History 423/523
Home Up History 425/525 History 423/523

 

Schedule
Course Themes & Questions
Learning Outcomes
523 Syllabus
Grad. Review Assign.
Major Project
Final Paper

HISTORY 423:
IDAHO AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST

University of Idaho

Fall 2007

Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2:00 p.m. – 3:15 p.m

Administration 336

 

Professor Adam M. Sowards

Office: Administration 319 (mailbox in Admin. 315)

Phone: 885-0529

E-Mail: asowards@uidaho.edu

Web: http://www.class.uidaho.edu/asowards/

Office Hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:00 a.m. to 12:15 p.m., and by appointment

Please Note: It is my pleasure to do what I can to help you meet your goals in this class. If you find yourself having trouble, please send me e-mail, use my office hours, or set up an appointment to see me.

 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

This course will survey major developments in Pacific Northwest history, including the territory from the Pacific Coast to the Rocky Mountains, from northern California to southern Alaska, including British Columbia. We will generally discuss cultural, economic, environmental, ethnic, political, and social topics. We will examine tensions between various groups and individuals, conflict between economic and environmental imperatives, the changing nature of the Pacific Northwest’s political and social climate, the development of a unique Pacific Northwest culture and identity, and the relationship between the Pacific Northwest and the larger nation and world. Of special emphasis this semester will be the ways history is constructed—in books, in public, in the classroom. In the process, we will learn much about the development of the regional past as we will hone our skills of critical thinking.

 

REQUIRED BOOKS

·         Carlos Arnaldo Schwantes, The Pacific Northwest: An Interpretive History, revised and enlarged edition

·         Laura Woodworth-Ney, Mapping Identity: The Creation of the Coeur d’Alene Indian Reservation, 1805-1902

·         Monica Sone, Nisei Daughter

·         William Dietrich, The Final Forest: The Battle for the Last Great Trees of the Pacific Northwest

·         Other readings will be placed on reserve in the library or will be accessible via the Internet

 

ASSIGNMENTS AND GRADING

Major Project (25%) One of the most valuable things advanced undergraduates can do in a history class is an independent research project. It allows students to practice being historians and gives you a chance to study, in-depth, a topic of your own choosing. For this assignment, students will conduct a research project in Northwest history based chiefly in primary sources (i.e., those documents produced at the time and by participants or observers). Topics must be approved by me. Your final paper will be approximately ten pages and consult at least five primary sources and three scholarly sources. Your main interpretations must be drawn from the primary sources.

 

Midterm Exams (2 * 15% = 30%) You will take two in-class midterm exams. These will include essay question(s) that will require you to integrate the readings you have done in the class, as well as lectures. It is possible there will be other aspects to the midterm (e.g., identification of key terms, events, laws, documents, etc.), but if so, I will announce them no later than a week before the exams.

 

Final Paper (25%) In lieu of a final exam, you will write a final essay (approximately eight to ten pages) that critically assesses The Pacific Northwest. This final paper will require that you engage the ideas we have encountered in all our readings, lectures, and discussions. In particular, you will consider the process of constructing history for a general textbook and the challenges of that endeavor.

 

Preparedness, Quizzes, In-Class Assessments (20%): Just as you don’t get paid for your job just by showing up, you don’t get credit by just being in the classroom. I expect you to come to class ready to work. That means you will have read the assignment carefully and critically and will be prepared to offer your thoughts, ideas, and questions about the reading. Because my experience has taught me that many students will not do that without inducement, a significant part of your grade will be determined by your preparedness. This will be judged in several ways:

Participation will be evaluated by contributions to discussions, attendance, and in-class assignments, through general observations by professor and peers. Talking a lot is not necessarily a surefire way to get high grades here (although never speaking is not a positive alternative either). Good participation requires thoughtful listening, intelligent questioning, and careful responses.

 

Quizzes may be used to test student comprehension of reading material or lectures. They are likely to be unannounced. If you miss a quiz, you will not have the opportunity to make it up unless you made prior arrangements with me. If we have at least five quizzes, I will drop the lowest one; if we have at least eight, I will drop the lowest two.

 

Other work done in class may be collected; this may be individual or collaborative assignments and is likely not to be given a letter grade but a meets / fails to meet / exceeds expectation grade.

 

POLICIES

Late Work Policy: Your grade drops one full grade for each day your work is late. With legitimate, documented excuses or for absences arranged ahead of time, exceptions can be made.

 

Grade Challenges: I am willing to entertain grade challenges provided they are submitted in writing and that you wait 48 hours after the assignment is returned before you hand in your objection. You will then need to set up an appointment with me to discuss the assignment and grade. You must initiate this process within one week of the time the assignment was returned to the class.

 

Plagiarism: To plagiarize is to present someone else’s work as your own. To present someone else’s work as your own means to use someone else’s information, ideas, or writing without explicitly acknowledging with quotation marks and/or citations that the ideas and/or writing are not your own. You may be plagiarizing even if you are not directly quoting. Plagiarism is a serious offense and I will give a 0 to the first assignment in which a student plagiarizes. If a student plagiarizes again, I will fail that student in the course. If you have ANY questions or confusions about plagiarism, please let me know before you turn in your work. It is essential to be using others’ ideas and information; however, you just must provide credit where credit is due. You may find additional information about Academic Honesty (and dishonesty) as part of the Student Code of Conduct: (http://www.students.uidaho.edu/default.aspx?pid=56182).

 

Accommodations: Reasonable accommodations are available for students who have a documented disability. Please notify me during the first week of class of an accommodation(s) needed for the course. Late notification may mean that requested accommodations might not be available. All accommodations must be approved through Disability Support Services located in the Idaho Commons Building, Rm. 333, 885-7200, or dss@uidaho.edu.