What is the best way to engage and teach students in their history survey course? From the beginning, The American Promise has been shaped by our firsthand knowledge that the survey course is one of the most difficult to teach and, for many, also the most difficult to take. From the outset we have met this challenge by providing a story students enjoy for its readability, clear chronology, and lively voices of ordinary Americans. The American Promise: A Concise History preserves the already-
With LaunchPad we have made meeting the challenges of the survey course a great deal easier by providing an intuitive, interactive e-
What Makes The American Promise Special
Our experience as teachers and our frustrations with available textbooks inspired us to create a book that we could use effectively with our own students. Our knowledge of classroom realities has informed every aspect of each edition and version of The American Promise. We began with a clear chronological, political framework, as we have found that students need both the structure a political narrative provides and the insights gained from examining social and cultural experience. To write a comprehensive, balanced account of American history, we focus on the public arena — the place where politics intersects with social and cultural developments — to show how Americans confronted the major issues of their day and created far-
The unique approach of our narrative is reflected in our title, The American Promise. We emphasize human agency and demonstrate our conviction that the essence of America has been its promise. For millions, the nation has held out the promise of a better life, unfettered worship, equality before the law, representative government, democratic politics, and other freedoms seldom found elsewhere. But none of these promises has come with guarantees. Throughout the narrative we demonstrate how much of American history is a continuing struggle over the definition and realization of the nation’s promise.
To engage students in this American story and to portray fully the diversity of the American experience, we stitch into our narrative the voices of hundreds of contemporaries. We further animate this story with a vivid art and map program. Visual and map activities in each chapter prompt students to think critically about what they see. To help students of all levels understand American history, we provide the best in primary sources and pedagogical aids. To help instructors teach important skills and evaluate student learning, we provide a rich assortment of assignments and assessments in both the print and LaunchPad formats. While this edition rests solidly on our original goals and premises, it breaks new ground in addressing the specific needs of today’s courses.
A New Skills Focus for the Special Features
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For this revision we focused our attention on The American Promise’s acclaimed feature program by looking for ways to make the features more useful, skills-
Collectively these features provide a range of new topics and content that includes a new focus on the weak opposition to the African slave trade in the eighteenth century; a nuanced look at reactions to the Boston Port Act outside Massachusetts; an examination of the nation’s first formal declaration of war; attention to Ida B. Wells and her campaign to stop lynching; a spotlight on Franklin D. Roosevelt’s use of New Deal programs to rebuild the navy during the 1930s; an exploration of the failure of the Equal Rights Amendment; and much more.
Evaluation of Primary Sources
Primary sources form the heart of historical study, and we are pleased to offer the new Analyzing Historical Evidence feature, which asks students to use historical thinking skills to consider a range of documents. Each feature juxtaposes two to four primary documents to reveal varying perspectives on a topic or issue and to provide students with opportunities to build and practice their skills of historical interpretation. Because students are so attuned to visuals and instructors deeply value their usefulness as primary sources, we have included both text and visual sources in this new feature. Images including artifacts of daily life in Chaco Canyon, examples of early photojournalism, political cartoons, and more show students how to mine visual documents for evidence about the past.
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In Analyzing Historical Evidence, feature introductions and document headnotes contextualize the sources, and short-
In addition, more than 150 documents in the accompanying collection Reading the American Past are available free to users who package the reader with the main print text, and they are automatically included in the LaunchPad e-
LaunchPad for The American Promise also comes with a collection of more than 135 additional primary sources that instructors can choose to assign. These sources include letters, memoirs, court records, government documents, and more, and they include items by or about such people as John Smith, William Penn, Anne Hutchinson, Jonathan Edwards, Mary Jemison, Black Hawk, John C. Calhoun, Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, Mary Elizabeth Lease, William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Huey P. Long, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, Paul Robeson, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and more.
To give students ample opportunity to practice thinking critically about primary source images, one picture in each chapter includes a special visual activity caption that reinforces this essential skill. One set of questions in these activities prompts analysis of the image, while a second set of questions helps students connect the image to main points in the narrative.
Distinctive Essay Features Practice Historical Thinking Skills
To demonstrate and engage students in various methods of historical thinking, our new Making Historical Arguments feature essays pose and interpret specific questions of continuing interest, such as “Why Did Cortés Win?,” “Was the New United States a Christian Country?,” “Did Westerners Really Build It All by Themselves?,” and “Why Did the ERA Fail?”
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Helping Students Understand the Narrative
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Every instructor knows it can be a challenge to get students to complete assigned readings and then to fully understand what is important once they do the reading. The American Promise addresses these problems head-
To help students come to class prepared, instructors who adopt LaunchPad for The American Promise can assign the LearningCurve formative assessment activities. This online learning tool is popular with students because it helps them rehearse content at their own pace in a nonthreatening, game-
Encouraging active reading is another means for making content memorable and highlighting what is truly important. To help students read actively and understand the central idea of the chapter, instructors who use LaunchPad can also assign Guided Reading Exercises. These exercises appear at the start of each chapter, prompting students to collect information to be used to answer a broad analytic question central to the chapter as a whole.
To further encourage students to read and fully assimilate the text as well as measure how well they do this, instructors can assign the multiple-
Another big challenge for survey instructors is meeting the needs of a range of students, particularly the students who need the most support. In addition to the formative assessment of LearningCurve, which adapts to the needs of students at any level, The American Promise offers a number of print and digital tools for the underprepared. Each chapter opener includes Content Learning Objectives to prepare students to read the chapter with purpose. Once into the heart of the chapter, students are reminded to think about main ideas through Review Questions placed at the end of every major section. In print and LaunchPad these questions can be assigned as a chapter review activity. Key Terms are defined in the margins, giving background on important ideas and events. Some students have trouble connecting events and ideas, particularly with special boxed features. To address this, we have added a set of Questions for Analysis to the end of each feature to help students understand the significance of the featured topic, its context, and how it might be viewed from different angles. These questions are also available in the print and LaunchPad versions of the book.
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With this edition we also bring back two popular sets of end-
Helping Instructors Teach with Digital Resources
With requests for clear and transparent learning outcomes coming from all quarters and with students who bring increasingly diverse levels of skills to class, even veteran teachers can find preparing for today’s courses a trying matter. With LaunchPad we have reconceived the textbook as a suite of tools in multiple formats that allows each format do what it does best to capture students’ interest and help instructors create meaningful lessons.
But one of the best benefits is that instructors using LaunchPad have a number of assessment tools that allow them to see what it is their students do and don’t know and measure student achievement all in one convenient space. For example, LearningCurve, an adaptive learning tool that comes with LaunchPad, garners more than a 90 percent student satisfaction rate and helps students master book content. When LearningCurve is assigned, the grade book results show instructors where the entire class or individual students may be struggling, and this information in turn allows instructors to adjust lectures and course activities accordingly — a benefit not only for traditional classes but invaluable for hybrid, online, and newer “flipped” classes as well. In addition, not only can instructors assign all of the questions that appear in the print book and view the responses in the grade book, but they also have the option to assign automatically graded multiple-
With LaunchPad for The American Promise we make the tough job of teaching simpler by providing everything instructors need in one convenient space so they can set and achieve the learning outcomes they desire. To learn more about the benefits of LearningCurve and LaunchPad, see the “Versions and Supplements” section on page xvii.