UC Santa Barbara > History Department > Prof. Marcuse > Courses > Hist 2c homepage
World map, scaled by population, from asiaintheschools.org
World map, scaled by population
Which countries shrink, which grow?
Should "size" determine which to focus on in this course?
 
World History, 1700-present
(UCSB Hist 2c), by
Professor Harold Marcuse
(Prof's homepage, Courses Page, Publications Page)

contact: marcuse@history.ucsb.edu

page created March. 25, 2008; last update: Aug. 11, 2011

Announcements (at top)

Old Announcements
(at bottom)
Lecture
Outlines

'09 Syllabus
Resources:
'09 Reader TOC
'09 Family History Handout
Plagiarism Policy
Exams:
Links:
World History Links
Prof's other course sites:
Hist 2c: 2003, 2006, 2008
133a, 133b, 133c, 133d,
133p, 133q, 500

TA section grid

Announcements (old announcements move to bottom [with visitor statistics])
  • August 23, 2011: This page has been decommissioned. Please see Prof. Marcuse's Fall 2011 Hist 2c Homepage instead
  • August 11, 2011: I've been thinking about this course as I pick my textbook, and have some links to add:
    • "The Science of Why We Don't Believe Science" by Chris Mooney, in the May 2011 edition of Mother Jones magazine. Mooney lays out the neuroscience behind why people tend not to change their opinions even in the face of massive evidence to the contrary. I think this would be a great introductory reading for a discussion of controversial historical explanations and the use and value of evidence.
      A short 2-page excerpt was published in The Week on May 20, 2011: "Made-Up Minds: Since political beliefs are rooted in emotion, the Facts are often irrelevant." (scanned pdf version). The original has more examples and links to the actual studies.
    • "Why We Have College" by Louis Menand in the June 6, 2011 issue of the New Yorker. Menand discusses several answers to why we have colleges: they are "meritocratic" (college sorts students according to ability, assigning a score--GPA--useful to future employers), or "democratic" (deliver knowledge and skills to make better citizens), or "vocational" (providing specialized skills and knowledge needed for skilled work). (scanned pdf)
      The article discusses this 2008 article by "Professor X" in The Atlantic: "In the Basement of the Ivory Tower," a sarcastic but thought-provoking gloss that the anonymous author turned into a padded book of the same title in 2011. He argues that many college students should not be in or should not have to go to college.
    • Textbook. After reviewing quite a few textbooks during a graduate seminar on the teaching of the World History survey, I narrowed it down to 2 choices:
      • Tignor, Adelman, et al's Worlds Together, Worlds Apart (Norton, 3rd ed. 2011) (WTWA), and
      • Robert Strayer, Ways of the World (Bedford, 2011).
      I used the 1st and 2nd edtions of WTWA before, and tried Judge/Langdon, Connections (Pearson, 2009, 2nd 2012) the last time I taught this course--to about 470 undergraduates at a large public research university. Although the new edition of WTWA is much shortened and improved even over its excellent predecessors, this time I decided to try Strayer before possibly going back to it. Here are some reasons:
      • Strayer is slightly more thematic, and I like the "big picture" section introductions. His themes cut across longer stretches of time, giving them and their evolution more emphasis with less attention to disjointing chronology.
        The chapter themes also work better with the "EIEIO" model of causality that I use (comparable to the "PERSIA-T" and "SPRITE" mnemonics): 17 ideology, 18 economics, 19 elites, 20 international.
      • While Strayer does devote somewhat more space to Europe, he addresses this issue head-on at the outset of part 5, making it a very "teachable moment."
      • I've decided to use Strayer's Brief Global History with Sources edition, which will give TAs a weekly body of primary material to work with in section, and I can focus my photocopied reader on secondary texts
      • In my 10-week quarter I cover 9 chapters (340 pages 8.5x11") of WTWA, 8 chapters (408 pages 6.5x9"), so that the latter works better subtracting for introductory and exam weeks.
      • Not only is UCSB's world history survey a prime General Education course with many students taking it mainly because it fulfills multiple requirements, I'm also teaching the course in Fall quarter, which enrolls the largest proportion of incoming freshmen. The lower text density (24,600 vs. 31,800 sq.in.--admittedly a very rough measure, given illustrations, maps, font size, line spacing etc.) makes for smoother reading for this audience, giving me more space for non-textbook readings.
      • While the ancillaries and websites are comparable, as are the various marginal/caption/heading aids in the book, I find the in-text questions more specific and thus accessible in Strayer. For example:
        WTWA p. 580: How did the industrial revolution reorder society?
        Strayer p. 827: In what respects did the roots of the Industrial Revolution lie within Europe? In what ways did that transformation have global roots?
        830: What was distinctive about Britain that may help to explain its status as the breakthrough point of the Industrial Revolution?
        833: How did the Industrial Revolution transform British society? ...
        849: Did Latin America follow or diverge from the historical path of Europe during the 19th century?
  • Jan. 30, 2011: Since they are so buried on this site, I've added links to some of the special" online features of this course to the navbar above: transcript of 2008 chat review session; 7 page pdf of all 2009 Clicker Questions (with results and some interpretation); 2009 survery results page, with links to previous surveys at bottom.
    When I redesign the site for Fall 2011, I'll have to figure out better places to put these.
  • Jan. 17, 2010: Two universities in Bremen, Germany, have teamed up to offer an English-language M.A. program in Modern Global History. Their program page outlines the program's core themes is slightly greater detail; its emphasis is on the post-1850 period. (for 200w)
  • Dec. 29, 2009: The grade distribution for the entire class in Fall 2009 (255 total students) was:
    A+     2
    B+    28 C+   18 D+    2 F     3 + NP   4 = 7
    A     32 B      48 C     14 D      2 withdraw/incomplete: 0
    A-   41 B-     38 C-     4 D-     0 mean grade: 85.6 (w/o Fs)
    30% got As
    46% got Bs
    15% Cs
    2% Ds
    18 "Pass" = 7%
  • Dec. 7, 2009: PPT pdf of L19: Conclusions now available (34 slides on 6 pages), as is the Final exam study guide.
    To see this evening's GauchoSpace chat review session, go to the Gauchospace course page, under "Activities" in the upper left click Chats, then select 12/7 and then on the upper right of that page, click "view past chat sessions."
    • Next GauchoSpace chat review session: Wed. 12/9, 5-6pm.
    • Remember to check your iclicker points on Gauchospace, under grading, and let the prof. know if there are discrepancies.
    • I've made a page of the online survey results. Especially interesting are the written comments at the end, which I've sorted into categories.

