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Welcome!

Welcome to History 1102

This document is long, but essential reading if you want to learn about the past (and pass this class). We are going to be doing history, digital history, in ways that are both familiar and foreign to you. As a course in 2018, we can take advantage of new ways of doing history. Much of the basics of history haven’t changed: we still look at sources from the past, draw relationships between those sources, and then make arguments about why things happened to different people at specific times.

What has changed is our way of getting at the past, our toolbox of history. Before we had books, and museum objects, and pictures, and letters and all sorts of other physical stuff. And all that stuff was in museums and archives. Now, we have all that, and new digital tools that give use greater access to the stuff we had before, and new ways of understanding it. For example, go here. 15 years ago we simply couldn’t do this type of analysis. Now you can overlap a 1606 map with a modern map, and plot how long it would take to travel from Mali to Kenya, and how many language groups you would cross during the trip.

So, we are going to use a bunch of new digital tools this semester. One advantage of this approach is that everything I want you to use is: free, web-based, and user-friendly. As long as you can use a web-browser, you can use this semester’s digital tools. I assume you can successfully navigate a web browser: that’s it.

Our theme for the course will be poverty, that is how did people the world over adjust to scarcity.

Introduction

Our course begins officially today. I’ll walk you through the course design below and encourage you to poke around our course page and our D2L page and get comfortable with the two. More on why the two pages below For my online-only students, you can also start posting to our opening introductory discussion board.

By way of introduction, my legal name is David, but everyone calls my Jack. If you feel the need, you can address me as professor Norton, but I’m not terribly formal. I’ll address you by your first names, unless otherwise directed and, most importantly, I’ll always address you respectfully.

So, I’m Jack Norton, and I’ve been teaching at Normandale since 2009. I taught at the “U” while getting my Ph.D. in history, and have since taught on the south side of Chicago for two years before returning to MN to settle down. On that note, I’m a dad of elementary-age kids.

Course Design

The syllabus and grade plan have been posted to our course page.. Grades will be recorded in D2L

I am hosting our course on my own server. Doing so allows you (and your friends, family, whomever) open access to our material beyond the two years Normandale supports on D2L. Putting our course on the open web also lets me design a web site that includes only that which is useful for learning.

There are some things that I do need D2L, Normandale’s course management system for, mostly due to legal requirements. Anything having to do with your grades is protected by the Federal Education Rights Privacy Act (FERPA). So, you will submit assignments through D2L, check grades –and discuss readings for my online-only students- on D2L because all of those parts of our course need the extra security provided by D2L.

In addition to our course page, I’m also posting all of our class materials (assignments, syllabus, grading rubrics) on Github. Github is a repository, or file library. Should you ever wish to use what I’ve created for this class for your own purposes, you can get the original files on my Github page..

Please read them and then take your first quizzes, the scavenger hunt to familiarize you with the syllabus and get to know you quizzes. You can take the quiz as many times as you need to: your best score counts for the syllabus scavenger hunt. As long as you complete the get-to-know you quizzes, you’ll receive full credit.

As a general road map of the class, our class is divided into modules. Each model is two weeks long. They are:

  1. History bootcamp (Weeks 1 & 2)
  2. Time (Weeks 3 & 4)
  3. Images (Weeks 5 & 6)
  4. Maps (Weeks 7 & 8)
  5. Words (Weeks 9 & 10)
  6. Numbers (Weeks 11 & 12)
  7. Conversations (Weeks 13 & 14)
  8. Exhibits (Weeks 15 & 16)

We will address these modules in the above order. For all but History Bootcamp, the modules include readings, quizzes (due Sunday nights), and projects. A typical module takes place over two weeks and includes the following components:

  1. Readings: there is no textbook, all our readings are from the web and can be downloaded and printed. The readings are also on reserve in the library (paper).
  2. Quizzes
  3. Assignments: Instructions for how to do the project of the week.
  4. Discussion, online.

I’ll open the reading quizzes on Thursday at noon and it will close on Sunday night at 8 p.m. The quizzes will be timed with 90 seconds a question, and it will tell you how much time you have left on a timer. You can take the quiz twice and D2L will record the average of your two scores. I use quizzes to ensure you’ve read, not to ensure you’re a master of this week’s readings. If you can remember the main themes of the reading, you’ll be great. Looking up the answers to questions during the quiz will not allow you enough time to complete all the answers. Your lowest two quizzes will be dropped from total quiz grade. I add one question from the week before to each subsequent week. So, Week 3’s quiz will have one question from Week 2’s quiz. Week 4’s quiz will have one question from Week 2 and one question from Week 3’s quizzes.

I design the first week of a module to introduce you to history and get you comfortable with the materials with which we’re working. I want to give students lots of room to play and fail without it affecting their grade the first week, so you can do the project until you get it right. The second week of a module will be more rigorous in terms of critical thinking skills, and I’ll give you clear guidelines for your projects.

Discussions

To understand the past, we need to talk about it.

Online only students
Online-only students will have one to two discussions a week on the Discussions boards on D2L. Online discussions will be graded (more on this later), mostly based on the thoughtfulness of your contributions. The discussion boards replace what would normally be class time, so be sure to read them as I’ll drop helpful advice along the way that will be useful for your projects.

A note on technology:

For reasons of economy, future-proofing, and personal preference, everything your write for this course will be in in plain text in the Markdown syntax. I assume you have no experience using either, and so will train you in our first two weeks of class. You will be shocked how fast and easy writing in plain text is and how much easier your life can be without dealing with expensive software or fussing with formatting.

In addition, you’ll need to sign up for accounts with a number of web pages, such as google, to complete work for this course. I’ll walk you through it slowly and with plenty of time before you need to use the accounts. All the web services we’ll be using are free, such as google, twitter, or wordpress. I assume you know nothing about any website we’re using, and will train you accordingly.

For the content of the course, we are going to cover from around prehistory to around 1400. I assume you’ve had no college history and no world history, so this is a true introduction to both subjects. All readings and films will be in English, although you are welcome to use other language skills if you have them. I designed the course to prevent any single grade from ruining a final grade. My experience is that students who stay up on the readings, participate in discussions, and turn their work in on time have few problems in my courses. Those students who check out for even a short period struggle. I cannot emphasize this enough: you must submit regular work and check in regularly in this class or you will likely fail. Please see here if you are unsure if online education is for you.

First assignments:
  1. Read the syllabus.
  2. Tell me something about yourself in my get-to-know ya form.
  3. Read the History Bootcamp Readings and Assignments and work through its activities and readings in the first two weeks.

It would be useful to me if you could load a picture of yourself, or an avatar into D2L so that we can all get to know you.

Looking forward to meeting y’all.