Category: History

  • HIST 141: Key Analysis #2

    PLEASE READ THE INSTRUCTIONS AND REVIEW THE UPLOADED RUBRIC!

    Instructions:

    In the 21st Century, Historians have built digital exhibits where the public can access historic documents online. For this KA, you will explore 3 of them: The Lowcountry Digital History Initiative (which documents slavery in the Carolinas) and the Yale Avalon Project (which houses the nations oldest federal laws and political documents. Additionally, you will examine the Code Noir meaning the Black Code in French. This document consists of the laws produced by the French to govern slavery in their Caribbean colonies which were/are: St. Domingue (Now Haiti), Guadeloupe and Martinique, Saint Barthelemy, Martinique, Anguilla, Saint Lucia, and Saint Martin.

    Finally, you will look at a compiled list of slave codes from NC. This document is housed at UNC Chapel Hills DocSouth Digital Archive.

    LINKS:

    https://ldhi.library.cofc.edu/exhibits/show/africanpassageslowcountryadapt/sectionii_introduction/contrasting_beginnings_of_slav

    https://www.nps.gov/articles/000/transcription-of-the-code-noir-the-black-code.htm

    https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/rightsof.asp

    https://avalon.law.yale.edu/18th_century/usconst.asp

    https://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/slavesfree/slavesfree.html

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): KA 2 (3).pdf

    Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.

  • Success of the U.S as an Independent Republic

    Instructions There are many reasons how and why the United States became an independent republic and successful nation. Please write a 1,000-word essay in response to one of the following questions on American history from colonial times through the early republic: Choose an individual leader and explain how he or she contributed to the successful creation and development of the United States as an independent republic by 1800 JAMES MADISON. Guidelines Keep the following guidelines in mind when you write your essay: Include a clear and strong thesis statement in the introduction. Be sure the essay is well organized and makes logical sense. Use evidence from the textbook, historical documents, lectures, and/or outside sources to support your argument. Be sure to cite any quotes and outside sources that you use. Explain the evidence and how it relates to your argument. Dont assume that evidence speaks for itself. Use simple, clear, and straightforward language. Avoid grammatical and spelling errors. Write a strong conclusion that summarizes your argument. Choose an appropriate title for your paper. Use MLA format and include a works cited page.
  • History Question

    Turnitin enabledThis assignment will be submitted to Turnitin.

    This assignment assesses LO Groups 1, 2, 4 and 5.

    Purpose (Why We’re Doing This)

    This essay helps you practice the skills historians use: making arguments, analyzing sources, and connecting past events to bigger themes. By writing it, youll:

    • Strengthen critical thinking by weighing different kinds of evidence, identifying strengths and weaknesses in arguments, and drawing logical conclusions.
    • Practice persuasion by crafting a thesis and supporting it with reasoning and evidence to convince your reader of your position.
    • Demonstrate an understanding of the major debates and changes in U.S. history from 18201860, especially around national unity and division through intercultural competence.
    • Build transferable skills in research, analysis, and clear communication.

    In short, this assignment asks you to apply your knowledge of 18201860 to explain how rapid growth united or divided Americans by applying the skills that you have developed in the course so far.

    Task (What To Do)

    Write an essay that answers the following question:

    To what extent did the rapid economic and territorial growth of the United States between 1820 and 1860 strengthen (or weaken) national unity?

    Instructions

    Your essay must:

    • Be 56 pages (about 1200-1400 words) in length (double-spaced, 12-pt font, 1-inch margins).
    • Use at least 3 primary sources from Modules 46.
    • Draw on the course textbook (The American Yawp, Chapters 813) for background and context.
    • Not use outside sources.
    • Use MLA or Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) citation format, including both in-text citations and a works cited/bibliography page.
    • You may not submit anything written by AI as your own work. Your analysis, argument, and final draft must be entirely your own. Think of AI as a coach or assistant, but do not load the sources into AI and ask it to analyze the contents, as it will not interpret the context correctly. It can help you think, plan, and polish, but the ideas and words you turn in must be yours.

