The Scout, by Charles M. Russell, (1907)

U.S. History 1301 on the Web

Palo Alto College
San Antonio, Texas

Robert R. Hines
Office: SWF, 209

 

Class Calendar Course Syllabus Orientation Instructor

 



Orientation

Greetings, folks, and welcome to U.S. History on the Web. My name is Rob Hines, your instructor. This course is designed for students who are self-motivated, do not need much direction from their teachers, and who have some familiarity with computers and the Internet.  Access to a computer on a regular basis is a must.  Age makes no difference; motivation and self-discipline do.  I require a lot of reading and outside research in web based sources.  If you feel you have what it takes to proceed, do so. I believe this course will be interesting and rewarding! The FIRST thing I require for this course is my On-line Orientation. ALL students will have to complete this simple orientation questionaire BEFORE I can grade anything else. Thanks.

After you have completed the Orientation, go to the Class Calender link above. Inside, you will find 15 themes listed, each with its' own link.  Click on Theme Five. Everything I require for Theme #5 is there, plus the date it is due. I require nine out of the fifteen themes listed, three from each section. So you can make choices. Due dates are important. Once a theme's due date is past, you missed it.

At this point, I would like you to click on the course Syllabus. This page has all of the course requirements listed. You should familiarize yourself thoroughly with this page. How can I get an A? Great question. Read you syllabus carefully!

Students with individual questions or comments should direct them to me.
Objectives

I have designed this course with three broad goals in mind. First I wanted the course to be convenient. Convenience is important. Students won't have to come to campus for anything. Everything is on-line. Secondly, I believe this course is challenging. Students will do a lot of reading and writing, especially if an "A" is desired. For students seeking the multiple-choice experience, this course is not for you. Finally, I wanted to design a class that utilizes the broadest spectrum of the mass media as possible. While I do not use video-streaming or even Real Player here, students will be afforded the opportunity to listen to music, watch critically acclaimed films, visit museums, including "on-line" museums in Washington D.C., and other activities. In a very real sense, this is not only an introduction to American History, it is also an introduction to the Humanities. For students with curiosity and an open mind, this course will be interesting and rewarding.

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Class Calendar

This is the place to go for all of your assignments.  There are three sections to the course: A, B, and C. Students are required to complete three themes from each section of the course. The other two you can skip. For Section A, you do three of the five themes. The same for Section B. The same for Section C. Yes, that means you just skip the other ones. This way, you don't have to be doing something every week. No, you cannot do extra themes for extra credit, but some of the themes contain work you CAN do for extra credit. I can not accept late work for any reason.

 

A- Themes 1-5
(Complete Three)
B- Themes 6-10
(Complete Three)
C- Themes 11-15
(Complete Three)
Theme 1: A Collision of Cultures
Due: January 21
Theme 6: Documents of the Revolutionary Era
Due: February 25
Theme 11: The Indian & Manifest Destiny
Due: April 8
Theme 2: Two Settlements:
One Spanish, One English

Due: January 28
Theme 7: Gone West!
Due: March 4
Theme12: Slavery and the Old South:
An American Tragedy

Due: April 15
Theme 3: The Origins of Slavery
Due: February 4
Theme 8: The Irish Immigrant
Due: March 11
Theme 13: The Civil War, in Film & On the Web
Due: April 22
Theme 4: Gender & Religion
in the American Colonies

Due: February 11
Theme 9: Technology and Social
Change in the 19th Century

Due: March 25
Theme 14: The War That Never Goes Away
Due: April 29
Theme 5: The Revolutionary Era: 1763-1783
Due: February 18
Theme #10: From Women's Roles, To Women's Rights
Due: April 1
Theme #15: What Then, the Freed Slave?
Due: May 6




About the Instructor:
Robert R. Hines, Assistant Professor of History

I bring to this task a wide variety of experience in the field  many call education.  Behind me lies over twenty years of teaching experience.  In addition to my twenty years of work at Palo Alto College, I have taught history at the University of the Incarnate Word, Our Lady of the Lake University, and the University of Texas  at San Antonio.  I completed my Master of Science Degree at Illinois State University in 1985, whereupon I journeyed overseas to  Papua New Guinea, where I taught English and History for two years under the auspices of the United States Peace Corps

I made my way to South Texas in 1989, gaining employment as an adjunct instructor of history at Palo Alto College, the then new campus of the Alamo Community College District in San Antonio, Texas.  I am now a tenured Instructor of History at Palo Alto, where I teach both halves of U.S. History, World Civilization, Western Civilization, and East Asian Civilization.  With my colleagues Peter Myers and Rex Field, I am the co-editor of "Flyover History," a two volume collection of readings and documents in American History.  I am married to the former Kimberly Augustus.  We are the parents of two sons, Adam and Liam.

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