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Nov 23, 2024
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HIST 153 - Contemporary America - U.S. History Credits: 3 Lecture Contact Hours: 3 Description: This course is a survey of American civilization within the last hundred years: turn-of-the-century growth and crisis; the Progressive Era and World War I; the 1920s, the Great Depression and the New Deal; World War II and the emergence of the U.S. as a superpower; affluence, consensus and confrontation in the 1950s-1960s; malaise, drift and fragmentation in the 1970s-1980s; and the U.S. in the world of the late 20th century.
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: Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall Check Course Availability
Course Competencies
- Demonstrate a clear, factual understanding of the historical development of contemporary America.
- 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.
- Distinguish between historical artifacts and other types of sources concerning history.
- Analyze historical evidence of the human experience/culture for the period covered by the course.
- Incorporate historical artifacts and other types of sources concerning history.
- Demonstrate digital literacy, especially as it relates to the study of history.
- 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.
- Analyze the role of the United States in an international/global context.
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