Short Assignments:
(Worth 10% of grade)
Most weeks of the course will include a short (ľ to 1 page) assignment due
the following class period. Some of these assignments will include maps and
lists of topics to locate. The lowest two of the grades earned will
be dropped. Assignments may be submitted early, but no late
assignments will be accepted.
Short Research Presentation:
(Worth 10% of grade) Signups
first day of class
Each student
will present to the rest of the class one short presentation from amongst
the options on page four and five of the syllabus. Presentations occur only
on the day listed on the syllabus. There are no make ups for missed
presentations.
Presentation Content:
1.
briefly identifying and describing the subject
2.
explaining the significance of the subject to the history of the time
3.
analysis of how this subject illustrates the major events occurring in
the world around it
Each presentation must:
1.
be more than a simple oral presentation (use other resources such as
computer, video, web, audio, slide show, hands on activity, etc.)
2.
last between three (3) and five (5) minutes. The time will be kept by a
student.
3.
include a handout distributed to the class
4.
email to the professor PRIOR to the class presentation a
bibliography of sources used to prepare the presentation including:
a.
three (3) different books
b.
three (3) web links, NONE of which may be a .COM
Journal Review Paper:
(20%) – six to nine pages
details of
the paper
Each student must
read and then summarize and critique three journal articles of their own choosing relating to the period
covered in this class from history journals available on JSTOR. The three articles you choose must deal with the same
topic. Some sample topics are; women and the Revolutionary army, slave
families in the 1700s, religious revivals in Virginia, the origins of the
anti-slavery movement, the creation of the National Bank, Caribbean pirates.
The campus library
website at
http://www.nvcc.edu/loudoun/library/ will provide a free connection to
JSTOR from on campus. From the library’s site, click “Magazines”; then click
on “JSTOR”. You can save a PDF copy of any article by clicking “download”.
Topics
submission:
TEN DAYS after RESEARCH DAY (include your
name, your research interest, and the bibliographic information (author,
title, journal, issue, pages) for your
three articles)
Final Paper due:
ONE WEEK PRIOR to EXAM #4 at the beginning of class
Late papers lose one
letter grade for each day they are late. Papers submitted on the due date
but after the beginning of class will lose ˝ a letter grade.
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