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History
498: Watergate Version 2 |
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This course aims to improve your knowledge of historical methods and content.
In terms of methods, it will
In terms of content, it will
Methods
We will investigate the following questions:
Most of you have probably written a historical research paper of some sort during your undergraduate years. While that will serve as useful experience, in this course we will look at "state of the art" methods for researching and writing papers, including expanding the types and numbers of sources you use, and examining the rich array of electronic sources that are now available.
Content
“Watergate” is the term given to a whole host of illegal and questionable legal practices in which the Nixon administration engaged from its inception in January, 1969 until the break-in at the Democratic National Headquarters at the Watergate Complex on June 17, 1972 -- and the cover-up by President Nixon and his associates that occurred afterwards, until his resignation on August 8, 1974. Many Americans think of Watergate as the break-in and the subsequent cover-up, but it applies to a much broader range of activities that, some asserted, would have undermined American democracy irreparably if they had gone undiscovered.
Using Watergate as the main theme, students will be asked to investigate such topics as:
o Was Watergate unique? To what extent did previous presidents engage in similar practices?
o What was the CIA’s role in Watergate? the FBI’s?
o What was the role of the press in uncovering Watergate?
o What was the role of Congress in uncovering Watergate?
o What was the role of the federal judiciary in uncovering Watergate?
o What was the role of the Supreme Court in uncovering Watergate?
o What was the perspective of individual participants in Watergate: Richard Nixon, Bob Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, Gordon Liddy, John Dean, Charles Colson and others?
o What were the short- and long-term impacts of Watergate?
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The final grade will be determined according to the following scale:
A+ 97% and above
A 93%-96%
A- 90%-92%
B+ 87%-89%
B 83%-86%
B- 80%-82%
C+ 77%-79%
C 73%-76%
C- 70%-72%
D+ 67%-69%
D 63%-66%
D- 60%-62%
E Less than 60%
V.Assignments
A. Submission
All
assignments must be submitted via the Blackboard site, under Assignments, in
the correct place. The instructor will not accept assignments sent by e-mail
or in paper form.
B. Format
All
assignments must be submitted using Word or an electronic word processor acceptable
to the instructor. All should include your name, the date, and the number and
title of the assignment, and have page numbers.
All
assignments will be graded using Word's (or other) commenting features, and
students must be or become familiar enough with these features to be able to
read and interact with these features. I will demonstrate this in class, and
you should feel free to visit me during office hours or at another time to review
this if you are not familiar with it.
C. Standards
Assignments will be graded based on quality of content, writing, and presentation.
Quality
of Content
o How well
does the author understand and comply with the tasks required in the assignment?
o What is the level
of effort revealed by the work? An engaged effort to learn as much as possible,
or a weak effort to comply minimally?
o Is the author
accurate in factual information, and logical in analyses?
Quality
of Writing
o Comprehensibility
-- is it easy to understand the author's arguments and the presentation of evidence?
Is the material organized in a logical fashion?
o Style -- is the
language simple enough to read easily but sophisticated enough to present complex
thoughts?
o Grammar, spelling
and punctuation -- are there grammatical, spelling, and punctuation errors?
o Are the citations
correctly formatted?
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Week |
Tuesday |
Thursday |
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1 8/21 |
Rael: Introduction |
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2 |
Watergate |
Watergate |
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3 |
Watergate |
Watergate |
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4 9/11 |
Watergate |
Watergate |
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5 9/18 |
Sources |
Sources |
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6 9/25 |
Sources |
Sources |
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7 10/2 |
Developing the Outline |
Developing the Outline Assignment 5, Outline due by end of day Friday, 10/5 |
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8 10/9 |
Writing: Citations (Citation guide will be distributed) | Writing: Citations (Citation guide will be distributed) |
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9 10/16 |
Analyzing Primary & Secondary Sources | Analyzing Primary & Secondary Sources |
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10 10/23 |
Integrating Primary & Secondary Sources |
Integrating Primary & Secondary Sources |
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11 10/30 |
Writing: Style |
Writing: Style |
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12 11/6 |
Writing: Style |
Writing: Style Reading: Rael, "Writing Your Paper" (All sections) |
13 11/13 |
Due: 1st Draft of Paper
by Sunday, 11/11 |
Individual Meetings |
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14 11/20 |
No class -- revise papers | No class - revise papers |
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15 11/27 |
Students Present Papers | Students Present Papers |
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16 |
Students Present Papers | Students Present Papers |