Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Quiz 4

World History Summer 2020
Quiz 4


Each of the following current events articles can be understood on multiple levels. The majority of people who read them will take them at face value. Whatever the author says will be taken as fact, and the reader will have little to no background / historical knowledge of the issues that may be involved. How has taking this journey through World History this summer grown your ability to understand or appreciate articles such as these? Perhaps you are in a better position to be a critical consumer of media. Maybe you have a deeper, longer-term understanding of the issues presented. Maybe you recognize more nuance and the intersection of issues. Maybe you just get more enjoyment out of reading them because you know what the authors are talking about. Or it could be something else entirely. 

How has learning World History grown your ability to understand or appreciate articles such as these? Another way to think about it is, think about how you would have read the article 3 months ago. Do you think you read it differently now? In what way?

Please choose 3 of the following 4 articles. Each is very current. Summarize the key points of the article and answer the question: How has learning World History this summer grown your ability to understand or appreciate the article? Be sure that your answers demonstrate historical knowledge… this is best done by citing examples and details from the historical record as it was presented to you during the course of our class. You may use our textbook, your blogs, other students’ blogs and any other resource used during the course of the class.

I suspect some of you will have very interesting answers, and you might want to read each other’s thoughts. Please post your responses on your blog by the due date, Sunday, July 19, 11pm.

Remember, respond to 3 of the articles. Plan to spend about 30 minutes on each response.


1) Umut Uras. “Turkey turning Hagia Sophia back into mosque divides social media.” Al Jazeera. July 11, 2020, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/07/turkey-turning-hagia-sophia-mosque-divides-social-media-200711104417533.html


2) Anne Mawathe. “Coronavirus: Why Africans should take part in vaccine trials.” BBC. May 18, 2020. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-52678741


3) Ganesh Chakravarthi. “Is it Time to Embrace the Anthropocene? The Anthropocene requires that humanity take responsibility for preserving the earth and its species.” The Diplomat. February 11, 2020. https://thediplomat.com/2020/02/is-it-time-to-embrace-the-anthropocene/


4) Justin Dallaire. “Why Pride sponsors shouldn’t hit pause during Black Lives Matter protests.” strategy. June 9, 2020. https://strategyonline.ca/2020/06/09/why-pride-sponsors-shouldnt-hit-pause-during-black-lives-matter-protests/

Thursday, July 9, 2020

Module 10

Week 10          21stCentury conflicts & issues. Quiz 4on WW Ch’s 19-23. Project presentations.
(July 13-17)    Due:    Module 10, Ch 22 (End of Empire), Ch 23 (Capitalism & Culture) 
                        & formal online presentation of research results

Last week! You’re just about there. And if you aren’t just about there, please communicate with me with a timeline for completing the remaining assignments. If this will take more than an additional week or two, we will need to consider filing an Incomplete grade for you for the class. Please do not accept a failing grade for the class, as the special circumstances in which we find ourselves preclude any opportunity to take the class again. If you are in danger of failing and are unable to complete the remaining work in a timely manner, we will need to file for an Incomplete and you will need to complete the requirements independently by May 2021.

1) Please follow the instructions for your Final Research Presentation, which were provided by email and also posted to the class website. Post your link to your blog by Wednesday, July 15, and read/comment on the blogs of others by 11pm Sunday, July 19.

2) Read chapters 22 and 23. Answer the same question for each chapter: In what way(s) do you see the historical developments described in this chapter continuing to evolve in our world today? Make a separate blog post for each chapter. 

3) Quiz 4 will be provided on Wednesday, July 15 and will be due by 11pm Sunday, July 19.

4) Breathe a collective sigh of relief at one more milestone toward graduation completed. 

Final Research Presentation

FINAL RESEARCH PRESENTATION
1) Please prepare a brief presentation in which you:
a)   Introduce the topic of your research.
b)   Describe at least one “best practice” (i.e. something you found most useful) from your Annotated Bibliography.
c)   Explain who your letter / communication is written for and why you chose this reader.
d)   Read your letter.
e)   Provide any concluding thoughts you may have about the research project &/or the class as a whole.
2) Post your presentation online in a location from which other students will be able to view it. Then post the link to your presentation on your blog. Some of you had trouble providing your Gilgamesh recording to me… it was on an invitation-only Google drive, for example, or you just emailed a large file to me instead of sharing it via link. Please keep those difficulties in mind when completing your research presentation assignment. You MUST share your recording in a way that enables your fellow students to view it, either via link or in some other manner you prefer, without running into similar difficulties. Your fellow students, for example, may not want to download an enormous file just to look at your recording, or they may not persist through multiple attempts to gain password-protected access to your file. If these barriers are in place, most will simply skip your recording and look at someone else’s.
3) Watch and comment on at least 3 other students’ presentations.

