Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
The Advanced Placement course in United States History is a challenging course that is
meant to be the equivalent of a freshman college course and can earn students college
credit. It is a two-semester survey of American History, from the age of exploration and
discovery to the present. Solid reading and writing skills, along with a willingness to
devote considerable time to homework and study are necessary to succeed. Emphasis is
placed on critical and evaluative thinking skills, essay writing, and interpretation of
original documents.
Students will master a broad body of historical knowledge and demonstrate an
understanding of historical chronology. They will be able to use historical data to support
their argument or position, interpret and apply data from original documents, including
cartoons, graphs, letters, etc. Students will effectively use analytical skills of evaluation,
cause and effect, compare and contrast, along with working with others to solve
problems.
The course will meet five times per week for 55 minutes each day, and it relies primarily
on the developmental lesson, daily homework, quizzes, multiple-choice and essay exams.
All units are four to five weeks in length, with various DBQs throughout the units. There
will be a mid-term exam after Unit 4 over all material covered to that point and then a
final exam at the end of the year on all material covered since the mid-term. During the
month of April there will be optional night study groups twice a week prior to Unit 9.
Course Materials
The courses basic text is America: Past and Present (New York: Longman, 2011),
written by Robert A. Divine, et al. Some other works consulted for handouts to
accompany daily lessons and to produce homework assignments and DBQs are listed
below and referred to in abbreviated form throughout the syllabus.
Dollar and Reichard
McGraw-Hill, 2002)
Curriculum Calendar
Unit 1: Colonial History to 1763
Required Reading:
Chapters 1 thru 4 in Divine
Key Discussion Topics: Native American culture, European conquest, race and freedom,
Political revolts, American Enlightenment, Political cultures, Century of Imperial war.
Work on how a DBQ is set up and what the difference is between descriptive and analysis
thinking. We will use the question concerning how different economic and social
systems evolved within the three colonial regions of British North America. Other
questions will be used for essay assessment, such as, analyzing the cultural and economic
responses by the European countries toward the Indians of North America prior to 1750.
Key Discussion Topics: Origins of resistance, Military course of the war, Peace
negotiations, weaknesses and accomplishments of the Articles of Confederation, the roles
of Hamilton and Madison, Constitution of 1787, the rise of Political parties, Revolution
of 1800, Jeffersons imprint, War of 1812.
Two DBQs this unit the first one will be the 2005 DBQ: To what extent did the American
Revolution fundamentally change American society? This will be a take home
assignment. The second one will compare and contrast the actions of Thomas Jefferson
as president against the philosophies that defined the Republican Party which he led.
This one will be worked on in class in a group setting with class discussion of
information and documents. Other questions that can be used for essay assessment, such
as, comparing the Articles of Confederation vs. the Constitution along with analyzing the
contributions of Adams, Jefferson, and Washington in helping to establish a stable
government after the adoption of the Constitution.
Key Discussion Topics: Settling the West, Laissez-Faire and Social Darwinism, Rise of
Industrialists, Labors response, Urbanization, Immigration, Social Gospel, Politics of
1890s, Big Government, Republicans and the Populists.
Various questions concerning Indians, the settlement of the West, City Life, the Federal
Government and Laissez-Faire, Immigration, and whether Industrialists are Robber
Barons or Captains of Industry will be discussed and essays will be included for
assessment.
Key Discussion Topics: Normalcy, Red Scare, New KKK, Harlem Renaissance, The
Crash, Great Depression, Relief, Recovery, and Reform, Critics of the New Deal,
Isolationism, Appeasement and Foreign policy, Pearl Harbor, Blitzkrieg, European war,
Pacific war, Atomic Bomb decision, Cold War, Containment, Korean War, Indochina,
McCarthyism.
Work on a DBQ concerning FDR and the New Deal reforms, also work concerning
questions dealing with World War II, the Cold War, and the differences between the two
Red Scares. Essays will be used for assessment purposes.
Key Discussion Topics: Postwar economic boom, Rise of suburbs, Civil rights, New
Frontier, Warren court, Great Society, War on poverty, Vietnam, Black power, Womens
liberation, Nixon and Kissinger, Watergate, OPEC, Affirmative Action, Carter, Sadat and
Begin, Iranian Hostage crisis, Changing American population, Clinton, New Millennium.
In class DBQ on identifying and assessing the impact of three major events that were
responsible for the undermining American public support for the Vietnam War will be
used, along with various other questions concerning Watergate, Womens rights, etc. will
be used with essays assessments.