sábado, 5 de agosto de 2017

LAIR: Syllabus

Syllabus

Course:
Liberalism & the Industrial Revolution
(a.k.a. 19th Century History)
Code
PH1007
Semester
August-December 2017
Professor
Francisco García González
E-mail
fgarciagonzalez@itesm.mx
Website
http://fgg23.blogspot.com (Go to the tag for the class)
Asesorías
Tuesday, 10:30-12:30 in Media Luna

A. General Objective

This course aims to set the stage for students to experience the necessary balance between concepts, abilities, and content to be able to understand the topics they will study in IB History.

B. Specific Objectives

Upon completing this course, students should have a firm grasp on:
1.     Evaluating historical sources through the OPCVL (Origin, Purpose, Content, Value, Limitations) format.
2.     The discussions surrounding the historical concepts of liberalism, nationalism, and imperialism.
3.     Regional dynamics and international relations as viewpoints from which to study history.
4.     The use of different types of sources in historical research.

C. Work Methodology

-       The class will be based around class discussions and teamwork.
-       Content will be made available to students before each session through the professor’s blog (fgg23.blogspot.com) in the class’s tag. Reading or watching the content is not necessary, but is highly recommended before each session, as it will make each class quicker and allow for more time to be dedicated to activities outside of listening to lectures or reading sources.
-       Book Presentation: The group will be divided into teams with an assigned novel from the 19th century. On the assigned date, they should make a 15-minute presentation that includes the plot of the book and the historical themes it touches upon. Each student will present at least twice in the semester. The rubric and the teams will be posted in the blog.

D. Class Instructions

In order for the class to flow smoothly, some specific rules will apply:
1.     Be honest. Using information without a proper citation in written assignments, presentations, projects, or exams will be penalized as Academic Dishonesty (D.A.) according to Article 33 of Tecnológico de Monterrey’s General Rules and Regulations for Students.
2.     Be responsible. The professor reserves the right to reschedule due dates, quizzes, and exams. While it is true that certain unexpected situations make deadline extensions acceptable and necessary, this is generally not the case, and deadlines are scheduled for specific reasons. Please respect the professor’s time and your own by planning accordingly when possible, and speaking up when necessary. Regarding absences, the class policy is that SAPPA will be taken after the 5-minute mark, and no one may enter the class afterwards. Absences are non-negotiable, and any kind of request for them to be justified should be taken directly to the department.
3.     Be respectful. While cellphones and electronic tablets are a staple of contemporary life, texting and taking calls while someone else is speaking in a discussion and teamwork-oriented class is impolite and counterproductive. Please raise your hand and wait for your turn to talk during class discussions, debates and lectures. If a student is unable to pay attention or participate respectfully, they will be asked to leave the class.
4.     Be present. As each class is only 1-hour long and activities are fast-paced, any absence (even to go to the bathroom) is distracting and probably unnecessary. This also applies for the usage of computers, tablets and phones for things that are unrelated to the class. You already made it to class, so you might as well make the most of it.