Monday, July 6, 2020

Module 9

Module 9:  20thCentury challenges.
(July 6-12)
Due:    Module 9, RP & WW Ch 20 (Collapse at Center), Ch 21 (World Communism)

You’re almost done, everyone. Keep up that great energy and know that we will be winding down these last two weeks. 

1) Your Research Project– a combination of the Annotated Bibliography and the Letter, plus a small amount for your Presentation – will be tentatively graded as soon as I have the final draft of your letter. That’s due July 12, but you can send it to me earlier if you are ready. If you haven’t yet sent me a draft of your letter, or are stuck farther back in the project and still haven’t sent me your Annotated Bibliography, please prioritize that as your first work toward this class this week.

2) Presentation of your Research Project will be online. We can do this via a live Zoom meeting if there are enough of you who would like to do that, but again, we have students currently on at least two continents and spread out over 2-3 time zones, so I know not everyone would be able to do that. If we do a Zoom session for this, I would propose Wednesday evening the final week of class (next week) at about 7pm Pacific time. Please let me know if you are interested and available. Otherwise, you will record yourself making your final presentation, post your recording online in a way that makes it available to your fellow students and me, and post the link to your blog. An assignment sheet outlining the requirements for the final presentation will be provided later this week.

3) In addition to finishing your project, you also have two chaptersto read this week. Please post one blog entry per chapter, choosing one of the side bar questions, or one of the end-of-chapter big picture questions, to focus your post.

I will also post Module 10 later this week, so those of you who are eager to complete all the requirements of the class and want to get ahead can do that.

I hope you all had a nice but safe 4thof July celebration.

Monday, June 29, 2020

Module 8

Week 8            The 20thCentury, Light week to catch up and slow down.
(Jun 29-Jul 3)  Due:    Module 8, RP check-in & WW Intro to Part 6, Ch 19 (Empires in Collision)

Congratulations you all – you’re in the home stretch! Those of you taking Summer term 1 classes have wrapped those up, so hopefully some of you are experiencing some much-needed reduction in your workload. In some cases, I know you’re also moving right on to new classes for Summer term 2 so relief is not quite yet here. But it’s close. We only have 3 more weeks for our Summer 2020 journey through the history of the human world.

1) This week, we look forward to celebrating July 4 and all it represents. For your first blog post, please write a historically-informed reflection on the state of the nation as we get ready to celebrate the 4thof July.“Historically-informed” means you should not simply state your opinions, but rather make a statement that is grounded in the historical record as it has been presented to you so far this semester. Your reflection should include at least one thing you’ve learned from your textbook so far.

2) Let’s also take an opportunity to look back. The coronavirus pandemic is not the only one humanity has suffered. Spend some time learning about any other historical pandemic by doing a little self-guided research either via internet or in your textbook. What other pandemic can you find that has plagued humanity? Where did it strike? Why were people so vulnerable to it? How long did it last? Did the people who experienced it learn anything from the experience or do anything differently afterwards? What were the long-term effects of it on human populations or the planet? These questions are just to get you started. You do not need to answer them all… just use them if they are helpful. Write a blog post summarizing what you’ve learned about pandemics and what it has been like for you personally to live through this present historical event, the pandemic of 2020.

3) Read the intro to Part 6, and chapter 19 in your textbook. You do not need to make a blog entry about the reading this week.

4) Remember, the DRAFT of your letter is due by July 1, 11pm. You’ll email this to me.

Thanks for all your hard work so far. Have a good week!

Patti Andrews

Monday, June 22, 2020

Module 7

Week 7            Western expansion & globalization. Quiz 3Worksheet on WW Chapters 13-18.
(Jun 22-26)     Due:    Module 7, WW Intro to Part 5, Ch 16 (Atlantic Revolutions),
      Ch 17 (Revolutions of Industrialization), Ch 18 (Colonial Encounters)

This week, we continue to come closer to a world you’ll begin to recognize. 

You’ll get foundational knowledge about European colonialism and perhaps a better understanding of how white supremacist concepts grew hand in hand with the colonial endeavor. We are living through times when many people want to dismantle those concepts – it helps to know where they came from and how they grew in our specific manifestation of human relationships. 

You’ll also get foundational knowledge about the process of industrialization – another process that many advanced thinkers are now dismantling for the benefit of humanity’s future and that of the planet itself. 