    Materials

  • The American Yawp, Chapters 813
    • Primary Sources from Modules 46 (Voices from the Past)
  • Criteria for Success (How You’ll Be Graded)

    Your essay will be evaluated on:

    • Argument (Thesis & Analysis) – Clear, defensible claim that answers the question; thoughtful analysis rather than summary. Demonstrates strong critical thinking.
    • Use of Evidence – Incorporates at least 3 primary sources plus the textbook; explains the significance of each source to the argument. Uses sources persuasively.
    • Organization & Clarity – Demonstrates logical structure, effective topic sentences, smooth transitions.
    • Citations – Correct and consistent MLA or CMS style.
    • Communication – Clear, polished writing with minimal errors.

    Rubric

    The Rubric for this assignment is available

    Extra Help

    Need Citation Help? Guidance for and citation styles are available in Course Resources.

    Requirements: Be 56 pages (about 1200-1400 words) in length (double-spaced, 12-pt font, 1-inch margins).

  • The Gilded Age and Progressive Era Worksheet

    The instructions are uploaded along with the worksheet.

  • Ibn Fadlans account of the Viking Rus

    Topic Discussion post 2 Type Discussion post Education level College Citation style Not applicable Service Writing Add-ons Plagiarism & AI report Size 300 words (1.091 pages), double spacing Sources 3 sources required Subject Western CIV to 1500 Language English (US) Deadline 22 Feb 07:00 Description Read An Arabic View of the Viking Rus starting on page 248 in the Perspectives from the Past text book. After reading the information agree or disagree with the following statement: Ibn Fadlan over came his own bias in discussing the Rus. Defend your choice with quotes and information from the text. 2 paragraphs long, 3 citations I do not have the textbook, you need to find it online! Prespectives from the Past, Vol. 1 ISBN: 9781324068204 (this is the ISBN for the Text + Reader bundle) Authors: James Brophy, et al. Publisher: Norton Publication Date: 2020 Edition: 7th editionTopic Discussion post 2 Type Discussion post Education level College Citation style Not applicable Service Writing Add-ons Plagiarism & AI report Size 300 words (1.091 pages), double spacing Sources 3 sources required Subject Western CIV to 1500 Language English (US) Deadline 22 Feb 07:00 Description Read An Arabic View of the Viking Rus starting on page 248 in the Perspectives from the Past text book. After reading the information agree or disagree with the following statement: Ibn Fadlan over came his own bias in discussing the Rus. Defend your choice with quotes and information from the text. 2 paragraphs long, 3 citations I do not have the textbook, you need to find it online! Prespectives from the Past, Vol. 1 ISBN: 9781324068204 (this is the ISBN for the Text + Reader bundle) Authors: James Brophy, et al. Publisher: Norton Publication Date: 2020 Edition: 7th edition
  • World history project

    Grading Criteria

    You will be successful in this assignment if you:

    • Submit a 3-5 page essay in Word or PDF format that accurately addresses all of the specified criteria.
    • Follow either MLA or APA formatting utilizing 3-5 scholarly sources (primary sources or peer-reviewed secondary sources)

    Purpose

    This assignment aligns with Learning Outcomes 3, 7, 8, and 9.

    In this project, you will embark on an exploration of the rich history and cultural heritage of Dynastic China by selecting one of the ruling dynasties to study (Han,). Through research and analysis, you will gain insights into the selected dynasty’s political, social, and cultural contributions. The project includes a short essay and a reflective video presentation. The video portion serves to verify your identity in lieu of a proctored exam and is required to pass the course.

    Essay

    Select one of the ruling dynasties that we have studied (Qin, Han, Tang, Song, Yuan, or Ming). Write a 3-5 page research-based essay following MLA or APA style format, focusing on your chosen ruling dynasty of China. The essay should cover the following aspects:

    Introduction: Introduce the concept of Dynastic China and provide a brief overview of the chosen dynasty’s historical significance.