F. Course Topics

Date
7-Aug
Introduction
8-Aug
Presentation & Horizontal history
9-Aug
History and its sources. OPCVL Format
10-Aug
INTEGRATION
11-Aug
Seven Years War
14-Aug
What is a Revolution?
15-Aug
French Revolution
16-Aug
French Revolution: Robespierre & Napoleon
17-Aug
Social, Political, Scientific Revolutions
18-Aug
TEAM PRESENTATION: "Memoirs of a Nun" & "The Scarlet Pimpernel"
21-Aug
INTEGRATION
22-Aug
American Revolution
23-Aug
American Revolution: Jefferson & Hamilton
24-Aug
Causes of the Industrial Revolution
25-Aug
TEAM PRESENTATION: "Mary Poppins" & "Silas Marner"
28-Aug
INTEGRATION
29-Aug
Liberalism: Smith & Ricardo / PARTIAL PROJECT
30-Aug
Socialism: Marx & Fourier
31-Aug
INTEGRATION
1-Sep
TEAM PRESENTATION: "North & South"  & "The Man Who Was Thursday"
4-Sep
REVIEW
5-Sep
PARTIAL EXAM
6-Sep
EXAM REVIEW
7-Sep
Social & Cultural impact of the Industrial Revolution
8-Sep
Industrialization, Liberalism & Capitalism
11-Sep
American expansion and Manifest Destiny
12-Sep
American Civil War: Viewpoint from the North
13-Sep
American Civil War: Viewpoint from the South
14-Sep
Capitalism and Human Relationships
15-Sep
TEAM PRESENTATION: "Maurice" & "Lady Susan"
18-Sep
INTEGRATION
19-Sep
State Building Activity
20-Sep
Nation vs State
21-Sep
Nationalism
22-Sep
Nationalism
25-Sep
Congress of Vienna: Agreements
26-Sep
Congress of Vienna: Setting
27-Sep
Congress of Vienna: Tabula Rasa
28-Sep
INTEGRATION
29-Sep
Colonial Mexico
2-Oct
Independence of Mexico in context
3-Oct
Reform War
4-Oct
Foreign interventions in Mexico
5-Oct
Porfiriato in context
6-Oct
TEAM PRESENTATION: "Los Empeños de una Casa" & "Sab"
9-Oct
INTEGRATION
10-Oct
European concept of Nation-State: Austria-Hungary / PARTIAL PROJECT
11-Oct
Unification of Germany
12-Oct
Unification of Italy
13-Oct
INTEGRATION
16-Oct
REVIEW
17-Oct
PARTIAL EXAM
18-Oct
EXAM REVIEW
19-Oct
French Imperialism
20-Oct
British Imperialism
23-Oct
Belgian Imperialism in the Congo
24-Oct
Imperialism and Industrialization
25-Oct
Imperialism
26-Oct
INTEGRATION
27-Oct
TEAM PRESENTATION: "Burmese Days" & "Around the World in 80 Days"
30-Oct
Imperialism
31-Oct
Conference of Berlin:Agreements
1-Nov
Conference of Berlin: Setting
2-Nov
Conference of Berlin: Tabula Rasa
3-Nov
TEAM PRESENTATION: "Samskara: A Rite for a Dead Man" & "Things Fall Apart"
6-Nov
INTEGRATION
7-Nov
Chinese isolation and the Opium Wars
8-Nov
Spheres of influence in China
9-Nov
Russian expansion and stagnation
10-Nov
TEAM PRESENTATION: "The Travels of Lao Can" & "A Young Doctor's Notebook"
13-Nov
INTEGRATION
14-Nov
Concepts: Revolution, Conservatism
15-Nov
Concepts: Liberalism, Capitalism, Socialism
16-Nov
Concepts: Nation, State, Nationalism / FINAL PROJECT
17-Nov
Concepts: Imperialism
20-Nov

21-Nov
REVIEW
22-Nov
Feedback Session
30-Nov
FINAL EXAM


G. Course Evaluation

First and Second Partial
Partial Exam: September 5, October 17
33%
Activities
50%
Partial Project: August 29, October 10
17%
TOTAL
100%

Final Grade
Partial 1
30%
Partial 2
30%
Activities
10%
Final Project: November 16
10%
Final Exam: November 30
20%
TOTAL
100%


H. Professor’s Profile

Francisco García González holds a Bachelor of Arts in International Relations from Tecnológico de Monterrey, Campus Ciudad de México, and a Master of Arts in Public Administration and Public Policy from Tecnológico de Monterrey’s School of Government and Public Transformation. His areas of specialization have included corruption, conflicts of interest, security, and globalization.

He has also studied at Georgetown University’s School of Continuing Studies in the International Relations and Conflict Resolution track of their “Semester in Washington” program, as well as Universidad Católica del Uruguay’s Winter School of Research Methods and Data Analysis.  He has worked for the Mexican federal government, the National Defense University’s William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies in Washington, DC, and Yale University’s Center for the Study of Globalization.

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