Books for Fall 2009 (back to top)

textbook cover Equiano, cover Rampolla, cover 2008 Reader cover
Judge and Langdon, Connections: A World History
(Pearson, 2009, vol. II)
(publisher's website)
Robert Allison (ed.), The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano: Written by Himself (Bedford, 2nd ed. 2007)
($14-16 at amazon)
Mary Lynn Rampolla, A Pocket Guide to Writing in History (Bedford, 6th ed.2009)
($14-16 at amazon)
A photocopied reader of essays and documents
($10 at GrafikArt in IV)

Lecture outlines (back to top)


thumbnail of 2009 reader cover of Prof. Marcuse's course readerJudge Langdon textbook coverCourse materials (back to top)

  • 2009 syllabus
  • 2009 Reader table of contents;
  • Books for purchase:
    • Textbook: Edward Judge & John Langdon, Connections, A World History (Pearson, 2009), vol. II (chaps 19-37). This textbook strikes a good balance between conciseness, depth, coverage, and readability. ($60 at amazon, $64 UCen)
      Website: http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_judge_connections_1mylab/. Rampolla, 6th ed 2009 cover
      First you must register, with an ID that I think comes with the purchased textbook.
      Try registering for GradeTracker--the Class ID is cm293386. Use the "chapters" navigation for pre-, post- and chapter quizzes.
    • Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African (1789), (Bedford 2006 ed., edited and introduced by Robert Allison). This autobiography of a former slave played an important role in the antislavery movement. ($14/9 used at amazon)
    • Mary Lynn Rampolla, A Pocket Guide to Writing in History (Boston: Bedford, 6th ed. 2009 [earlier editions ok]). This is an excellent how-to guide about writing history papers and preparing for exams. ($16 at amazon)
    • iClicker: Classroom response unit ($30/23 used at amazon)
    • Reader of additional essays and sources, available at GrafikArt on Pardall Rd. in IV (90 pages).
    • Olaudah Equiano, Interesting Narrative (1789)(Bedford edition)
      • We will read this at the beginning of the course. Skim chapters 4, 5, 8-11.
      • Thumbnall of Robert Allison's edition of Equiano's "Interesting Narrative"Excellent site with an illustrated biography of Vassa/Equiano, and excerpts from his book, also a bibliography, map and links.
        The site was created by Dr Brycchan Carey at the School of Humanities, Kingston University, UK. Carey's 1996 MA thesis was on "The Poetry of Anti-Slavery; 1787-94," and his 2000 doctoral thesis was titled The Rhetoric of Sensibility: Argument, Sentiment, and Slavery in the Late Eighteenth Century.
        Carey is a recognized expert in this field.
      • PBS's Equiano pages have additional resources (see also resource listing [scroll down to point IV])
      • The full text of the Interesting Narrative is online, scanned by a project at Hanover college in Indiana
      • "Unraveling the Narrative: A scholar raises questions, and hackles, with evidence that the ex-slave who wrote the definitive first-person account of the Middle Passage may not have made that infamous journey," by Jennifer Howard, Chronicle of Higher Education, September 9, 2005.

Course Description (back to top)

  • This lecture course with discussion sections is designed for undergraduates of all disciplines (natural and social sciences, fine arts, humanities) with no prior college-level coursework in history. It fulfills the General Education requirement in area E-1, Civilization and Thought, and is approved as a GE writing course. (UCSB catalog info on GE)
  • The UCSB General Catalog description for Hist 2A,B,C reads as follows:
    "Survey of the peoples, cultures, and social, economic, and political systems that have characterized the world's major civilizations in Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Oceania."
    Hist 2C covers the period 1700CE-present.
  • Of course, it is utterly impossible to cover this much temporal and spatial ground in a meaningful way during a 10-week quarter, and I don't even try to do that. In fact, I don't think of history as a lot of information that "everyone should know." For me, it is a wealth of experiences, some of which are interesting and entertaining (like good books or movies), and some of which help me to understand and evaluate what is going on in the world around me. In this course we will study some of the historical experiences I have found to be interesting and helpful in understanding the present (we won't pass judgment on the entertainment value). Some of those experiences are the lives of exceptional people, some of ordinary people. Some are great cataclysmic events such as revolutions or wars. And some are ideas (or systems of beliefs) that have helped people to see the world around them in new ways, and have led to monumental changes in the way they--and we--live. Along the way of learning about these experiences, we will also learn and practice some skills, such as how to understand and draw meaning from primary sources, how to think beyond the obvious level of a story to its deeper meanings, and how to express our thoughts clearly in discussion and in writing.