    Historical Context: Describe the historical context in which the selected dynasty emerged, including key events and developments.

    Political and Social Structure: Analyze the political organization and social structure during the reign of the chosen dynasty, highlighting the roles of emperors, bureaucrats, and common people.

    Cultural and Intellectual Achievements: Explore the cultural and intellectual accomplishments, including art, literature, philosophy, and technological advancements, during the selected dynasty’s rule.

    Impact and Legacy: Discuss the dynasty’s lasting impact on Chinese history and how its legacy continues to influence the country today.

    Video Reflection

    Record a brief video (3-5 minutes) sharing your personal reflections on what you have learned throughout your research and the process of writing the essay. Instructions for recording your video are included below in the Submitting Your Essay and Video section. Your face must be visible in the video (for identity verification), and the video should include the following points:

    Introduction: Introduce yourself and the chosen dynasty you focused on in your essay.

    Initial Perceptions: Describe your initial knowledge or assumptions about Dynastic China and the selected dynasty.

    Transformative Insights: Share the most significant insights gained through research and writing the essay. Highlight any newfound understanding of the dynasty’s political, social, and cultural aspects.

    Perspective Changes: Explain any changes in your views and perspectives as a result of this assignment. If your views remained unchanged, clarify the reasons behind your consistent perspective.

    Appreciation for Chinese History: Discuss how this project has deepened your appreciation for the history and legacy of Dynastic China, as well as its place in world history.

    Submitting your Essay and Video

    Submit your essay in Word or PDF format. MUST BE IN MLA FORMAT

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): World History-Chapter 4.pdf, World History-Chapter 1.pdf, World History-Chapter 2.pdf, World History-Chapter 3.pdf

    Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.

  • Final Project Part 1

    Instructions

    Instructions:

    Before starting this assignment, be sure to read the which contains helpful information that will assist you in completing the project.

    Before completing the project which will be submitted in the Final Project Part 2 assignment, you will need to submit the following information in a Word or PDF document.

  • Name of narrator
  • Birth year (or generation, if they do not wish to share birth year). As a reminder, narrators must be Gen X or older (age 50 or older), and narrators must either be natural born citizen or raised in the US since early childhood.
  • The reason you chose the narrator(s) for the project (and this answer can be meaningful or purely pragmatic)
  • Minimum of five questions you will ask (You can choose more, but five meaningful questions minimum required in advance of the interview and ones that encourage open ended discussion. You might choose to or need to ask smaller questions, like place of birth, something with a short, simple answer, but your five+ posted questions should invite sharing, storytelling, or reflections on historic events or eras. (Samples provided.)
  • Short commentary on what you hope to learn or think you might hear and/or any excitement or concerns you might have about completing the assignment.
  • Final Project Overview

    Purpose

    During this semester we have learned a great deal of American history, much of it directly witnessed by individuals still alive today. An American who is 100 years old or older (and as of 2024, there are at least 100,000) will actually remember the 1920s as children and remember the Great Depression and much history from that time period forward. We can learn much about history, as it was lived out by various individuals and groups, by speaking to elders and hearing, not just general facts, but their own, particular lived experiences of events and change. Learning about the past from people who are still alive is called Oral History, a sub-field within the history discipline. Our final task will involve an oral history undertaking with an elder of your choice, or two if desired. Their memories will cover many decades and bring history more to life. Everyone is free to choose a family member or other elder who is Gen X or older, born 1975 or earlier. Your interviewee must have been born in the United States or immigrated as a small child. If you do not have a willing or available family member, consider a neighbor, co-worker, an amenable teacher or professor, or you can even reach out to an elder living community or center.Do complete the Generations assignment and unit reading first, so that you get a solid sense of the elder generations, what they experienced in life, and what distinguishes their cohort from others. That work and background knowledge will help you formulate initial questions, follow up questions, and generally help you relate to them or follow their recollections.


