigned due date.)
o Midterm
& Final
o Cumulative Essay
§ 1 Cumulative essay - 3-4 pg (1000 words max) typed essay question (on syllabus)
Ideology and expanding knowledge lead to both positive and negative developments across the 500 year span of modern western civilization. What was the impact of the expansion of “free thought?"
(Your argument must
include evidence and information from across the breath of the
semester, Frankenstein, and 2 different primary
documents, from those read for this course to prove your Argument.) [Footnotes
and all writing guide rules must be followed.]
Extra
Credit
Assignments (due by the end of Week 13) =
Digital History Project- check it out here.
This is a paperless course.
- All additional readings,
assignments, and course materials can be found here on my
website kinchteach.com
-All assignments and quizzes need to
be submitted in Canvas.
-All feedback will be given through
Canvas.
Formatting:
All Papers should be double
spaced, using 12 point Calibri font and one inch margins.
All papers must be word processed and submitted to Canvas as
“doc,” “docx,” or “rtf.”
E-mail submissions will not be accepted.
Style and Grammar:
You must present your arguments in clear, concise, and
grammatically correct English. Make sure to proofread and
use spell-check. For information on writing papers for this
class, make sure to read Kinch’s writing guide (under course
documents on BB.) You also might want to consult the
following handy websites:
o NVCC
Loudoun's
Writing Center
o
Charlie
Evans’
History Writing Center
Citations:
You
MUST include a formal citation any time you refer to a specific
passage in a text, even if you do not quote the text
directly. The required method for citing sources in this
class is Chicago Style
formatting for footnote citations.
According to this format, you “Insert Footnote” (under
references) and enter the citation information as laid out in
this link.
Late Assignments
-Late papers will be accepted after the due date and
time for half credit, as long as they are submitted
before the final class period of the term.
-Discussion, Quizzes, Participation, and Presentation
assignments will only be accepted during the week they are due.
-All assignments should be stored on a cloud server and
submitted online. Excuses
such as “my dog ate my homework” and “my computer crashed” are
no longer valid.
For exam sessions, make-ups will not be given other than
in the case of a genuine emergency with appropriate
documentation (ie, emergency room documents, court summons,
etc.) Missing class due to "not feeling well," not being
able to get a ride, having to work, and the like are not genuine
emergencies.
Fresentation /
Video feedback will be given in person at the end of class, and
the grade will be posted within a couple days.
Papers and Exams
will be graded and posted within two weeks of their due date, in
order to give more detailed feedback.
Attendance Policy:
Absences, Late arrival, and leaving early will affect
a student’s grade due to the student not being able to
participate in class/group discussions. Students missing more
than thirty percent of the scheduled classes without an excused
absence from the professor will receive ZERO points for the
class participation grade. Class absence does not excuse a
student from meeting assignment due dates
Academic Dishonesty will not be tolerated.
Students involved in cheating will receive a grade of
“0” on the activity during which cheating occurred and
particularly flagrant or obviously intentional instances of
cheating or plagiarism will result in a grade of "F" for the
course. In
addition the student will be reported to the Dean of
Students for further disciplinary action.
**Please read the section titled Student Conduct, Rights,
and Responsibilities: F.
Academic Dishonesty in the Student
Handbook.
Academic
dishonesty, as a general rule, involves one of the following
acts:
1.
Cheating on an examination or quiz;
including the giving, receiving, or soliciting of information
and the unauthorized use of notes or other materials.
2. Plagiarism
- This is the act of appropriating passages from the work
of another individual, either word for word or in substance, and
representing them as one’s own work. This includes any
submission of written work other than one’s own.
-Please note that even copying a
sentence or two from another source without citing it is enough
to trigger a plagiarism penalty. Likewise, changing a word
here or there from content which you copy is plagiarism.
Your work should be entirely in your own words except
for the passages which you quote and appropriately cite. All of
your papers for the class will be checked for plagiarism by
SafeAssign software.
Be aware of
the following:
-
Internet-enabled devices, dictionaries and/or calculators are
prohibited during testing.
- If you need
to leave the room during testing, for whatever reason, your
test will be collected immediately for grading without any
additional time for more work on the test or quiz.
The primary means
of communication outside the classroom between the Instructor
and the student is via Blackboard Announcements and e-mail.
Students should check Blackboard and their e-mail daily for
any Instructor communications. Failure on the part of the
student to check Blackboard and e-mail on a regular basis is
not an excuse for missed /late assignments or exams. The Instructor
turn-around time to respond to e-mails is 24-to-48 hours
Monday through Friday.
Instructors receive a significant number
of e-mails from students over the course of the semester. To
specifically identify the course in which the student is
enrolled, all e-mail from the student must include
the course and section
number (e.g., ACC211-000) in the Subject of the
e-mail.
I will email you at the email address on
my class list which is your VCCS email address. If you do not
check this address frequently, I would recommend you set it up
for automatic forwarding to an email address you do check more
frequently. When emailing the instructor, always send email
from your VCCS email address.
Please be considerate. Disruptive
behavior, on the ground and online, will not be
tolerated. Private conversations during lecture or class
discussions, ringing mobile phones, texting, sleeping, or
walking into class late or out of class early all distract and
disturb your instructor and your classmates, and will count
against your participation grade. Repeated instances of
rude behavior will result your removal from the
classroom.
--All students are considered adults and
will conduct themselves in a professional manner at all times.
Please read the section titled Student Conduct,
Rights, and Responsibilities: B. Student
Conduct in the Student Handbook.
In event
of an emergency just regarding this class, check
Blackboard for announcements regarding course
progress/assignments.
Academic Integrity Policy /
Closing Information (weather) / Communication (e-mail) / Course
Drop/Withdrawal Policy /
Disabilities and Accommodations / Emergency Preparedness / Financial
Aid / NOVACares
Everyone was trouble at
times, but there is help. If you are struggling please
reach out to me, a counselor, or click here https://blogs.nvcc.edu/wssn/
The IT Help Desk provides
first-level technical support to all faculty, staff and
students of Northern Virginia Community College. Additional
details and resources are located at http://www.nvcc.edu/ithd/.
Monday
- Friday: |
8:00
a.m. to 9:00 p.m. |
Saturday: |
8:00
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
Phone:
|
703-426-4141 |
Email: |
Procedures and items to be
aware of (click here)
Anyone observing an emergency situation should
contact the Campus Police Office or the dean of students.
Campus
Police: |
703-450-2540 |
Dean of
Students: |
703-450-2512 |
------Note: The instructor has the right to
alter or change the course and course schedule at any time as
he deems appropriate.-------
contact: jkincheloe@nvcc.edu