Academic Courses
Course Descriptions
| Course | Course Title | Credit Hours |
|---|---|---|
| HIST 152 | 19th Century America - U.S. History | (3-0) 3 Cr. Hrs. |
Course Description
This course is a survey of the expansion, crisis and renewal of the U.S. in the 19th century: demographic, economic, social and cultural change in Jacksonian America; the North and antebellum reform movements; the South and slavery; the West and territorial conquest and settlement; sectional struggle, the Civil War and Reconstruction; and emergence of modern, urban, industrial America to the beginning of the 20th century.
Prerequisites
(A requirement that must be completed before taking this course.)
- None.
Course Competencies
Upon successful completion of the course, the student should be able to:
- Explain the historical development of American civilization from a fledgling republic in the early nineteenth-century to an emerging world power on the eve of the twentieth-century from a factual perspective.
- Explain the historical development of American civilization from a fledgling republic in the early nineteenth-century to an emerging world power on the eve of the twentieth-century from a conceptual perspective.
- Evaluate the human experience as it relates to the historical period covered by the course.
- Relate the human experience-using history-to contemporary times.
- Analyze the unique geographical history of the regions covered by the course.
- Analyze the role geography played in the regions covered by the course.
- Analyze the role geography played in the historical period covered by the course.
- Explain major constitutional issues that emerged during the historical period covered by the course.
- Identify ways in which American history must be understood in an international context.
Note: This course may not be offered every semester.
Please check the HIST section of the current course schedule for availability.