Course Goals (back to top)

By reading the assignments, attending the lectures, participating in section discussion and doing the written work, you should:

  1. gain a better understanding of the nature and relevance of historical study in general;
  2. better appreciate the historical forces and events that have shaped the modern world (since ca. 1700);
  3. better appreciate the diversity of modern nations and peoples and the ways they act on each other in time and space;
  4. improve your ability to understand and interpret (draw reasoned conclusions about) historical source materials (including texts, images and music);
  5. improve your ability to write a short paper with research, analysis, interpretation and argumentation.

Links to interesting web sites (back to top)


Doonesbury comic on gradingGrading issues (back to top)

Please note that we grade YOUR WORK, not you.
If you feel that the grade you received on an assignment, exam or paper does not correspond to the quality of work that you submitted, you must first meet with your TA.
No grading reassessments will be done before 24 hours have elapsed since the work was returned to you, nor after two weeks after the work was returned.
If you are within that window of time, you can:

  1. EITHER: Print out, complete, and submit this Universal Grade Change Application Form.;-)
  2. OR: Write a page (or paragraph, whatever it takes) explaining WHY you think your work is better than the grade assigned to it. Please refer to the appropriate assignment sheet, and make sure you fulfilled the formal requirements of the assignment.
    1. Then resubmit the work in question with your explanation to the TA.
    2. If you are not satisfied with that reevaluation, please ask your TA to date and sign your explanation sheet, and then submit it and ALL of your work for this course to me (I need everything so that I will have the comparable knowledge of your work as your TA). I will assess your work for the course and the assignment in question, and get back to you.
    3. Note that I may lower your grade as well as raise it.
    4. Finally, be sure to put some contact address on your explanation sheet, so that I can be in touch with you
  • Here is the overall grade distribution for Spring 2003:
    total #: 108 B+    29 C+   8 D+    0 F       2
    A      7 B      19 C     7 D      0 withdraw/incomplete: 0
    A-   23 B-    13 C-   0 D-     0 mean grade: 86.2
    28% As
    56% Bs
    14% Cs
       
  • Here is the overall grade distribution for Spring 2006:
    total #: 227
    B+    26 C+   20 D+    1 F     6
    A     19 B      61 C       8 D      1 withdraw/incomplete: 3
    A-   37 B-    39 C-     8 D-     1 mean grade: 85.0 (w/o Fs)
    25% As
    56% Bs
    16% Cs
    1% Ds
     
  • Here is the overall grade distribution for Spring 2008 (468 total students):
    A+     8
    B+    59 C+   30 D+    4 F     9
    A     51 B     117 C     36 D      2 withdraw/incomplete: 2
    A-   77 B-     68 C-     5 D-     0 mean grade: 85.4 (w/o Fs)
    29% got As
    52% got Bs
    15% Cs
    1% Ds
     
  • Here is the grade distribution for Fall 2009 (255 total students):
    A+     2
    B+    28 C+   18 D+    2 F     3 + NP   4 = 7
    A     32 B      48 C     14 D      2 withdraw/incomplete: 0
    A-   41 B-     38 C-     4 D-     0 mean grade: 85.6 (w/o Fs)
    30% got As
    46% got Bs
    15% Cs
    2% Ds
    18 "Pass" = 7%
Plagiarism-presenting someone else's work as your own, or deliberately failing to credit or attribute the work of others on whom you draw (including materials found on the web)-is a serious academic offense, punishable by dismissal from the university. It hurts the one who commits it most of all, by cheating them out of an education. I will report offenses to the appropriate university authorities for disciplinary action. details

Old Announcements (back to top)

