UNITED STATES SOCIAL HISTORY: CULTURAL PLURALISM IN AMERICA Honors Transfer Program El Camino College - History 32 Spring 2009 Dr.

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UNITED STATES SOCIAL HISTORY: CULTURAL PLURALISM IN AMERICA Honors Transfer Program El Camino College - History 32 Spring 2009 Dr. Christina Gold Class: TTh 11:15-12:40 SOCS207 Section 2392 Office: 202G Social Sciences Building Phone: (310)660-3593 x3751 Email: cgold@elcamino.edu Office Hours: MW 12:00-1:00; T 10:45-11:15; Th 9:45-11:15 Course Description: This honors course surveys the contributions of ethnic groups and racial minorities to United States history. Emphasis is placed on these groups cultural interaction with the American way of life from colonial times to the present. We will begin by learning relevant basic theory and terminology and will proceed to chronologically study the topic, focusing on the ways that race and ethnicity shaped personal lives, communities, the nation, and international relations. This course emphasizes critical thinking and historical methods. As an honors course, you will be expected to complete all the assigned readings before class, to participate actively in class and group discussions, and to write papers and reading reviews that reflect critical thinking about the topics and reading materials. The class is designed as a seminar with a substantial discussion component. Your last assignment is to submit a portfolio of your course work, including a final self-reflection paper that assesses your performance in the course and discuss how the course impacted your personal opinions about race and ethnicity in America. Grading Vocabulary Test 5% 4 Reading Reviews 20% Essay #1 25% (5% book reviews, 5% thesis/outline, 15% paper) Essay #2 20% Essay #3 15% Participation 10% Course Portfolio 5% Textbooks Reid Luhman. Race and Ethnicity in the United States: Our Differences and Our Roots. Wadsworth, 2002. Chapters 1-3. On Reserve in the El Camino Library. Ronald Bayor, Ed. The Columbia Documentary History of Race and Ethnicity in America. Columbia University Press, 2004. Toni Morrison. A Mercy. Knopf. 2008. Course Reader. For sale in the El Camino book store. Reading Reviews Students will submit 4 reviews of the course readings. The reading reviews assess student understanding of the basic concepts conveyed in the textbook. Lectures Students are responsible for all the information conveyed in the lectures. Students should take notes during lecture and should borrow someone s notes for days that they are absent.

Essays Students will write three 5-7 page essays based upon the secondary and primary document sources in Bayor s textbook. An outline and thesis are required prior to submission of the first essay. Essay topics and the grading rubric are included in the course reader. Participation Active participation in class discussion is essential to success in the course. Assigned readings must be completed in order to effectively participate. Your final participation grade is based on your attendance, group discussions and class participation. Group Discussion In this honors course, students will participate actively in small groups that discuss primary document sources in Bayor s textbook. Complete all document readings before coming to class. There will not be time for you to read the documents in class before the group discussion begins. Bring the Bayor textbook with you to class everyday. Group answers will be graded and will form part of the participation grade. In the event of absence, students are permitted to make-up two group discussions. Attendance Attendance will be taken at the beginning of every class. More than 3 absences in the semester will adversely impact your grade. One percentage point will be deducted per absence over 3 unless written notification of a medical or other extraordinary reason is provided. Classroom Etiquette, Cheating, and Late Policy Students are expected to treat each other and the Professor respectfully. Disruptive behavior interrupts learning and creates a tense classroom environment. Please contribute to a positive learning experience for yourself and the other students. Arrive on time, prepared to participate in class. If you need to leave early, please notify the Professor before class. Out of respect for all the students hard work, cheating and plagiarism will absolutely not be tolerated. Plagiarism occurs when you take credit for the original ideas and/or words of another person. Plagiarism or cheating on any assignment or exam will incur a 0 for the grade, making it difficult to pass the course. For late assignments, the grade will be reduced by one full grade for each class meeting it is late. Reading Assignments Students should complete the assigned reading before coming to class. Do not fall behind in the reading, as it will be difficult to catch up. Try to make it a habit to do your class reading in the evening or day before we meet. Portfolio Students will submit a course portfolio in the last week of class. The portfolio contains all of the semester s work and a brief concluding self-assessment of the student s performance in the course and a discussion of how the course impacted the student s ideas about race and ethnicity.

Weekly Topics and Assignments Week One Feb. 17 Feb. 19 Week Two Feb. 24 Feb. 26 Week Three March 3 March 5 Week Four March 10 Course Introduction Learning Styles Survey Homework Due: Conduct an internet web search for the origin and meaning of your last name. Write this on a blank piece of paper, along with the country or countries from which your family first immigrated to the United States. If you aren t certain, make an educated guess. Student Introductions Theory: Basic Concepts Reading Assignment: Luhman, Chapt. 1 Group Discussion: Group Rules Monterey Park, California Theory: Social and Ethnic Stratification Reading Assignment: Luhman, Chapt. 2 Group Discussion: Imagine a Country Theory: Discrimination and Prejudice Reading Assignment: Luhman, Chapt. 3 Video: The Dave Chapelle Show Vocabulary Test 17 th century America, 1600-1700 Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 1, pp. 1-15 Bayor, documents starting on p. 41 (Winslow); p. 50 (Powhatan); p. 55 (Rolphe). Book Reviews of A Mercy Due 17 th century America, 1600-1700 Group Discussion: The British Colonists and the Indians Reading Review #1 Due 18 th century America, 1701-1788 Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 2, pp. 89-103 Bayor, docs. p. 124 (Crevecoeur); p. 133 (Jefferson). March 12 18 th century America, 1701-1788 Group Discussion: Race and Colonial America Reading Assignment: Finish reading A Mercy

