MindEdge has enhanced OpenStax’s History of the United States, which presents college and university students with a comprehensive, introductory survey of the major events and historical trends that have shaped America. Topics include Reconstruction, the Great Depression, World War II, the Civil Rights Movement, 9/11 and through the Obama Era. This course provides a wide-ranging look at the social and political forces that have defined American society.
MindEdge has enhanced OpenStax courses with interactive games, video commentary, adaptive learning segments, additional practice questions, and a robust question database.
Module 1: The Americas, Europe and Africa before 1492
- Locate on a map the major American civilizations before the arrival of the Spanish
- Discuss the cultural achievements of these civilizations
- Discuss the differences and similarities between lifestyles, religious practices, and customs among the native peoples
- Describe the European societies that engaged in conversion, conquest, and commerce
- Discuss the motives for and mechanisms of early European exploration
- Locate the major West African empires on a map
- Discuss the roles of Islam and Europe in the slave trade
Module 2: Early Globalization: The Atlantic World, 1492-1650
- Describe Portuguese exploration of the Atlantic and Spanish exploration of the Americas, and the importance of these voyages to the developing Atlantic World
- Explain the importance of Spanish exploration of the Americas in the expansion of Spain’s empire and the development of Spanish Renaissance culture
- Explain the changes brought by the Protestant Reformation and how it influenced the development of the Atlantic World
- Describe Spain’s response to the Protestant Reformation
- Identify regions where the English, French, and Dutch explored and established settlements
- Describe the differences among the early colonies
- Explain the role of the American colonies in European nations’ struggles for domination
- Describe how Europeans solved their labor problems
- Describe the theory of mercantilism and the process of commodification
- Analyze the effects of the Columbian Exchange
Module 3: Creating New Social Orders: Colonial Societies, 1500-1700
- Identify the main Spanish American colonial settlements of the 1500s and 1600s
- Discuss economic, political, and demographic similarities and differences between the Spanish colonies
- Compare and contrast the development and character of the French and Dutch colonies in North America
- Discuss the economies of the French and Dutch colonies in North America
- Identify the first English settlements in America
- Describe the differences between the Chesapeake Bay colonies and the New England colonies
- Compare and contrast the wars between native inhabitants and English colonists in both the Chesapeake Bay and New England colonies
- Explain the role of Bacon’s Rebellion in the rise of chattel slavery in Virginia
- Explain the reasons for the rise of slavery in the American colonies
- Describe changes to Indian life, including warfare and hunting
- Contrast European and Indian views on property
- Assess the impact of European settlement on the environment
Module 4: Rule Britannia! The English Empire, 1660-1763
- Describe the wars for empire
- Analyze the significance of these conflicts
- Analyze the causes and consequences of the Restoration
- Identify the Restoration colonies and their role in the expansion of the Empire
- Identify the causes of the Glorious Revolution
- Explain the outcomes of the Glorious Revolution
- Analyze the role slavery played in the history and economy of the British Empire
- Explain the effects of the 1739 Stono Rebellion and the 1741 New York Conspiracy Trials
- Describe the consumer revolution and its effect on the life of the colonial gentry and other settlers
- Explain the significance of the Great Awakening
- Describe the genesis, central ideas, and effects of the Enlightenment in British North America
Module 5: Imperial Reforms and Colonial Protests, 1763-1774
- Describe the state of affairs between the colonies and the home government in 1774
- Explain the purpose and results of the First Continental Congress
- Discuss the status of Great Britain’s North American colonies in the years directly following the French and Indian War
- Describe the size and scope of the British debt at the end of the French and Indian War
- Explain how the British Parliament responded to the debt crisis
- Outline the purpose of the Proclamation Line, the Sugar Act, and the Currency Act
- Describe the socio-political environment in the colonies in the early 1770s
- Explain the purpose of the Tea Act of 1773 and discuss colonial reactions to it
- Identify and describe the Coercive Acts
- Explain the purpose of the 1765 Stamp Act
- Describe the colonial responses to the Stamp Act
- Describe the purpose of the 1767 Townshend Acts
- Explain why many colonists protested the 1767 Townshend Acts and the consequences of their actions
Module 6: America’s War for Independence, 1775-1783
- Explain how Great Britain’s response to the destruction of a British shipment of tea in Boston Harbor in 1773 set the stage for the Revolution