  • 7/13/04: The on-line journal World History Connected (homepage) has some excellent articles for teachers. Next time I teach this course I'm going to start the course by discussing this June 2004 article about the fundmental approaches found in world history textbooks: Tom Laichas, "History and the Textbooks". I think it lays out very clearly one of my goals for this college-level required introduction to the discipline of history, namely to help us recognize our underlying assumptions in the ways we conceive of our world. We are not teaching The Truth, but how to find principles that can guide our understanding about how and why things happen, then and now. It would be fun to have each TA's sections take one of my EIEIO/C causes (see L1 outline) and make arguments for it as the writing assignment.
    By the way, I find that William Everdell's article "How To Use the Theme Of Technology in Teaching the World History Survey Course" offers some insightful new approaches for examining some of the tried-and-true events of world history.
  • 9/28/04: After seeing the film Outfoxed (official Outfoxed site) about how the Fox "News" network systematically obfuscates opinion and fact, I think historians need to focus more than ever on teaching students how to assess the reliability and relevance of their sources. This is a step that would precede the interpretation of primary source material, which many World History courses (and the notorious DBQ) emphasize. 11/10/05: here are some good sites:
  • Sept. 29, 2004: I found an interesting and very comprehensive teaching site developed since 1999 by Alexander Ganse, a German historian teaching World History at an elite school in South Korea, "World History at KMLA" (Korean Minjok Leadership Academy) hosted by the Center for Instructional Media (ZUM) in Germany. It is in English, and especially the links seem to be excellent and unique (that is, not the usual top 3 google results).
  • Oct. 2, 2004: Well-designed lesson plan about the genocide in Darfur, Sudan, at newzcrew.org, which is run by Global Kids and NewsHour Extra. Global Kids is a New York City-based educational organization that supports urban youth to become global citizens and community leaders. NewsHour Extra is the student section of the Online NewsHour, the Web site for PBS's daily news broadcast, The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.
  • Jan 7, 2005: World History Connected (homepage) has an excellent newsletter with many interesting articles. See, for instance, this 2004 special issue on Africa, and the index of issues.
  • April 7, 2008: The 2c course demographic survey is now ready: please take it--the 10 radio button/check box questions should take you only a minute or two. Thanks! (report log-in)
    • April 9, 2008, 11am : I've responded to the things you wrote in the "free response" question on the survey. See the forum on the course Sakai site. (Link also in dark green box of menu bar above) . Log in with your UCSBnet ID, then click on this course in the blue menu bar going across. Then select "Discussion and Private Messages" on the vertical bar." So far 251 people have taken the survey--I'm hoping for 75% (375-400 responses) by tonight.
  • April 15, 2008: Policy on the extra credit films. In the interest of fairness, the TAs are willing to do the extra administrative work for students who can't attend the showings at the MCC. However, you will have to do a little more work (writing). So here are the policies:
    • If you can attend the showing at the MCC, just jot down your name, the film title, and a few notes on the index card Anil distributes, and give it to your TA. That will get you credit.
    • If you canNOT attend the showing, you must obtain the film on your own and watch it. In some cases (namely if UCSB, the prof, or a TA has a copy) a copy may be placed on 24 hour reserve at the library. This may be a VHS copy, however (Amistad is).
      • You should show your TA a copy of your class or work schedule that shows that you have a conflict. (We really prefer that you attend the showing if possible.)
      • You must type and submit to your TA: a 1-page (ca. 250-300 word) answer to the question: How have the concepts presented in the course helped me to understand the film? Or: How does the film reflect the concepts taught in the course?
      • You must do this within one week of the official showing time and get the card to your TA in section or lecture. (Do not come with a bunch of cards at the end of the quarter!)
    • Finally, if you know any films that you'd like to suggest, please e-mail the prof or ask your TA to pass on the suggestion. Thanks!
  • June 10, 2008: Sample papers page with 4 prizewinning papers now available, and (finally) the results of the midterm survey.
  • June 24, 2008: Here is the overall grade distribution for Spring 2008 (468 total students):
    A+     8
    B+    59 C+   30 D+    4 F     9
    A     51 B     117 C     36 D      2 withdraw/incomplete: 2
    A-   77 B-     68 C-     5 D-     0 mean grade: 85.4 (w/o Fs)
    29% got As 52% got Bs 15% Cs 1% Ds  
  • June 25, 2008: I've started a World History Feature Films page.
  • Sept. 3, 2008: Now some bloglike thoughts on how to restructure the course the next time I teach it. Number 1: refuse to teach it in Campbell Hall. The entertainment venue is not at all conducive to the more demanding, less entertaining way I conceive of my courses, as the comments on the student evals (and RateMyProfessor) bear out. [scan ESCI form when it resurfaces]
  • Sept. 10, updated Sept. 21, 2009:
    Textbook cover iclicker
    Equiano cover Rampolla 2009 cover
      • The books for Fall 2009 are:
      1. Textbook: Edward Judge & John Langdon, Connections, A World History (Pearson, 2009), vol. II (chaps 19-37). This textbook strikes a good balance between conciseness, depth, coverage, and readability. ($60 at amazon, $64 UCen)
        Website: http://wps.prenhall.com/hss_judge_connections_1mylab/.
        First you must register, with an ID that I think comes with the purchased textbook.
        Try registering for GradeTracker--the Class ID is cm293386. Use the "chapters" navigation for pre-, post- and chapter quizzes.
      2. Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African (1789), (Bedford 2006 ed., edited and introduced by Robert Allison). This autobiography of a former slave played an important role in the antislavery movement. ($14/9 used at amazon)
