History
- Department Information
- Program Description
- Career Possibilities
- Features
- Preparation
- Major Requirements (B.A.)
- Other Degree Requirements
- Minor Requirements
- Certificate in Public History
- Undergraduate Courses
Department Information
Department of History
College of Letters, Arts, and Social Sciences
Office: Meiklejohn Hall 4036
Phone: (510) 885-3207; FAX: (510) 885-4791
Website: http://csueastbay.edu/history
Professor Emeritus
Henry F. Reichman, Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley
Professors
Dee E. Andrews, Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania
Richard A. Garcia, Ph.D. University of California, Irvine
Jessica Weiss, Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley
Associate Professors
Vahid Fozdar, Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley
Bridget Ford, Ph.D. University of California, Davis
Robert A. Phelps, Ph.D. University of California, Riverside
Nancy M. Thompson (Chair), Ph.D. Stanford University
Assistant Professors
Linda Ivey, Ph.D. Georgetown University
Khal Schneider, Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley
Program Description
Students who pursue work in History benefit in a variety of ways. Their studies afford them entree to the riches of the recorded past and understanding of the process of historical change. At the same time, a History major enables them to develop critical reading and writing skills which are valuable in life and in any employment field they choose to enter.
Student Learning Outcomes
Students graduating with a B.A. in History from Cal State East Bay should:
- know basic analytic concepts that help historians assemble, organize, and interpret evidence;
- demonstrate significant knowledge of major events and trends in their area of concentration;
- be able to write and speak clearly and persuasively about historical themes and topics;
- be able to conduct basic historical research in primary source materials, provide original interpretation of sources, and provide accurate referencing for all sources;
- be able to comprehend differences and similarities among peoples and cultures over time and be able to address historical issues from an informed perspective.
Career Possibilities
- Archivist
- Attorney
- Corporate Historian
- Curator
- Diplomat/Foreign Service Officer
- Government Service
- International Relations Specialist
- Journalist
- Legal Assistant
- Librarian
- Museum Worker
- Professor
- Politician
- Public Administrator
- Researcher
- Teacher
- Writer
Features
The B.A. degree major in History requires 68 units in History, 24 at the lower division and 44 at the upper division level. Foundation courses (28 units) provide an introduction to the methods and purposes of historical study, historical writing, and surveys of world history and U.S. history. Option requirements (16 units) permit specialization in a particular area, while elective courses (16 units) provide additional breadth. Capstone courses in historiography and historical method acquaint students with the theory and history of historical study and provide opportunities for the student to engage in original historical research.
Preparation
Students planning to major in History should pay particular attention to the lower division requirements in the major: some of these may be satisfied before coming to Cal State East Bay.
Advanced Placement: Students who score a "3," "4," or "5" on the College Entrance Examination Board's Advanced Placement Test in European History will be granted 8 units of credit for HIST 1015 and HIST 1016 which count towards the lower division requirements in the History major. Students who earn a "3," "4," or "5" on the College Entrance Examination Board's Advanced Placement Test in U.S. History will receive 8 units of credit equivalent to HIST 1101 and 1102. Credit will apply to the U.S. history and U.S. Constitution requirements for graduation, but not to the California state and local government requirement. An additional course is required to complete the California state and local government requirement.
Major Requirements (B.A.)
Please consult an advisor in your major department for clarification and interpretation of your major requirements. The major consists of 68 units; the B.A. degree requires a total of 180 units.
- Core Curriculum (36 units)
- Foundation Courses (28 units)
The following courses should be taken as early in the major as possible:
- HIST 1014 World Civilizations I (or 1017) (4)
- HIST 1015 World Civilizations II (4)
- HIST 1016 World Civilizations III (4)
- HIST 1101 History of the United States to 1877 (4)
- HIST 1102 History of the United States Since 1877 (4)
- HIST 2010 Introduction to History (4)
- HIST 3010 Historical Writing (4)
- Capstone Courses (8 units)
The following courses should be taken in the student's final three quarters. All Foundation courses must be completed before enrollment in Capstone courses.
- HIST 4030 Historiography (4)
- One from the following (4):
- HIST 4031 Historical Research Methods
- HIST 4032 Introduction to Public History
- Foundation Courses (28 units)
- Option Requirements (16 units)
The Department of History offers several options for degree candidates. Majors should choose one of the following options: United States History, European History, Asian History, Latin American History, History of California and the American West. Students may also design a topical (e.g., women's history), geographic (e.g., Russian history), or period (e.g., ancient and medieval history) option of their own with the advance written approval of the department chair.
