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Dec 26, 2024
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HIST 141 - History of Michigan and the Great Lakes Credits: 3 Lecture Contact Hours: 3 Description: This course is a general survey of the historical development of Michigan from the primitive wilderness to the present; growth of certain political, economic, social and cultural institutions which contribute to understanding Michigan and the Great Lakes area today; and emphasis on relating the history of the state to that of both the area and the nation.
Prerequisites: None. Corequisites: None. Recommended: None.
Course Category: Liberal Arts | Humanities or Social Sciences This course counts toward Schoolcraft’s General Education Requirements. This course counts toward a Michigan Transfer Agreement General Education Requirement.
This Course is Typically Offered: Fall, Winter Check Course Availability
Course Competencies
- Demonstrate a clear, factual understanding of the historical development of the history of Michigan and the Great Lakes.
- Evaluate the human experience as it relates to the historical period covered by the course.
- Analyze the role geography played in the historical period covered by the course.
- Relate the human experience-using history-to contemporary times.
- Analyze historical evidence of the human experience/culture for the period covered by the course.
- Distinguish between historical artifacts and other types of sources concerning history.
- Incorporate historical artifacts and other scholarly sources concerning history into their writing and research.
- Demonstrate digital literacy, especially as it relates to the study of history.
- Compile a summary of the Native American tribes of the region, their patterns of settlement, tribal life and reaction to European explorers and settlers.
- Investigate the economic development and major industries in Michigan and the Great Lakes region.
- Explore how modes of transportation have influenced Michigan’s economic development.
- Identify ways in which the history of the Great Lakes must be understood in an international context.
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