And you’ll get foundational knowledge about the core founding values of the United States, which arose from the European Enlightenment and traveled to this continent, where they were given an opportunity to grow in the context of our founding documents – the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence – and evolve into the democracy we have today. Freedom and equality are two of those core values, important goals of the “American experiment.” What we mean by those words has changed over time. To whom do they apply? To what aspects of life do they apply? Even this very week, the Supreme Court has weighed in on these questions, and of course the pandemic is challenging ideas relating to personal freedom. And, like industrialization and like the colonial legacy of white supremacy, there are also people today who would like to dismantle parts of our evolved understanding of what it means to be a democracy seeking ever greater progress toward freedom and equality. 

These foundational aspects of the Modern era are so important that I don’t want you to divert your attention to a quiz this week. I’d really like for you to have time to read the chapters and process the weighty information you’ll find there. With that in mind, we will have a Worksheet this week, in lieu of Quiz 3. That’s right, no quiz this week. The Worksheet will include some references to chapters 13-15 from last week, but will primarily focus on the chapters for this week. You’ll make 2 separate blog entries to complete the worksheet and those will be your only blog entries for this week.

I will be reading your Annotated Bibliographies and will reply to each of you individually with comments and feedback. The assignment sheet for your letter, the second part of your research assignment, will be attached to that email.

Here’s the worksheet for this week:

Summer World History – Quiz 3àWorksheet for Module 7 (replaces Quiz 3)

Let’s not give you test anxiety this week. This is an open book worksheet for you to complete as you read your chapters. It also contains some questions relevant to last week’s reading. But it is not a quiz. Please answer all 10 questions and post to your blog.

NOTE: YOU WILL NEED TO MAKE 2 SEPARATE BLOG POSTS TO COMPLETE THIS WORKSHEET. POST YOUR RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS 1-9 FIRST, THEN POST YOUR RESPONSE TO QUESTION 10 SEPARATELY.

1) What was The Great Dying? Cite examples and details from the historical record in your response. Could this be considered a genocide? Why/ why not?

2) What did native Siberians and native Americans have in common in terms of their experiences with Europeans during the early Modern period?

3) Discuss the history and impact of the Indian Ocean trade network (the Sea Roads) from the Classical to Modern periods.

4) Look at the pie chart titled “The Destinations of Slaves” on page 627 of our textbook. What might people find surprising about the percentages of slaves who disembarked in different parts of the Americas? What factors explain why the percentages were this way?

5) What does Strayer mean by the “echoes of Atlantic Revolutions”? Cite examples and details from the historical record in your response. Are the Atlantic Revolutions still echoing in the 21stCentury?


6) What did feminists and abolitionists have in common? How and why did they sometimes work together?


8) What was the Industrial Revolution? Where and when did it begin? Discuss its long-term significance to people, cities and the planet.


9) Chapter 18 contains some powerful images. Why do you suppose Strayer chose to include these specific images? How do they illustrate concepts introduced in this chapter? Choose one image and a) describe it, b) explain how it illustrates a concept from the chapter, and c) give your general thoughts about the image, as you might do in the context of a small in-class discussion group. The images you can choose from are (your version of the textbook may use different titles and page numbers):
            An American View of British Imperialism (p.790)
            European Racial Images (p.791)
            Map 18.2 Conquest and Resistance in Colonial Africa (p.796)
            Colonial Violence in the Congo (p.803)
            The Educated Elite (p.815)



REMEMBER, QUESTION 10 SHOULD BE IN A SEPARATE BLOG POST (BECAUSE YOU WON’T BE ABLE TO COMPLETE IT UNTIL YOU’VE READ SOMEONE ELSE’S ANSWER TO QUESTION 9)

10) Find a classmate’s posting for Question 9. How would you respond to your classmate’s comments if you were participating in an in-class small group discussion about the image? 

Monday, June 15, 2020

Module 6

Week 6            Early Modern World. Conducting research.
(Jun 15-19)     Due:        Module 6, Research Proposal / ROL & WW Intro to Part 4, Ch 13 (Empires & Encounters),
                        Ch 14 (Commerce & Consequence), Ch 15 (Religion & Science)

Happy Monday everyone. The online debate format was not viable. I won’t ding anyone for not getting it right, but I will give some extra credit to those who came closest. I moved back to the Bay Area this past week (I was sheltering in place in Modoc, as you might recall – am now back in East Palo Alto.) As a consequence, I got behind in my grading… I will be finishing your Xinchen/Claudius papers first and then your Quiz 2s. I’m feeling like some of you (maybe all of you… maybe me, too!) could use an easier week. It’s hard to decide what to omit, but let’s modify our reading load for this week as follows:

Chapter 13: Just read the first 3 sections of the chapter: European Empires in the Americas; Comparing Colonial Societies in the Americas; and The Steppes and Siberia, the Making of a Russian Empire.