    Task

    There are two parts to this assignment:

    1. After securing a narrator, you will begin by deciding upon a list of questions you plan to ask (minimum of five questions), though be prepared for other content and storylines to appear in your conversations organically. You just need a plan, a way to begin an interview. The kinds of questions you plan in advance to ask will likely depend on the narrators age/generation. Will someone remember silent films, the Depression, life in the 50s, the Korean or Vietnam wars, the 1969 moon landings, growing up in the 70s, 9-11? You also need to share the name, age or generation, and picture of the person you interview, and the picture should be of you and the person together. If you must speak to them via Zoom or Facetime, use your phone or a second phone to snap a picture.
    2. Share what you learned from them about their lives and history in an informal paper that is 1000 words minimum, not counting the questions themselves. Include an opening paragraph at the beginning that introduces your narrator generally and also add a conclusion at the end in which you include your own personal thoughts on the experience, like what you found most interesting or surprising, what you wished could have heard more about, any feelings brought up, or other aspects of personal reflection. You can include direct quotes if you record the interview session, and that is encouraged. If you record audio or a video, you have a record of the interview to keep and to which you can refer for the written portion of this assignment, or even if cheating/plagiarism/AI is suspected. It might be a wonderful record to keep forever, if you interview a family member or other person close to you. At the interview, minimally have paper and a pen/pencil to take notes, and you might need to ask them how to spell a name or to repeat something unclear. Again, be sure that content connects back to topics we have learned in history, whether thats the Great Depression, Vietnam, 9-11, or whatsoever happens to come up.

    Helpful Advice

    Questions can be open-ended to begin, like tell me about your parents and childhood? or how you were raised? or what was it like to be a kid of your generation, or what are your earliest memories in life?) That can get the conversation going and give you important back story. You might ask them about memories of specific events that took place no later than the year 2004. Be sure some answers include general historical context of the time that connects their personal lives to bigger trends and events in history, lest all you get is very personal stories completely disconnected from our studies. If your narrator seems to linger only on personal or family stories unrelated to history, you will need to redirect them or follow up with additional questions that focus on specific events or eras. Do encourage everything they have to say, though, as time permits. Peoples ability to just openly reminisce and even ramble not only respects their time and lived experiences, but also can lead to important recollections and facts you would not have thought to inquire after. Respect them if they emotionally cannot discuss a matter, like combat veterans or others who experienced trauma. Also listen respectfully but intelligently with at least a little bit of skepticism. Could they be romanticizing the past and making it seem better than it was? Are their memories clouded with pain? Do they have an agenda in what they share? Are they remembering accurately? Are they editing history (what they say) to please you, upset you, spare you difficult truths, or move you in any way? Just keep in mind a persons memories are not the same thing as reading a college textbook, as we peek back at history through the subjective lens of one individual (or two). Nonetheless, the past exists in all of our minds as memories, whether clear or obscured, whether honest or slanted, and always tinted with personal feelings and opinions. Still, that alone is valuable for learning and reflection in a U.S. history course.If for any reason you have no family or friends easily accessible or available who are Gen X or older, reach out to your instructor for help. Again, you might speak to a neighbor, co-worker, someone at a nearby senior citizen center or living facility (they would love that, incidentally) or maybe even one of your professors or someone in administration at your school who might be willing to be interviewed. ——–his assignment aligns with Learning Outcomes 2, 3, and 6.Before starting this assignment, be sure to read the which contains helpful information that will assist you in completing the project and submit your Final Project Part 1. We can learn much about history, as it was lived out by various individuals and groups, by speaking to elders and hearing, not just general facts, but their own, particular lived experiences of events and change. Learning about the past from people who are still alive is called Oral History, a sub-field within the history discipline. Our final task will involve an oral history undertaking with an elder of your choice, or two if desired. Their memories will cover many decades and bring history more to life. Everyone is free to choose a family member or other elder who is Gen X or older, born 1975 or earlier. Your interviewee must have been born in the United States or immigrated as a small child. If you do not have a willing or available family member, consider a neighbor, co-worker, an amenable teacher or professor, or you can even reach out to an elder living community or center.