- Describe the beginnings of the American Revolution
- Explain the British and American strategies of 1776 through 1778
- Identify the key battles of the early years of the Revolution
- Outline the British southern strategy and its results
- Describe key American victories and the end of the war
- Identify the main terms of the Treaty of Paris (1783)
- Explain Loyalist and Patriot sentiments
- Identify different groups that participated in the Revolutionary War
Module 7: Creating Republican Governments, 1776-1790
- Compare and contrast monarchy and republican government
- Describe the tenets of republicanism
- Describe the status of women in the new republic
- Describe the status of nonwhites in the new republic
- Explain the development of state constitutions
- Describe the features of the Articles of Confederation
- Analyze the causes and consequences of Shays’ Rebellion
- Identify the central issues of the 1787 Constitutional Convention and their solutions
- Describe the conflicts over the ratification of the federal constitution
Module 8: Growing Pains: The New Republic, 1790-1820
- Describe the competing visions of the Federalists and the Democratic-Republicans
- Identify the protections granted to citizens under the Bill of Rights
- Explain Alexander Hamilton’s financial programs as secretary of the treasury
- Identify the major foreign and domestic uprisings of the early 1790s
- Explain the effect of these uprisings on the political system of the United States
- Identify key examples of partisan wrangling between the Federalists and Democratic-Republicans
- Describe how foreign relations affected American politics
- Assess the importance of the Louisiana Purchase
- Describe the causes and consequences of the War of 1812
- Identify the important events of the War of 1812 and explain their significance
Module 9: The Industrial, Market, and Transportation Revolutions, 1800-1850
- Explain the role of the putting-out system in the rise of industrialization
- Understand industrialization’s impact on the nature of production and work
- Describe the effect of industrialization on consumption
- Identify the goals of workers’ organizations like the Working Men’s Party
- Explain the process of selling western land
- Discuss the causes of the Panic of 1819
- Identify key American innovators and inventors
- Describe the development of improved methods of nineteenth-century domestic transportation
- Identify the ways in which roads, canals, and railroads impacted Americans’ lives in the nineteenth century
- Identify the shared perceptions and ideals of each social class
- Assess different social classes’ views of slavery
Module 10: Jacksonian Democracy, 1820-1840
- Explain and illustrate the new style of American politics in the 1820s
- Describe the policies of John Quincy Adams’s presidency and explain the political divisions that resulted
- Describe the key points of the election of 1828
- Explain the scandals of Andrew Jackson’s first term in office
- Explain the factors that contributed to the Nullification Crisis
- Discuss the origins and creation of the Whig Party
- Explain the legal wrangling that surrounded the Indian Removal Act
- Describe how depictions of Indians in popular culture helped lead to Indian removal
- Explain Alexis de Tocqueville’s analysis of American democracy
- Describe the election of 1840 and its outcome
Module 11: A Nation on the Move: Westward Expansion, 1800-1860
- Explain the significance of the Louisiana Purchase
- Describe the terms of the Adams-Onís Treaty
- Describe the role played by the filibuster in American expansion
- Explain why the North and South differed over the admission of Missouri as a state
- Explain how the admission of new states to the Union threatened to upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress
- Explain why American settlers in Texas sought independence from Mexico
- Discuss early attempts to make Texas independent of Mexico
- Describe the relationship between Anglo-Americans and Tejanos in Texas before and after independence
- Identify the causes of the Mexican-American War
- Describe the outcomes of the war in 1848, especially the Mexican Cession
- Describe the effect of the California Gold Rush on westward expansion
- Describe the terms of the Wilmot Proviso
- Discuss why the Free-Soil Party objected to the westward expansion of slavery
- Explain why sectional and political divisions in the United States grew
- Describe the terms of the Compromise of 1850
Module 12: Cotton is King: The Antebellum South, 1800-1860
- Explain the labor-intensive processes of cotton production
- Describe the importance of cotton to the Atlantic and American antebellum economy
- Discuss the similarities and differences in the lives of slaves and free blacks
- Describe the independent culture and customs that slaves developed
- Assess the distribution of wealth in the antebellum South
- Describe the southern culture of honor
- Identify the main proslavery arguments in the years prior to the Civil War
- Explain the expansionist goals of advocates of slavery