      3. Mary Lynn Rampolla, A Pocket Guide to Writing in History (Boston: Bedford, 6th ed. 2009 [earlier editions ok]). This is an excellent how-to guide about writing history papers and preparing for exams. ($16 at amazon)2c 2009 Reader Cover
      4. iClicker: Classroom response unit ($30/23 used at amazon)
      5. Reader of additional essays and sources, available at GrafikArt on Pardall Rd. in IV (90 pages).
    • All books except the course reader are available in the library reserve room.
    • We will be using a GauchoSpace course website for this class.
    • The TAs for this course are:
  • Sept. 16, 2009: 2008 chat room midterm & final review sessions archived
  • 9/23/09, 9pm (links updated 9/24, 5pm). Sept. 24: First day of class: although I had previously been on the fence about canceling class completely on the Sept. 24 Day of Action (I thought I'd use most of the time to relate course content to the issues at hand), the UC Administration's intransigent stance and adding insult to injury by raising students fees a huge amount, I've decided I must participate in the strike action instead. You'll find me during class time on a picket line on the west side of campus, perhaps the Pardall corridor.
    • I usually use the first day of class to pass out and explain the syllabus, introduce myself and the TAs, take care of administrative matters, and ease into the course content. This year, all material will be posted on this website: Fall 2009 Hist 2c syllabus (pdf, doc), web version of intro lecture (2006 narrative, 2008 ppt). You can purchase your course books already (the course reader, required, will be available at GrafikArt (hours) on 6550 Pardall Rd. in IV by Friday noon, $10.43), since we will hit the ground running next Tuesday, 9/29.
    • I'm sorry if I've made your start of classes more stressful and chaotic than usual. I think and hope you and thousands upon thousands of future UC students and California residents will benefit from this action. As Chancellor Yang told the Regents on 9/16, it's time to start DEFENDING the university, instead of DEFUNDING it. For more information, see the News items on the History dept. homepage.
    • I'll send an email with this information to all enrolled students and those who've contacted me about wait lists once the syllabus is available.
    • Sincerely,
      Prof. Marcuse
  • 9/24/09, 7am: No office hours today, but I'll hold special office hours this Friday and Monday, noon-1pm, HSSB 4222. (Friday I must leave at 12:50.)
    • The Honors Section has been cancelled due to budget reasons--I'm very sorry.
  • 9/24/09, 7am, updated 5pm: "Crashing" Hist 2c. There is very little chance that this will be possible. If you want to try anyway, here's what to do:
    1. sign in at the first lecture on 9/29, as attendance at lecture is the first prerequisite of getting on ANY waitlist
    2. go to a specific section that you want to crash, and put your name on a waitlist there.
    • You must go to ALL sections you want to crash. Exception: if the same TA teaches multiple of your chosen ones, ask him/her to add your name to another list as well.
      You can check which TA teaches which section in the table on p. 3 of the syllabus. No need to or benefit from contacting them in advance.
    • Bring documentation of priority reasons. I have asked TAs to consider, in order:
      1. students who were once enrolled in this course and were dropped because financial aid came through too late (applies for any section, not just the original).
      2. History majors, or majors in dept's that require this course (bring a transcript printout that shows your declared major)
      3. Seniors in majors (like bio or engineering) that have so many prerequisites that they could not have taken GE courses in their first years at UCSB
      4. Students with other valid, documented reasons why they must take this course THIS QUARTER. (2A and B are offered in W, 2C in Spring, by Prof. Spickard, who's more fun than I am)
      • Within these categories, students who emailed the prof. prior to today, 9/24, will be rank-ordered by date of email, otherwise within a category by lottery. If you don't have a saved copy of your email, note on the waitlist sheet approx. when you emailed me, and I will verify that.
  • Sept. 26, 2009: The first film in the extra credit film series (see syllabus p. 3) will be:
    • Paradise Now (2005), 90 mins. It will screen at 7pm on Wed. Oct. 5 in the MCC theater. (preview on Netflix: it's about 2 suicide bombers assigned to Tel Aviv)
    • I'm also starting World History Links and World History Books pages to archive materialsI come across and want to include in future topical pages.
  • 9/28/09: some new items uploaded: 2009 syllabus, 2009 Reader TOC, TA schedule grid
  • 9/30/09: Lecture 1 pdf now available [Thu. 11 am: it's here](4 pages with 23 slides).
    • Policy on switching sections: First you need to find a "buddy" in the other/target section. Then this requires a form that you can get from your TA, to be filled out by BOTH students and initialed by the TAs.
    • Again, the Honors section is cancelled. Sorry, budget cuts, no resources.
    • The final exam date on the syllabus is incorrect. I put in the exam slot for TR8-9:15PM. Our correct exam time is Friday, Dec. 11, 8-11am.
    • The online Reader TOC has links to online versions of this week's section readings.
    • iClicker registration: You do this on the iClicker website. Use your perm for the student ID. More info in class; if your serial number (remote ID) is rubbed off, don't worry, see the prof. next week.
  • 10/1/09: Crashing update: 22 spaces have opened up, and 14 people have the prerequisite of having attended the first two lectures. Thus depending on circumstances a few students without the full prereqs may be able to get in. See the 9/24 announcement, below for the policy.
    • Lecture 2 pdf now available: Haitian & Industrial Revolutions (5 pages with 29 slides). Note: the comic text (slides 3 & 4) is a bit small, but if you zoom the pdf (on a computer) to 150%, you should be able to read even that.
  • 10/8/09: PDFs of this week's lectures now available:
    • L3: Theory & Model of Causes; Industrial Rev & Slavery 1: 4 page PDF with 21 slides
      L4: Slavery 2, begin Antislavery: 7 page PDF with 39 slides