- United States History
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- HIST 3411
- HIST 3412
- HIST 3413
- HIST 3414
- HIST 3415
- HIST 3416
- HIST 3417
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- HIST 3224
- HIST 3500
- HIST 3503
- HIST 3505
- HIST 3511
- HIST 3515
- HIST 3517
- HIST 3530
- HIST 3547
- HIST 3550
- HIST 3553
- HIST 3567
- HIST 3570
- HIST 3571
- HIST 3572
- HIST 3575
- HIST 3802
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- European History
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- HIST 3107
- HIST 3108
- HIST 3127
- HIST 3128
- HIST 3130
- HIST 3150
- HIST 3160
- HIST 3170
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- HIST 3005
- HIST 3017
- HIST 3123
- HIST 3223
- HIST 3224
- HIST 3230
- HIST 3801
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- Asian History
Four courses (16 units) from the following:
- HIST 3302
- HIST 3303
- HIST 3305
- HIST 3307
- HIST 3312
- HIST 3313
- HIST 3325
- HIST 3340
- HIST 3345
- HIST 3803
- Latin American History
Four courses (16 units) from the following:
- HIST 3600
- HIST 3605
- HIST 3622
- HIST 3632
- HIST 3804
- History of California and the American West
- HIST 3500, 3511 (8)
- Two courses (8 units) from the following:
- HIST 3503
- HIST 3505
- HIST 3515
- HIST 3517
- HIST 3530
- HIST 4032
- United States History
- Electives (16 units)
Four upper division courses (16 units) in History. These must include at least one course from each of at least two different option areas outside the student's option. HIST 3400 may not be counted towards the major.
Other Degree Requirements
In addition to major requirements, every student must also complete the University requirements for graduation which are described in the Baccalaureate Degree Requirements chapter in the front of this catalog. These include the General Education-Breadth requirements; the second composition (ENGL 1002) requirement; the cultural groups/women requirement; the performing arts/activities requirement; the U.S. history, U.S. Constitution, and California state and local government requirement; the University Writing Skills Requirement; and the residence, unit, and grade point average requirements.
Minor Requirements
The minor consists of 32 units. HIST 3400 may not be counted towards the minor.
- Lower Division (16 units)
- HIST 1014 World Civilizations I (or 1017) (4)
- HIST 1015 World Civilizations II (4)
- HIST 1016 World Civilizations III (4)
- HIST 2010 Introduction to History (4)
- Upper Division (16 units)
- HIST 3010 Historical Writing (4) (prerequisite: HIST 2010)
- Area Requirements
A minimum of four units of upper division History courses in each of the following areas: (1) Europe, (2) United States, and (3) Latin America or Asia (12)
Certificate in Public History
The certificate consists of 28 units.
- Prerequisites:
HIST 2010 Introduction to History and HIST 3010 Historical Writing (Note: may be waived with permission of the Public History and Internship Coordinator).
- Core Courses (12 units)
- HIST 3503 History of San Francisco Bay Area (4)
- HIST 4010 Internship (4)
- HIST 4032 Introduction to Public History (4)
- Electives (16 units)
(Substitutions may be made with permission of the Public History and Internship Coordinator)
- HIST 3500 California History (4); or HIST 3511 The American West (4)*
- HIST 3505 California Environmental History (4); or HIST 3535 American Indian History (4); or HIST 3538 American Indians in the 20th Century (4)
- Skills Course in Community Studies or Landscape Studies (4), as recommended by the Public History and Internship Coordinator.
- Skills Course in Practical Application (4), as recommended by the Public History and Internship Coordinator.
*Students preferring to focus outside the Bay Area may substitute other electives for HIST 3500/3511 with the permission of the Public History and Internship Coordinator.
