History 202: Course Journal Instructions

The professor requires all enrolled students to complete a course journal. The goals of the journal are: to provide practice in writing analytically; to encourage a critical approach to the assigned reading; and to give students experience in the process of historical analysis. The assignment makes students compare source documents from Reading the American Past with the general overview of events, actors and outcomes that The American Promise provides.

The source documents are found in the chapters of Reading the American Past. To complete the assignment, answer the questions that the professor presents below. Begin work on the assignment as soon as possible. When you compose your entries, do not quote from the sources or other resources. Instead, cite the material that you have selected for consideration or as evidence. Ask your professor for instructions. You may not use a pencil to complete your assignment. Otherwise, the structure and format of the assignment have no restrictions. You must complete one draft entry by April 22 and turn it in for the professor’s inspection. Keep the draft with your other entries as you work on the assignment during the quarter. Failure to turn in a draft for review will lead to a 15-point penalty against your assignment’s overall score. Students must turn in their completed journals, along with any reviewed drafts, in class on or before June 3.

Assignment 1: The Gilded Age.

Review the source documents in chapter 18 of Reading the American Past and chapter 18 in The American Promise. Write a journal entry that addresses the following questions. Cite the page number and the text from which you get the information that you are using to answer the professor’s questions.

  1. Inequality appears to be a given to the commentators in the reader. For each commentator, what did inequality signal about the United States and what did Americans need to do as a result?
  2. Judging from the textbook’s overview of conditions in the Gilded Age, which commentator appears to make the most sense? Explain your choice using evidence cited –not quoted –evidence from the readings.

Assignment 2: Dissent and Conflict in the 1890s

Review source documents in chapter 20 of Reading and chapter 20 in Promise. Then address these questions:

1. Which of the individuals whose testimony or writing appears in the reader is, in the context of the 1890s, the most radical? What makes them so? Explain your choice and cite evidence in support of your choice.

2 What made race so important to the individuals whose arguments appear in the reader selections in this chapter?

HST 202: Course Journal Instructions, continued Spring 2011

Assignment 3: Progressive Crusading

Using evidence from chapter 22 in Reading and chapter 22 in Promise, answer this question:

In what ways were the ideas and arguments that Wilson, Debs, and Norvell make

In their printed selections “Progressive” and in what ways did their ideas and

arguments depart from the Progressive movement?

Cite –do not quote –evidence in support of your assertions and comparisons.

Assignment 4: The New Deal in Context

Using evidence from chapter 24 in Reading and chapter 24 in Promise, address this question:

Hoover and Roosevelt had distinct views about the government and its role in

the economy. What events in the 1920s and 1930s supported the position of each?

Cite –do not quote –evidence in support of your assertions and comparisons.

Assignment 5: Society’s “Children”

Review sources in chapter 28 of Reading and chapter 28 of Promise. Then answer this question from the reader:

“4. Each of the documents in [chapter 28] makes assumptions about the state of American Society and what it means to be an American. To what extent do the documents agree and disagree about these matters? Each document called for changes in the state of American Society. Did the documents also advocate for changes in what it meant to be an American? If so what changes did they seek? Why?”

Cite–do not quote –evidence in support of your assertions and comparisons.