HIST 122: Development of Modern America
HIST 122-B01: Development of Modern America
(Summer 2025)
10:30 AM to 12:30 PM MWF
Online
Section Information for Summer 2025
This course examines changes that have occurred in the United States since the end of Civil War Reconstruction. Over the course of the semester, we will address three prominent themes in American history: changes in the role of the federal government in everyday life, the emergence of the United States as a world power, and changes in social relations that gave working people, women, and people of color a voice in public life. While we will be studying the past, this course will help students understand the world we live in today.
By the end of this course, students will be able to identify the major periods of modern American history; explain how industrialization, immigration, urbanization, and consumerism were key historical forces in the formation of modern America; explain how the meaning of citizenship changed across time; explain how the United States became a world power; answer a historical question by interpreting primary sources; differentiate between opinions and substantiated scholarly claims; and reflect and write critically about the diversity of human experience as influenced by geographical location, race, ethnicity, gender, and class. Skills developed in the course include reading comprehension, textual analysis, framing historical questions, critical thinking, formal and informal writing, and oral communication.
HIST 122 B01 is an online live video section.
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Course Information from the University Catalog
Credits: 3
This course is graded on the Undergraduate Regular scale.
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