Undergraduate Courses
| Course Number | Course Information |
|---|---|
| 1014 | World Civilizations I (4) To ca. 800. Neolithic revolution. River Valley civilizations: Egypt, Mesopotamia, India, China. Ancient Hebrews. The Mediterranean: Hellenic, Hellenistic, and Roman civilizations. Emergence and spread of Christianity and Islam. Gupta India. Not open to students with credit for HIST 1017. |
| 1015 | World Civilizations II (4) Ca. 800 to ca. 1700. Empires and civilizations: Sung China, Japan, West Africa, Byzantium, Abbasid Iraq and Islamic Spain, Aztecs and Incas, Christian Europe and feudalism. Eurasian migrations. European self-transformation and expansion. Monarchic states and market economies. Scientific revolution. Not open to students with credit for HIST 2018. |
| 1016 | World Civilizations III (4) Ca. 1700 to present. European absolutism. Enlightenment and democratic revolutions. Industrial capitalism and social transformation. Liberalism, conservatism, nationalism, socialism. Imperialism in East Asia, India, Middle East, Africa. Second scientific revolution. World Wars, Communism, Fascism. Cold War and end of colonialism. Not open to students with credit for HIST 2019. |
| 1017 | Ancient World Civilizations (4) An overview of ancient world civilizations throughout the medieval period. Egypt, Mesopotamia, India, China. Ancient Hebrews. Hellenic, Hellenistic, and Roman civilizations and the emergence and spread of Christianity and Islam. Not open to students with credit for HIST 1014. |
| 1101 | History of the United States to 1877 (4) A survey of the development of the American nation from colonial times to the close of Reconstruction. This course, when combined with credit for History 1102, meets statutory requirements in U.S. History, U.S. Constitution, and California State and Local Government. |
| 1102 | History of the United States Since 1877 (4) A survey of American history from Reconstruction to the present. This course, when combined with credit for History 1101, meets statutory requirements in U.S. History, U.S. Constitution, and California State and Local Government. |
| 2010 | Introduction to History (4) Seminar on historical study as academic discipline. Focus on historical argument, interpretation of evidence and sources, source citation, and oral expression. Introduction to historical writing, historiography, and library and Internet research. Not open to students who have taken HIST 1000. |
| Course Number | Course Information |
|---|---|
| 3005 | Frankenstein: The Making of a Myth (4) Mary Shelley's classic tale Frankenstein against the background of the Romantic movement. The Frankenstein story in literature, film, and other forms of popular culture as a critical insight into modern science and technology. |
| 3107 | History of Ancient Greece (4) From the Bronze Age to Alexander the Great. The Homeric World; the development of the city-state; classical thought and culture; the Persian and Peloponnesian Wars; the rise of Macedon. |
| 3108 | History of Ancient Rome (4) Politics and society in Rome from foundation to AD 565. Etruscans; Republic and Punic Wars; Julius Caesar; Age of Augustus, and the pax Romana; paganism and Christianity; barbarian incursions; decline of empire in the West. Not open to students with credit for HIST 3109 or 3110. |
| 3123 | History of Medieval Christianity (4) The Christian faith and its institutions from ca. 500 to ca. 1500: development of church hierarchy, monasticism, conflicts between secular and ecclesiastical authority, the medieval university, theology, maintaining an orthodox faith, and Christianity as perceived and practiced by ordinary Christians. |
| 3125 | Women in Medieval and Early Modern Europe (4) Women's political, economic, religious, domestic, and educational spheres in medieval and early modern Europe. Includes primary sources and emphasis on historical interpretation. |
| 3127 | Europe in the Early Middle Ages (4) European society and politics, 300-1150. Fall of Rome; Germanic kingdoms; Benedictine monasticism; rise of the papacy; pagans and conversion; Carolingian Renaissance; Viking invasions; Gregorian Reform. |
| 3128 | Europe in the Later Middle Ages (4) European society and politics, 1150-1400. Popular religion; the Crusades; heresy and the Inquisition; kings and law; growth of towns and trade; bubonic plague and dissolution of the medieval order. |
| 3130 | Renaissance and Reformation Europe (4) Europe, 1350-1550. Politics, economics, arts, humanism, and science in the Renaissance; the Protestant and Catholic Reformations. Not open to students with credit for HIST 3131. |
| 3150 | Early Modern Europe, 1550-1789 (4) Wars of religion, constitutional and absolutist struggles and the resulting political philosophies; age of exploration and discovery; intellectual and technological effects of the scientific revolution; age of Enlightenment. |
| 3160 | Europe in the 19th Century (4) The Revolutionary and Napoleonic legacy; Romanticism, Liberalism, and Socialism; the Revolutions of 1830 and 1848; Nationalism and the consolidation of states; Darwinism and its social ramifications; European imperialism and the First World War. |
| 3170 | Europe in the 20th Century (4) Europe's tumultuous century. Two World Wars; rise and fall of fascism and Communism; decolonization; changing attitudes toward social class, sexuality, and the family. |