Week Five March 17 March 19 Week Six March 24 March 26 Week Seven March 31 April 2 Thesis and Outline for Paper #1 Due 1780-1836: The New Republic Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 3, pp. 151-167 Bayor, docs. p. 177 (Livingston); p. 184 (Dwight); p. 191 (Walker); p. 193 (Doyle), p. 215 (Morse) Group Discussion: Anti-Immigrant Sentiment Group Self-Evaluation Film: PBS, Destination America: The Earth is the Lord s Reading Review #2 Due 1837-1877: Westward Expansion Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 4, pp. 223-247. Bayor, docs. p. 260 (O Sullivan); p. 276 (Dana) Group Discussion: Manifest Destiny and the Californios No Class Paper #1 Due 1837-1877: Slavery, the Civil War and Reconstruction Reading Assignment: Bayor, docs. p. 288 (Northrup); p. 290 (Jacobs) 1837-1877: Slavery, the Civil War and Reconstruction Group Discussion: Enslaved Women Week Eight April 7 Race Relations in the South, 1878-1900 Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 5, pp. 309-336. Bayor, docs. p. 351 (Wells), p. 355 (Washington), p. 359 (DuBois) Group Discussion: African American Reformers New Groups and Group Rules April 9 1878-1900: American Imperialism Reading Assignment: Bayor, docs. p. 400 (Liliuokalani), p. 403 (Thurston), p. 405 (Kipling), p. 407 (Bryan), p. 408 (Aguinaldo), p. 409 (Consent). Group Discussion: Debating Imperialism SPRING BREAK April 13-17 Week Nine April 21 April 23 1878-1900: Immigration Reading Assignment: Bayor, docs. p. 388 (Ferrari), p. 392 (Riis), p. 398 (Immigration) 1878-1900: Immigration Group Discussion: Immigrant Experience and Restriction

Week Ten April 28 April 30 Week Eleven May 5 May 7 Week Twelve May 12 Film: PBS, Destination America: The Golden Door Reading Review #3 Due 1901-1929: The Critical Period Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 6, pp. 413-437 Bayor, docs. p. 463 (Covello), p. 471 (Kennan), p. 479 (Roosevelt), p. 497 (Kallen) 1901-1929: The Critical Period Group Discussion: Americanization, Pluralism, and Exclusion Group Self-Evaluation The Great Depression and World War II Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 7, pp. 599-618 Bayor, docs. p. 620 (Perkins), p. 623 (Montagu), p. 657 (Internment), p. 658 (Covenant), p. 659 (Memorandum) Group Discussion: Wartime Racial Awareness and Intolerance Paper #2 Due Film: The Defiant Ones, 1958 May 14 Film: The Defiant Ones, 1958 The Civil Rights Movement: The Early Years Reading Assignment: Bayor, Chapt. 8, pp. 667-703 Group Discussion: The Defiant Ones Week Thirteen May 19 Reading Review #4 Due The Civil Rights Movement May 21 The Civil Rights Movement: Radicalization Reading Assignment: Bayor, docs. p. 707 (Malcolm X), p. 718 (Carmichael), p. 733 (Newton), p. 793 (Kerner) Group Discussion: Radicalization of the Civil Rights Movement Week Fourteen May 26 The 1970s: The Expansion of the Civil Rights Movement Reading Assignment: Bayor, docs. p. 783 (Jackson), p. 810 (Novak), p. 884 (One Nation) Group Discussion: The Rainbow Coalition May 28 The 1980s & 1990s Reading Assignment: Bayor, docs. p. 906 (Understanding), p. 919 (Corwin), p. 921 (Chavez) Group Discussion: Los Angeles Riots

Week Fifteen June 2 Film: Crash, 2005 June 4 Film: Crash, 2005 Group Discussion: Crash, 2005 Week Sixteen June 9 Paper #3 and Course Portfolio Due (Covers Bayor, Chapts. 5-9) June 11 Pick up graded work and course grade consultation Student Learning Outcomes 1. Upon completion of History 32, students will identify and explain major social, economic, political and cultural patterns in the history of ethnic groups and racial minorities in the United States in a written or oral assignment. 2. Given primary and/or secondary source(s) pertaining to a significant aspect of economic, political, social or cultural patterns in the history of ethnic groups and racial minorities in the United States, students will develop and persuasively argue an historical thesis in a written or oral assignment that effectively uses the sources as evidence. 3. Given a primary or secondary source relating to the history of ethnic groups and racial minorities in the United States, students will accurately identify the source and then apply appropriate historical methods to explain what the source reveals about its historical context. Course Objectives 1. Assess the influence of race and ethnicity in shaping the American way of life. 2. Evaluate the significance of immigration in redefining American culture from colonial times to the present. 3. Analyze the dominant society s political, social, economic, and legal stratification of ethnic groups and racial minorities in American history. 4. Compare and contrast the status of European and African immigrants in colonial society. 5. Discuss and assess government policies for American Indians in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. 6. Identify and describe the contributions of major ethnic groups and racial minorities to United States history. 7. Analyze the debate over cultural pluralism in recent American history. 8. Explain and assess the cultural consequences of the assimilation process on immigrant groups.

9. Compare and contrast the economic, political, and cultural experience of Asian, European and Mexican immigrants to the United States in the latter half of the nineteenth century through the early twentieth century. 10. Identify the relationship between racial minorities in the American West during the latter half of the nineteenth century. 11. Evaluate the influence of the civil rights movement of the twentieth century on American social attitudes. 12. Analyze differences and similarities between pre-1945 immigration to the United States and recent immigrants from the Middle East, Latin America, and Southeast Asia.