Middle School American History
$549.00
History is not about raw memorization of names, dates, and events. In the WriteAtHome Middle School American History course, the details of history are used to make cause-and-effect sense of why our world is the way it is. This class will focus on giving students a timeline frame of reference for major events and introduce some of the people involved in those events. This course surveys American History from the Exploration of the New World to the late 20th Century, with a strong emphasis on the American Founding through the Civil War and Reconstruction.
We will cover such topics as
Types of North American colonies and their interaction with Native communities
The contrast of colonial life and culture and European culture
The First Great Awakening, the path to Independence and the Revolutionary War
The framing of the Constitution, presidents and major events
Westward expansion, the Industrial Revolution, the Second Great Awakening, divisions in the country before the Civil War
Secession and the Civil War, Reconstruction, the Age of Industry
The turn of the Twentieth Century, World War I, the 1920s before the stock market crash, The Great Depression, World War II, societal change in America during the Cold War
This class meets on Wednesdays at 4 pm, Eastern Standard Time.
The weekly required reading will be assembled from various articles, primary sources, and textbooks available for free online, with links provided in the weekly required reading section of Canvas. The reading will be mostly synchronous with the weekly lessons.
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• attend weekly class sessions (recordings will be available after each session)
• complete weekly reading assignments
• take weekly quizzes and answer the discussion questions meant to promote critical thinking
• write two short, historical figure papers
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If you prefer a physical copy of a book in addition to the online resources provided, we will also give weekly reading suggestions from the WriteAtHome High School History class textbook, Paul Johnson’s A History of the American People.