| 3223 | History of the Soviet Union (4) The revolutionary movement in Russia, Marxism-Leninism, the Provisional Government and the Bolshevik coup, domestic and foreign affairs under Lenin and his successors. |
| 3224 | The Cold War (4) History of the Cold War from 1939 to the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. |
| 3230 | Science and Medicine to 1700 (4) Major developments in Western science, medicine, and natural history from antiquity through the seventeenth century. Examines early attempts by philosophers, mathematicians, and physicians to understand nature and the human body. Origins of the scientific method. |
| 3240 | Science and Medicine From 1700 to the Present (4) Major developments in Western science and medicine from the Enlightenment. Examines major scientific advances in historical context emphasizing their effects on modern society: (1) Darwin to the discovery of DNA structure; (2) atomic physics to the bomb; (3) germ theory to genetic therapy. Not open to students with credit for HIST 3331. |
| 3801 | Topics in European History (4) Reading, discussion, and research on selected topics in European history. Repeatable for credit when content is different. |
| Course Number | Course Information |
|---|---|
| 3302 | Modern East Asia Through Film (4) Individualism, gender relations, family life, nationalism, and imperialism in 19th and 20th century China, Japan, and Korea through films produced in East Asia and elsewhere. |
| 3303 | Precolonial India (4) Ancient and medieval South Asia (Indian subcontinent) from Indus Valley Civilization to 18th century. Hinduism and Buddhism; introduction of Islam and formation of Indo-Muslim society; religious and ethnic communities; creation of states and empires; arrival of Europeans. |
| 3305 | Modern South Asia (4) History, culture and political economy of the Indian subcontinent from the seventeenth century to present. Decline of Mughal empire, British colonial conquest, anti-colonial resistance, nationalism and religious identity, Gandhi, independence, post-colonial India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. |
| 3307 | Modern India through Film (4) The history of nation, class, caste, gender, sexuality, community, and diaspora as documented in Indian film. Special focus on Bollywood. Weekly readings and discussions. |
| 3311 | Traditional China (4) China from classical antiquity to the 19th century; intellectual trends, political developments, and social changes. |
| 3312 | Modern China (4) China from the Opium War to 1949. The collapse of imperial China, Western incursions, the emergence of modern culture, and the roots of the Communist revolution. |
| 3313 | People's Republic of China (4) The socialist experience in China from 1949 to the present: the leadership of Mao Zedong, the Cultural Revolution, and changes in urban and rural areas in the post-Mao era. |
| 3322 | Early Japan (4) Cultural, social, and political history of Japan to 1800. The aristocracy, the samurai, and the impact of Asian continental culture. |
| 3323 | Modern Japan (4) Japan as an industrial and imperialist power from traditional foundations to defeat in World War II. Modern culture, party politics, and social problems. |
| 3325 | Postwar Japan (4) The political, social, and cultural dimensions of Japan's transformation from defeated nation in 1945 to world economic power today. |
| 3340 | The Middle East and Rise of Islamic Societies (4) Middle East from 600 from 1750. Beginnings of Islam; establishment of Muslim rule from Spain to Central Asia; emergence of Islamic civilization and contributions by non-Muslims; religious, political, and intellectual debates; contacts with Europe and Asia; establishment of Turkish power. |
| 3345 | The Modern Middle East (4) Emergence of states and societies of the modern Middle East. Disintegration of pre-modern empires and evolution of traditional societies into modern nation-states of the Arab world, Turkey, and Iran; response to Western colonialism; socio-religious reform; Islam and nationalism; pan-Arabism; militant Islam. |
| 3803 | Topics in Asian History (4) Reading, discussion, and research on selected topics in Asian history. May be repeated for credit when content varies. |
| Course Number | Course Information |
|---|---|
| 3400 | America to 1900 (4) Survey from colonial times to 1900. For partial fulfillment of subject matter preparation in history and social science for the multiple-subject teaching credential. Not for history major credit. |
| 3411 | Colonial America (4) Development of the British mainland colonies from frontier societies to the Age of the American Revolution. Topics include Native American background, European expansion, regional variation, mercantilism, slavery, cultural diversity, and the rise of colonial political institutions. |
| 3412 | The American Revolution (4) The creation of the American republic, 1763-1800. Imperial politics, loyalism, and the war; postwar changes in constitutions, politics, slavery, gender relations, and the frontier. |
| 3413 | The New Republic (4) The expansion of the new republic, 1800-1850. Democratic politics, early industrialization, the Cotton South, reform movements, the Mexican-American War, and California. |