Chapter 14: Entire chapter. Sorry, there’s no section I can cut here.

Chapter 15: Just read the last 2 sections: Persistence and Change in Afro-Asian Cultural Traditions; and A New Way of Thinking, The Birth of Modern Science

1) For each chapter, just pick one sidebar or big picture question per chapter to reflect on in a blog post. So that’s 3 blogs posts this week, one for each of the 3 chapters.

2) I’m also going to dial back your research requirement a bit. You will NOT have to write a research paper. You WILL have to write an Annotated Bibliography(which will require you to follow an academically rigorous method for gathering information), and you WILL have to write a letter to someone, or a social media post, in which you use the historical knowledge gained through your research to make the case that the reader should act (or perhaps think) in a certain way with respect to a certain issue. Your first step, then, is to think of an issue about which you are passionate (or curious), and about which you would like to be able to speak more knowledgeably. Examples follow below. For this week, just think of your topic and do the Annotated Bibliography. Please email your AB to me when it’s done, and don’t begin your letter until I’ve had a chance to look at the AB.

Examples:

* You are passionate about your position on racial equality. Would you be better able to convince others to think or act differently if you were more knowledgeable about the history of racial equality?

* You are curious about how the present pandemic compares to other pandemics that have afflicted humanity. Would you be better able to put it in context for yourself and others if you were more knowledgeable about the historical details of other pandemics from the past?

* You are passionate about leadership within the context of a democracy. Would you be more confident of your opinions if they were grounded in more historical reading and reflection? Perhaps go all the way back to Plato – what did he have to say about how democracy would play out? How about Machiavelli? MLK Jr?

* You are passionate about some wrong of the past that hasn’t yet been righted. Is there a person or organization you could write to, explaining why now is the time for that wrong to be righted? Perhaps suggesting a way to do that? Would your argument be stronger if it were grounded in solid historical research about the wrong?

* You feel strongly that our president (current or future) should be more knowledgeable about some aspect of the historical past. You could write a letter addressed to both candidates running for president in 2020 and give them a little history lesson on that subject area, explaining why you feel it is so important for them to know the subject area more deeply if they are going to serve as president.

* Etc. These are just examples to get you thinking… 

Once you have chosen a subject area you’d like to learn more about, follow the instructions below to write an Annotated Bibliography on that subject area. Remember that the NDNU librarians are in fact available over summer term for online help if you need them! Send me your AB by email when you’re done.


Annotated Bibliography

The purpose of this assignment is to help you prepare for your research assignment by identifying the main concepts in your research topic and finding relevant and authoritative sources that will help you analyze your topic. 

Assignment addresses IL criteria- Determine the extent of information needed, access the needed information, evaluate information and its sources critically.

Instructions:
·      Write 1-2 sentences describing your research topic and identifying the key concepts in your research topic.
·      Find three relevant sources on your research topic.  Examples include:
o   print or electronic booksfound using the library catalog
o   scholarly articlesfound using one of the library databases
o   authoritativewebsitesor news articles
·      Cite each source using APA or MLA format. List your annotations in alphabetical order.
·      Create an annotation for each source that includes:
o   1-2 sentences explaining how you found your source. What keywords and search terms were useful? What was the best combination of terms? Why did you choose those words?  Where did you search for your source (which database, search engine, etc.) and why?
o   2-3 sentences summarizing the content of the resource. What are the main points?  Is your source a primary source or a secondary source?  Scholarly or popular?  Based on fact or opinion?
o   2-3 sentences evaluating the author(s) and publisher. Who is the author? What are his/her credentials as an expert on this subject? Are they affiliated with a university or college? What are their degrees? Have they published other articles or books on this topic? Hint: do a web search for your author to find out more about them.   Who is the publisher?  What are their credentials?  Do they have a bias or agenda in publishing the information?
o   2-3 sentences describing the relevance of the resource to your research. How will you use it in your paper? Is the information in this resource general (like for background information) or specific, and how can you tell?  How does this source differ from the others you chose?  What perspectives or aspects of the topic does this source represent?
·      Has this assignment helped you prepare to write your research paper? Please explain why or why not.