- Describe the filibuster expeditions undertaken during the antebellum era
Module 13: Antebellum Idealism and Reform Impulses, 1820-1860
- Explain the connection between evangelical Protestantism and the Second Great Awakening
- Describe the message of the transcendentalists
- Identify similarities and differences among utopian groups of the antebellum era
- Explain how religious utopian communities differed from nonreligious ones
- Explain the different reforms aimed at improving the health of the human body
- Describe the various factions and concerns within the temperance movement
- Identify the different approaches to reforming the institution of slavery
- Describe the abolitionist movement in the early to mid-nineteenth century
- Explain the connections between abolition, reform, and antebellum feminism
- Describe the ways antebellum women’s movements were both traditional and revolutionary
Module 14: Troubled Times: The Tumultuous 1850s
- Explain the contested issues that led to the Compromise of 1850
- Describe and analyze the reactions to the 1850 Fugitive Slave Act
- Explain the political ramifications of the Kansas-Nebraska Act
- Describe the founding of the Republican Party
- Explain the importance of the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott ruling
- Discuss the principles of the Republican Party as expressed by Abraham Lincoln in 1858
- Describe John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry and its results
- Analyze the results of the election of 1860
Module 15: The Civil War: 1860-1865
- Explain the major events that occurred during the Secession Crisis
- Describe the creation and founding principles of the Confederate States of America
- Assess the strengths and weaknesses of the Confederacy and the Union
- Explain the strategic importance of the Battle of Bull Run and the Battle of Shiloh
- Explain what is meant by the term “total war” and provide examples
- Describe mobilization efforts in the North and the South
- Explain why 1863 was a pivotal year in the war
- Describe the reasons why many Americans doubted that Abraham Lincoln would be reelected
- Explain how the Union forces overpowered the Confederacy
Module 16: The Era of Reconstruction, 1865-1877
- Describe Lincoln’s plan to restore the Union at the end of the Civil War
- Discuss the tenets of Radical Republicanism
- Analyze the success or failure of the Thirteenth Amendment
- Describe the efforts made by Congress in 1865 and 1866 to bring to life its vision of Reconstruction
- Explain how the Fourteenth Amendment transformed the Constitution
- Explain the purpose of the second phase of Reconstruction and some of the key legislation put forward by Congress
- Describe the impeachment of President Johnson
- Discuss the benefits and drawbacks of the Fifteenth Amendment
- Explain the reasons for the collapse of Reconstruction
- Describe the efforts of white southern “redeemers” to roll back the gains of Reconstruction
Module 17: Go West Young Man! Westward Expansion 1840-1900
- Explain the evolution of American views about westward migration in the mid-nineteenth century
- Analyze the ways in which the federal government facilitated Americans’ westward migration in the mid-nineteenth century
- Identify the challenges that farmers faced as they settled west of the Mississippi River
- Describe the unique experiences of women who participated in westward migration
- Identify the major discoveries and developments in western gold, silver, and copper mining in the mid-nineteenth century
- Explain why the cattle industry was paramount to the development of the West and how it became the catalyst for violent range wars
- Describe the treatment of Chinese immigrants and Hispanic citizens during the westward expansion of the nineteenth century
Module 18: Industrialization and the Rise of Big Business 1870-1900
- Explain how the ideas and products of late nineteenth-century inventors contributed to the rise of big business
- Explain how the inventions of the late nineteenth century changed everyday American life
- Explain how the inventions of the late nineteenth century contributed directly to industrial growth in America
- Identify the contributions of Andrew Carnegie, John Rockefeller, and J. P. Morgan to the new industrial order emerging in the late nineteenth century
- Describe the visions, philosophies, and business methods of the leaders of the new industrial order
- Explain the qualities of industrial working-class life in the late nineteenth century
- Analyze both workers’ desire for labor unions and the reasons for unions’ inability to achieve their goals
- Describe the characteristics of the new consumer culture that emerged at the end of the nineteenth century
Module 19: The Growing Pains of Urbanization 1870-1900
- Explain the growth of American cities in the late nineteenth century
- Identify the key challenges that Americans faced due to urbanization, as well as some of the possible solutions to those challenges
- Identify how each class of Americans—working class, middle class, and upper class—responded to the challenges associated with urban life