| 3414 | Civil War and Reconstruction (4) The Civil War and American society, 1850-1877. Causes, content, and consequences of America's bloodiest conflict. |
| 3415 | America in the Age of Empire (4) The rise of imperial America, 1877-1920. Industrialism, mass immigration, urbanization, populism, progressivism, foreign expansion, and World War I. |
| 3416 | The Great Depression and World War II (4) The modernization of the United States, 1920-1945. The modernist 1920s, origins and impact of the Great Depression, the New Deal, mass culture, World War II and mass mobilization. |
| 3417 | Cold War America (4) The United States in the postwar era, 1945-1989. Prosperity, anticommunism, the Civil Rights Movement, Vietnam and the 1960s, Watergate, internationalism, and the end of the Cold War. |
| 3500 | History of California (4) California history from early days to the present, emphasizing the influence of geography, natural resources, and a growing population. Satisfies requirement in California state and local government. |
| 3503 | History of the San Francisco Bay Area (4) The settlement of the Bay Area from the Indian period through the twentieth century, stressing the influence of natural environment, population growth, ethnic assimilation, transportation, urbanization, and economic development on the evolution of a regional culture. |
| 3505 | California Environmental History (4) California environmental history from the Indian period to the present. Varying interactions between human societies and the natural environment, the deterioration and exhaustion of natural resources, and recent efforts to promote greater environmental balance. |
| 3511 | The American West (4) Westward expansion of the United States from 1763 to 1900; development of western states and effect on the history of the nation. |
| 3515 | Mexican Americans and the West (4) The historical evolution of northern Mexico. Acquisition of the Southwest by the United States. Social, economic, and political development of region, with emphasis on the role and social condition of the Mexican-American people. |
| 3517 | The Immigrants' West (4) The movement and interaction of diverse ethno-racial groups within the American West, focusing on the 19th and 20th centuries. Indigenous peoples, Hispanic-Anglo frontier, trans-Pacific migration, exclusion and restriction, Depression-era migrants, inter-racial mixing, the new western immigration. |
| 3530 | The Shaping of North America, 1492-1850 (4) Major topics in the formation of North American societies, including Native American peoples, impact of European expansion, Africans in the West Indies, environmental transformation, creation of U.S. and California. Visual documentation of North American cultures. |
| 3535 | American Indian History (4) Pre-contact to the present. The diversity of native life in North America; engagement and conflict with Europe; responses to the territorial expansion of the United States; the persistence of Indian communities; political and legal issues in Indian Country. |
| 3538 | American Indians in the 20th Century (4) 1890 to the present. American Indian life at the turn of the 20th century; colonization and responses; political relationship to the United States government; cultural and political resurgence; the development of the legal and political doctrine of tribal sovereignty. |
| 3547 | The United States and Modern War (4) The experience of United States men and women in modern war from 1861 to the present. Why people go to war, soldiers' daily life, combat experiences, technology of warfare, life on the home front, and war in literature and film. |
| 3550 | The History of U.S. Foreign Relations (4) Selected problems of American foreign relations, including the American Revolution, expansion and conflict, isolationism and internationalism, the Cold War and terrorism. Consideration of the State Department and of diplomatic practice in their historical context. |
| 3553 | Modern American Thought and Culture (4) Intellectual, political, and cultural ideas, ideologies, and movements in twentieth-century United States. Focus on Progressivism, Pragmatism, the Romantic Left, Socialism, Unionism, Utopianism, Liberalism, the New Left, and Conservatism. |
| 3567 | African American History (4) Political, economic, social, and cultural history of African-Americans in the United States since 1619. A comparison of the African-American experience with the experiences of other Americans. Cross-listed with E S 3567. |
| 3570 | The Family and Sexuality in American History (4) Development and diversity of family life in U.S. from pre-colonial beginnings to present. Regional and racial family patterns; responses to urbanization and industrialization; African American families during and after slavery; development of companionate family; changing role of families. |
| 3571 | Women in American History (4) Survey of female gender roles and women's contributions to and place in the social, economic, and political life of the nation from colonial times to the present across ethnicity, race, and class. |
| 3572 | American Women in the Twentieth Century (4) A multicultural exploration of the revolutionary changes in female gender roles and women's lives. Topics include the ballot box, social movements, the workplace, family and sexuality, the military, and popular culture, with attention to continued inequalities. |