    Task

    • After securing a interviewee, you will first need to record a brief video that shows you and your narrator together whether in person or virtually. In this video it must be stated (by you and/or the narrator) that the purpose of the video is to document the interview itself as minimal proof that the oral history interview is taking/has taken place. Do not stress about the content/video, as the goal is simply to capture you and your narrator(s), so it can be brief, but feel free to say anything you like or to even have fun with it. Omission of the video, however, means Part 2 cannot be accepted.
    • Begin by asking your narrator the list of questions you submitted in Part 1 (minimum of five questions), though be prepared for other content and storylines to appear in your conversations organically. You just need a plan, a way to begin an interview. The kinds of questions you plan in advance to ask will likely depend on the narrators age/generation. Will someone remember silent films, the Depression, life in the 50s, the Korean or Vietnam wars, the 1969 moon landings, growing up in the 70s, 9-11? You also need to share the name, age or generation, and picture of the person you interview, and the picture should be of you and the person together.
    • Share what you learned from them about their lives and history.
      • You can do this by writing an informal paper that is 1000 words minimum, not counting the questions themselves. Include an opening paragraph at the beginning that introduces your narrator generally and also add a conclusion at the end in which you include your own personal thoughts on the experience, like what you found most interesting or surprising, what you wished could have heard more about, any feelings brought up, or other aspects of personal reflection. You can include direct quotes if you record the interview session, and that is encouraged. If you record audio or a video, you have a record of the interview to keep and to which you can refer for the written portion of this assignment. It might be a wonderful record to keep forever, if you interview a family member or other person close to you. At the interview, minimally have paper and a pen/pencil to take notes, and you might need to ask them how to spell a name or to repeat something unclear. Again, be sure that content connects back to topics we have learned in history, whether thats the Great Depression, Vietnam, 9-11, or whatsoever happens to come up.
      • Alternatively, you may choose to create a PowerPoint presentation instead of an essay that includes pictures of your narrator(s) or related images from history they experienced. If you choose the Powerpoint option, the word count minimum must still reach 800 words and there must be an image for every slide. Font size must not be overly small or difficult to read, as that would constitute a major design flaw. Direct quotes from your narrator(s) may not account for more than 20% of total paper or presentation.

    Grading Criteria

    • Short video clip showing you and your narrator. You and/or your narrator must state the purpose of the interview.
    • Essay or PowerPoint presentation sharing about your narrators life, what you learned in your oral history experience. Focus your content as much as possible on your persons memories of and connection to historical events and time periods. You should include your own thoughts only at the very end in a conclusion, leaving the body of the paper or majority of the PowerPoint dedicated to your narrators memories.
    • The five questions submitted in Part 1 must be covered along with the narrators name, age or generation. (If someone is reluctant to share their exact age, they can certainly share their generation.)
    • Points will be deducted if word count minimum is not met with content that relates to your narrator and to their experience as a member of their generation and history they have experienced. Extraneous stories, like about ones dog or a favorite joke, disconnected from history, might be interesting and may be included, but such content (unrelated to ones core experience as a member of a generation and/or unrelated to events in history) do not count toward 800 word minimum for a Powerpoint or 1000 word minimum on a reflective report. Therefore, minimize your personal reflections, feelings, opinions, or the narrators side stories or else plan to increase your overall word count if you wish to include non-historical content from either yourself or your interviewee. Any plagiarism or abuse of AI will earn a zero score.
  • Requirements: n/a

  • Thematic project history

    The paper has the reading and the instructions for the essay

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Whos an American.pdf

    Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.

  • Exam 1

    Attached Files (PDF/DOCX): Exam 1.docx

    Note: Content extraction from these files is restricted, please review them manually.

  • Alpha kappa

    Mini-Essay – Brief Knowledge of Alpha Kappa Mu History -at least 200 words, typed. (Along with the history of the organization, include your vision for AKM and/or how you would like to contribute to AKM.)