- Explain the process of machine politics and how it brought relief to working-class Americans
- Identify the factors that prompted African American and European immigration to American cities in the late nineteenth century
- Explain the discrimination and anti-immigration legislation that immigrants faced in the late nineteenth century
- Explain how American writers, both fiction and nonfiction, helped Americans to better understand the changes they faced in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
- Identify some of the influential women and African American writers of the era
Module 20: Politics in the Gilded Age, 1870-1900
- Discuss the national political scene during the Gilded Age
- Analyze why many critics considered the Gilded Age a period of ineffective national leadership
- Explain the difference between the spoils system and civil service, and discuss the importance of this issue in the period from 1872 to 1896
- Recognize the ways in which the issue of tariffs impacted different sectors of the economy in late nineteenth-century America
- Explain why Americans were split on the issue of a national gold standard versus free coinage of silver
- Explain why political patronage was a key issue for political parties in the late nineteenth century
- Understand how the economic and political climate of the day promoted the formation of the farmers’ protest movement in the latter half of the nineteenth century
- Explain how the farmers’ revolt moved from protest to politics
- Explain how the Depression of 1893 helped the Populist Party to grow in popularity in the 1890s
- Understand the forces that contributed to the Populist Party’s decline following the 1896 presidential election
Module 21: Leading the Way: The Progressive Movement 1890-1920
- Describe the role that muckrakers played in catalyzing the Progressive Era
- Explain the main features of Progressivism
- Identify specific examples of grassroots Progressivism relating to the spread of democracy, efficiency in government, and social justice
- Describe the more radical movements associated with the Progressive Era
- Understand the origins and growth of the women’s rights movement
- Identify the different strands of the early African American civil rights movement
- Explain the key features of Theodore Roosevelt’s “Square Deal”
- Explain the key features of William Howard Taft’s Progressive agenda
- Identify the main pieces of legislation that Woodrow Wilson’s “New Freedom” agenda comprised
Module 22: Age of Empire: American Foreign Policy, 1890-1914
- Explain the evolution of American interest in foreign affairs from the end of the Civil War through the early 1890s
- Identify the contributions of Frederick Jackson Turner and Alfred Thayer Mahan to the conscious creation of an American empire
- Explain the origins and events of the Spanish-American War
- Analyze the different American opinions on empire at the conclusion of the Spanish-American War
- Describe how the Spanish-American War intersected with other American expansions to solidify the nation’s new position as an empire
- Explain how economic power helped to expand America’s empire in China
- Describe how the foreign partitioning of China in the last decade of the nineteenth century influenced American policy
- Explain the meaning of “big stick” foreign policy
- Describe Theodore Roosevelt’s use of the “big stick” to construct the Panama Canal
- Explain the role of the United States in ending the Russo-Japanese War
- Explain how William Howard Taft used American economic power to protect the nation’s interests in its new empire
Module 23: Americans and the Great War 1914-1919
- Explain Woodrow Wilson’s foreign policy and the difficulties of maintaining American neutrality at the outset of World War I
- Identify the key factors that led to the U.S. declaration of war on Germany in April 1917
- Identify the steps taken by the U.S. government to secure enough men, money, food, and supplies to prosecute World War I
- Explain how the U.S. government attempted to sway popular opinion in favor of the war effort
- Explain how the status of organized labor changed during the First World War
- Describe how the lives of women and African Americans changed as a result of American participation in World War I
- Explain how America’s participation in World War I allowed for the passage of prohibition and women’s suffrage
- Identify the role that the United States played at the end of World War I
- Describe Woodrow Wilson’s vision for the postwar world
- Explain why the United States never formally approved the Treaty of Versailles nor joined the League of Nations
- Identify the challenges that the United States faced following the conclusion of World War I
- Explain Warren G. Harding’s landslide victory in the 1920 presidential election
Module 24: The Jazz Age: Redefining the Nation 1919-1929
- Discuss the role of movies in the evolution of American culture
- Explain the rise of sports as a dominant social force
- Analyze the ways in which the automobile, especially the Model T, transformed American life
- Define nativism and analyze the ways in which it affected the politics and society of the 1920s