| 3575 | Baseball in America (4) The history of baseball and its role in American Society. Nineteenth century origins of the game, the major and minor leagues, amateur baseball from universities to prisons, the Negro leagues and integration, labor relations and cultural influences. |
| 3580 | Lincoln and His Times (4) Lincoln and his personality in the context of antebellum and Civil War America. |
| 3802 | Topics in United States History (4) Reading, discussion, and research on selected topics in United States history. May be repeated for credit when content varies. |
| Course Number | Course Information |
|---|---|
| 3600 | Colonial Latin America (4) Relations among the colonists, Crown, Church, and Indians during and after the Spanish conquest. The catastrophic fall in the Indian population, the rise of the great estate, and the decline of Iberian power in the New World at the end of the eighteenth century. |
| 3605 | Modern Latin America (4) Latin American history from 1810 to 1950. Emphasis on process of independence, state formation, national consolidation, and neocolonialism in the nineteenth century. The rise of nationalism and social revolution after 1910. |
| 3622 | Mexico Since 1810 (4) The development of Mexico from the wars of independence; evolution of political, economic, and social institutions. |
| 3632 | Film and Society in Latin America (4) Film as a reflection of major themes and issues in Latin America, e.g., slavery and race relations, women's role in society, emergence of the military as a dominant political force, U.S. attitudes toward Latin America. |
| 3804 | Topics in Latin American History (4) Reading, discussion, and research on selected topics in Latin American history. May be repeated for credit when content varies. |
| Course Number | Course Information |
|---|---|
| 3010 | Historical Writing (4) Seminar on writing and revision of reviews, essays, and research papers through study of selected historical topics. Emphasis on form, argument, organization, source citation, and oral presentation. Prerequisite: HIST 2010. |
| 3017 | The Twentieth Century (4) World history from WWI to Soviet collapse, focusing on diplomacy, economics, and political/social trends. The world wars, Russian revolution and Stalinism, fascism and Nazism, Chinese Revolution, Cold War, decolonization and end of Western hegemony, globalization of world economy. |
| 3898 | Cooperative Education (1-4) Supervised work experience in which student completes academic assignments integrated with off-campus paid or volunteer activities. Prerequisites: at least 2.0 GPA; departmental approval of activity. A maximum of 5 units will be accepted toward the History major. May be repeated for credit for a maximum of 5 units. |
| 3999 | Issues in History (4) Readings, discussion, and research on contemporary and/or significant issues in history. May be repeated for credit when content varies, for a maximum of 8 units. |
| 4010 | History Internship (4) Supervised work that integrates academic learning and field experience. Introduces students to various career tracks in the historical profession. Prerequisites: HIST 3010; 3.5 major g.p.a.; consent of instructor and partnering agency. May be repeated once for credit with consent of instructor, for a maximum of 8 units. CR/NC grading only. |
| 4030 | Historiography (4) Development of historical writing from antiquity to present. Emphasis on Herodotus, Thucydides, St. Augustine, Vico, Hegel, Marx, and 20th century historians. Survey of other significant historians. Prerequisite: senior standing and HIST 1014-15-16, 2010, and 3010 or consent of instructor. |
| 4031 | Historical Research Methods (4) Seminar on advanced historical research through preparation of research paper based on primary sources. Prerequisites: senior standing; HIST 1014-15-16, 2010, and 3010 or consent of instructor. |
| 4032 | Introduction to Public History (4) The use of historical theory and method in non-academic settings, including museums, archives, consulting organizations, historical societies, government agencies, business, and historical preservation projects. Field trips to selected non-academic settings. |
| 4033 | Introduction to Teaching History (4) Seminar in teaching history at the K-16 level. The course presents an overview of the way history has been taught in the U.S.; a survey of current pedagogical trends; use of primary sources in the history classroom; methods for developing curriculum. May not be used to replace HIST 4030 or HIST 4031 in the History Major. Prerequisite: HIST 3010. |
| 4500 | The California History/Social Science Framework (1) Content review of California K-12 History-Social Science Framework for prospective teachers. Enrollment only in final quarter of Subject Matter Preparation Program in Social Science. Not for credit in History major or minor. |
| 4710 | History and Trends in Nursing (4) Survey of the development of modern nursing. Emphasis on social trends that have influenced the development of nursing; the Judeo-Christian tradition; the military heritage; the women's movement; developments in health care delivery. |
| 4900 | Independent Study (1-4) Supervised study. Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be repeated for credit with consent of instructor, for a maximum of 12 units. |