    • iClicker registration. 131 students have not registered a clicker yet; 60 of them have never clicked. Please do this!
      Here's how to do it:
      1. Go to the following web site: www.iclicker.com/registration, then:
      2. Enter your First Name and Last Name in the appropriate fields.
      3. Enter your PERM in "Student ID"
      4. Enter your i>clicker "remote ID" (this is the unique set of numbers and letters located on the bottom of the back of their remote).
      5. Enter the security/verification code that appears on the screen. This verification image will appear as a slightly distorted series of numbers and/or letters (and is used to keep spam bots from submitting the form).
      6. Click “Enter.” You will see an on-screen message confirming that registration was successful. Your ID is now tied to your unique i>clicker remote ID.
        If your Clicker code is rubbed off, see the professor.
        If you registered after August 2008, your registration is still valid.
  • 10/12/09: Various announcements:
    • Uploading to GauchoSpace: There is now a "dummy" assignment on GauchoSpace if you want to try out uploading a random file, since an electronic version of the Equiano paper must be uploaded by the due date next Tuesday, Oct. 20. I will give you a grace period, however, instead of 8am, when the hard copy is due, you must upload by 6pm before the late points accrue.
    • Extra credit film policy (we don't have a regular time yet): you MUST attend the screening in order to receive credit, unless you have a documented class or work conflict. The prof will try to put the films on reserve for those with conflicts, and others are free to watch them but won't receive credit. Index cards must be given to your TA within one week.
    • Extra credit for attendance of Oct. 14 teach-in events (schedule): 1pt for a 1/2 - 1 page summary description of the event, including what you learned from it. This would count as one of the films (3 total for credit).
    • Have the H1N1 flu? If you don't know someone who can fill you in about lecture, ask your TA to find someone in your section who can share their lecture notes with you. After you are well, of course.
  • 10/15/09 (updated 10/16/09): PDFs of this week's lectures now available:
    • L5: Latin American Independence Movements: 3 page PDF with 18 slides
      L6: Latin America cont'd, Teach-In, Anti-Slavery: 6 page PDF with 24+12 slides.
      NOTE: I've included the final 12 slides not shown in lecture because we instead took the time to discuss some of the presentations at the teach-in. I may try to fit them into a later lecture.
    • Please register your iClicker ASAP! See instructions under 10/8 announcement, below.
      63 enrolled students have not registered; 42 clickers used in class were not registered. What's with the other 21?--I know two don't have their clickers working yet.
  • 10/19/09 (updated 10/20): A student has asked that I post a full-page-size version of the EIEIO causality model for midterm study purposes. A great idea! I've consolidated all of the related ppt slides into one file and post it now as EIEIOslides.ppt; I'll convert and post it as a pdf later in the week.
    10/20/09: here the pdfs: 5 full-size and 1 page with 6 small images, or 9 full size slides.
    • PS. good luck finishing up your papers. Don't forget to upload to Gauchospace when done. Don't forget the word count, and note that you MUST draw your evidence from Equiano's writing (38-222), NOT from the introductory sections (pages 1-35). If you cite only passages from the introduction, you might get at best a "D". (I'm emailing this to everyone as well.)
    • Various events are coming up:
      • extra credit film Twilight Samurai will be shown at the MCC on Tuesday, 1-3:15pm
      • extra credit evening event: "How the US can bring Arabs & Israelis together," Wednesday, 8pm, Campbell Hall (free--dialog between two experts)
    • Note on paper: Check the prompt on syllabus p. 2: be sure to include your Word Count.
  • 10/20/09: Register your iClicker NOW! Instructions given on 10/8, below.
    Note 10/22: the iClicker company informs us that they purged their database in July 2009, so if you registered on the web before then, you need to do it again.
  • 10/23/09: Midterm online review session times are Mon. 5-6pm, and Tue 8-9pm. The forum will be on this GauchoSpace chatroom .
    • L7: China and Imperialism: 7 page PDF with 37 slides (last slide also in L8)
      L8: Japan and Imperialism: 9 page PDF with 54 slides (includes 5 slides on UC's future).
    • iClicker update: 35 clickers have no student names, 47 student names have no associated clickers, 2 clickers are defective. That means 10 students aren't participating--if you're one of them, please let me know why! List of 47 unregistered students
    • Is your clicker not functioning? Tech support suggests trying all 3 new batteries, and NOT Duracell (they are a tad shorter), but Energizer. That solves the problem on most clickers sent in for warranty repairs.
    • Midterm review sheet: I'll email you when it is available, probably sometime Saturday.
  • 10/24/09 (html on 10/25): Midterm Study Guide now available, with printable 1 page .pdf
  • 10/27/09: Just finished the second chat review. Here's how to access them:
  • 10/28/09, 9:30am: L9: Imperialism in India (6 page PDF with 35 slides) now available.
  • 10/27/09: I'll upload the slides from L9: India and Imperialism around 10am tomorrow (Wednesday). 6 page PDF with 35 slides.
    • iClickers: As of 10/27, there are 29 unregistered clickers and 36 students who don't have a clicker registered. Those 29: please register by 11/5 or you will begin to forfeit points. Of the 38-29=7 difference, I think 4 may have dropped the course, but I would love to hear from the rest of you why you don't want to participate in this aspect of the course. Here is the list of unregistered clickers. List of 36 no-clicker students.
      [update 11/2: 26 ownerless clickers; 34 clickerless students]
    • Clicker serial number: I noticed on my own clicker that my serial number is beginning to rub off. I put a piece of clear tape over it, as the company recommends. You may want to do the same, since they clearly haven't fixed this bad ink problem yet.
  • 11/3/09: L11: World War I (5 page PDF with 30 slides) now available
    • And here is the Family History Essay handout (1 page pdf).
    • Extra credit film Gandhi showing at the MCC, Wed. 11/4, 1-4pm.
  • 11/5/09: L12: Consequences of Crisis of European Global Order (5 page pdf) now available. NOTE: the last page of 6 slides was not shown in lecture, is included for reference.
    • Extra Credit Event tonight: SPEAK TRUTH TO POWER
      Thursday, November 5 / 8:00 p.m. / Free, UCSB Campbell Hall
      Kerry Kennedy founded the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Rights to ensure the protection of rights codified under the UN Declaration of Human Rights and to address problems of social justice in the spirit of her late father. She also serves as chair of the Amnesty International USA Leadership Council. Kennedy is the author of Speak Truth to Power: Human Rights Defenders Who Are Changing Our World, which features interviews with human rights activists such as Helen Prejean, Marian Wright Edelman, the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Elie Wiesel, and Oscar Arias. Speak Truth To Power has evolved from a book exploring the quality of courage into a global education initiative aiding the fight for international human rights.
      As usual, you will need to do a 1-page write-up in order to receive credit.
  • 11/16/09: Powerpoint pdfs of L13: World War II and L14: Cold War now available, as well as of Eric's presentation about his oral history project. Eric's proposal, interview transcript and his paper are available as well, but only on the GauchoSpace site.
  • 11/17/09: PPT pdf of L15: Isms & China now available (30 slides, of which 3 were skipped)
    • The remaining extra credit films (all at the MCC):
      Tue, 11/17, 1-3:15pm: Seven Years in Tibet (WW2 India & Tibet, China & Dalai Lama
      Thursday, 11/19, 2-3:45pm: Persepolis (1979 Iranian revolution)
      FRIDAY, 12/4, 2-3:30pm: Born into Brothels (contemporary India)
  • 11/19/09: PPT pdf of L16: Latin America now available (36 slides on 6 pages; 21 shown in lecture, remainder will be covered next Tuesday)
  • 11/16/09: Powerpoint pdfs of L13: World War II and L14: Cold War now available, as well as of Eric's presentation about his oral history project. Eric's proposal, interview transcript and his paper are available as well, but only on the GauchoSpace site.
  • 11/17/09: PPT pdf of L15: Isms & China now available (30 slides, of which 3 were skipped)
    • The remaining extra credit films (all at the MCC):
      Tue, 11/17, 1-3:15pm: Seven Years in Tibet (WW2 India & Tibet, China & Dalai Lama
      Thursday, 11/19, 2-3:45pm: Persepolis (1979 Iranian revolution)
      FRIDAY, 12/4, 2-3:30pm: Born into Brothels (contemporary India)
  • 11/19/09: PPT pdf of L16: Latin America now available (36 slides on 6 pages; 21 shown in lecture, remainder will be covered next Tuesday
  • 11/24/09: Essay due date extension, request for survey, final exam date
    Before you leave for Thanksgiving break, a few announcements:
    1. After consulting with the TAs, we decided that it would be ok to extend the paper due date until Thursday, Dec. 3 (8am), so you have more time to write after Thanksgiving break
    2. Also, I have a survey I'd like you to take. The 15 questions (3 multiple checkbox and 12 single answer "radio button") takes less than a minute to complete. It is anonymous, and I appreciate your candid answers.
      Please do respond, this is valuable information for me. Here is the link: http://www.feedbackfarm.com/surveyengine/s.php?i=3e4
      After you finish, you'll see links to previous years' survey results. [2009 survey results]
    3. As I announced in September, the Final Exam date in the printed syllabus is incorrect. That is the time slot for courses that meet TR at 8*p*m. The slot for TR 8am courses is: Friday, Dec. 11, 8-11am. That is the correct time.
    4. PPT pdf of L17: Middle East now available (30 slides, 23 shown)
    • Thanks for doing the survey, and have a good break!
    • PS. If anyone is interested in my use of the clickers, here's an overview of all the clicker question slides with their results, with a couple slides of analysis at the beginning (7 page/42 slide PDF). I have to admit that I don't feel I've used them very effectively--we'll see if I can do better in the final class sessions.
  • Dec. 1, 2009: PPT pdf of L18: 21st Century Problems now available (24 slides on 4 pages)
  • Dec. 10, 2009, 2:30pm: GauchoSpace tech support was able to retrieve the lost chat answers I posted around 9pm Wed. evening--after the long 5-6pm session, and before those two brief 9:15pm fragments with Ritesh. (direct link to archived chat) They may reappear there if the tech is able to restore them, but in any case here they are:
    • I'm just checking in to comment on a few things that came up in the earlier chat session this evening.
    • In the discussion of Islamic nationalism the word "reformism" came up. I'm not sure what that means--I wouldn't associate it with either type of Arab nationalism
    • As for "globalization," you might think about what happens to countries that aren't part of it (see Three Worlds model developed since the 1970s on economic criteria) when discussing its world-historical significance (but you don't HAVE to)
    • For the third essay question, you only need THREE total examples, not 9. An "A" answer will need to argue why some of those causal factors were more important than others, perhaps also more important in one century than another.
    • Liberalism: no, you don't need to define all 8 for the 20th c, but there are some common themes, and some are more important than others. You should be able to say why some of those types (or common features) are significant for world history.
    • For "critical history" you don't have to discuss N's other types in detail, but it may help to define critical by saying what it is not (and thus mentioning the other types briefly)--again, most important is that you can relate that concept to some other things in the course to show why it is significant
    • Just finished reading through the earlier session. Boy was there a lot of confusion on what a "choice" meant! I hope that is clarified now. Earlier returns: 22 for section II, and 76 for section III. If that holds til tomorrow: I will decide which of 1 OR 2 is on the exam, and both 3 and 4 will be there, and you can choose which of 3 or 4 you answer.
    • Good luck studying--bye.

Usage during quarters when the course is taught:

April 2003: 25/day
(each student checked site once every 4.5 days);
May 2003: 20day
(once every 5.5 days)
June '03 til final: 28.5/day
(once every 4 days)

Apr. 2006: 35/day
(each student checked once every 6 days)
May 2006: 53/day
(once every 4 days)
June '06 til final: 66/day
(once every 3.5 days)

Apr. 2008: 73/day
(each student checked once every 6.5 days)
May 2008: 95/day
(once every 5 days)
June '08 til final:
161/day
(once every 3 days)

Note: the statistics at left assume that all hits were from students in the course; actually, there is a "background" hit rate of about 6-10/day

author: H. Marcuse

visitors since March 31, 2003
(April 1, 2003=1st class)

These are "unique" hits, so the same person checking multiple times in one day (from the same computer) only counts once.

2003: 7.5/day (course of 110)
2004: 1.67/day (no course)
2005: 3.67/day
(no course)

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1000 on 5/12/03 [30/day]
1800 on 6/15/03 [9/day]
hits after end of course:
7.38 in 2003
2060 on 1/4/04 [1.5/day]
2650 on 12/23/04 [1.6/day]
1.67/day in 2004
(class not taught in 2004)
2675 on 1/7/05 [1.6/day]
(ca. 4000 on 1/1/06)
3.7/day in 2005
(class not taught in 2005) 4640 on 4/2/06 [7.4/day]
[4/4/06: first class, 11am]
4673 on 4/4/06, 10am
5000 on 4/11/06 [33/day] 6800 on 5/20/06 [46/day]
7900 on 6/11/06 [52/day]
8200 on 6/14/06 [100/day]

9676 on 12/31/06=3/day
2006: 12.8/day
10,700 on 6/20/07=6/day
11,280 on 10/8/07=5.3/day
11,500 on 11/5/07=9/day
11,854 on 12/31/07=6.3/day
2007: 6.0/day
(class not taught in 2007)
12,010 on 1/16/08=10/day
12,660 on 3/29/08=9/day
12,720 on 3/31/08=20/day
first class April 1, 2008
12,830 on 4/1/08=110/day
12,900 on 4/2/08=70/day

13,110 on 4/7/08=42/day
(survey launched)
13,236 on 4/9, 11am[250 resp.]
13,456 on 4/13/08=55/day
14,715 on 4/29/08=79/day
midterm guide e-mail sent
15,235 on 5/1/08=260/day
15,420 on 5/4/08=92/day
15,620 on 5/6/08=100/day
16,180 on 5/11/08=112/day
16,820 on 5/15/08=128/day
16,920 on 5/17/08=50/day
17,050 on 5/18/08=130/day
paper due 5/20/08
17,580 on 5/21/08=177/day
17,650 on 5/22/08=70/day
17,970 on 5/28/08=53/day
18,290 on 6/2/08=64/day
18,420 on 6/3/08=130/day
[study guide posted]
18,620 on 6/4/08=200/day
[e-mail re: Study Guide; L20]
18,800 on 6/5/08=180/day
final exam on 6/9, noon
19,640 on 6/9/08=210/day
June 9=final exam
19,680 on 6/10/08=40/day
19,900 on 6/24/08=16/day
20,200 on 9/5/08=4/day
20,770 on 1/1/09
22,000 on 9/23/09=4.7/day
9/24/09 1st day of class
22,100@2pm; 22,150@7pm

  22,240 on 9/27/09=60/day
22,380 on 9/30, 3pm=+140
22,420 on 10/1, 11am=+40
22,626 on 10/8=29/day
22,700 on 10/12/09=18/day
22,830 on 10/15/09=43/day
22,945 on 10/19/09=29/day
23,0010 on 10/20/09=65/day
23,080 on 10/22/09=35/day
23,128 on 10/24/09=24/day
midterm guide posted Sat eve
23,362 on 10/27/09=78/day
chat 10/27, 8-9pm
23,402 on 10/28, 9am=+40
23,600 on 11/3/09=34/day
family history essay handout
23,726 on 11/5/09=63/day
24,033 on 11/16/09=27/day
24,123 on 11/19/09=30/day
24,203 on 11/23/09=20/day
24,383 on 12/1/09=16/day
24,686 on 12/7/09=50/day
24,800 on 12/10/09=40/day
24,970 on 12/23/09=13/day
24,982 on 12/29/09=2/day
25,025 on 1/4/10=7/day
2009: 11.5/day
25,135 on 1/16/10=9/day
25,700 on 5/15/10=4.2/day

Data from server statistics package (some to be added later):
2006: 9188 page views=25.2/day; 6321 entry, 3832 exit
2007: 2685 page views=7.4/day; 1313 entry, 1226 exit
2008: 14,186 page views=38.8/day; 10,730 entry, 5,660 exit
2009:   5,590 page views=15.3/day;   4,199 entry, 2,530 exit
Note: entry - exit = number of viewers coming into this page, but looking at other pages before leaving the site.

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