- Describe the conflict between urban Americans and rural fundamentalists
- Explain the issues in question in the Scopes trial
- Explain the factors that shaped the new morality and the changing role of women in the United States during the 1920s
- Describe the “new Negro” and the influence of the Harlem Renaissance
- Analyze the effects of prohibition on American society and culture
- Describe the character and main authors of the Lost Generation
- Discuss Warren G. Harding’s strengths and weaknesses as president
- Explain how Calvin Coolidge was able to defeat the Democratic Party
- Explain what Calvin Coolidge meant by “the business of America is business”
Module 25: Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? The Great Depression, 1929-1932
- Identify the causes of the stock market crash of 1929
- Assess the underlying weaknesses in the economy that resulted in America’s spiraling from prosperity to depression so quickly
- Explain how a stock market crash might contribute to a nationwide economic disaster
- Explain Herbert Hoover’s responses to the Great Depression and how they reflected his political philosophy
- Identify the local, city, and state efforts to combat the Great Depression
- Analyze the frustration and anger that a majority of Americans directed at Herbert Hoover
- Identify the challenges that everyday Americans faced as a result of the Great Depression and analyze the government’s initial unwillingness to provide assistance
- Explain the particular challenges that African Americans faced during the crisis
- Identify the unique challenges that farmers in the Great Plains faced during this period
- Identify the successes and failures of Herbert Hoover’s presidency
- Determine the fairness and accuracy of assessments of Hoover’s presidency
Module 26: Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal 1932-1941
- Describe the events of the 1932 presidential election and identify the characteristics that made Franklin Roosevelt a desirable candidate
- Explain why Congress amended the U.S. Constitution to reduce the period of time between presidential elections and inaugurations
- Identify the key pieces of legislation included in Roosevelt’s “First New Deal”
- Assess the strengths, weaknesses, and general effectiveness of the First New Deal
- Explain Roosevelt’s overall vision for addressing the structural problems in the U.S. economy
- Identify key pieces of legislation from the Second New Deal
- Assess the entire New Deal, especially in terms of its impact on women, African Americans, and Native Americans
Module 27: Fighting the Good Fight in World War II 1941-1945
- Explain the factors in Europe that gave rise to Fascism and Nazism
- Discuss the events in Europe and Asia that led to the start of the war
- Identify the early steps taken by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to increase American aid to nations fighting totalitarianism while maintaining neutrality
- Describe the steps taken by the United States to prepare for war
- Describe how the war changed employment patterns in the United States
- Discuss the contributions of civilians on the home front, especially women, to the war effort
- Analyze how the war affected race relations in the United States
- Identify the major battles of the European theater
- Analyze the goals and results of the major wartime summit meetings
- Discuss the strategy employed against the Japanese and some of the significant battles of the Pacific campaign
- Describe the effects of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki
- Analyze the decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan
Module 28: Post-War Prosperity and Cold War Fears 1945-1960
- Identify the issues that the nation faced during demobilization
- Explain the goals and objectives of the Truman administration
- Evaluate the actions taken by the U.S. government to address the concerns of returning veterans
- Explain how and why the Cold War emerged in the wake of World War II
- Describe the steps taken by the U.S. government to oppose Communist expansion in Europe and Asia
- Discuss the government’s efforts to root out Communist influences in the United States
- Describe President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s domestic and foreign policies
- Discuss gender roles in the 1950s
- Discuss the growth of the suburbs and the effect of suburbanization on American society
- Describe Americans’ different responses to rock and roll music
- Discuss the way contemporary movies and television reflected postwar American society
- Explain how Presidents Truman and Eisenhower addressed civil rights issues
- Discuss efforts by African Americans to end discrimination and segregation
- Describe southern whites’ response to the civil rights movement
Module 29: Contesting Futures: America in the 1960’s
- Assess Kennedy’s Cold War strategy
- Describe Kennedy’s contribution to the civil rights movement
- Describe the goals and activities of SDS, the Free Speech Movement, and the antiwar movement
- Explain the rise, goals, and activities of the women’s movement
- Describe the major accomplishments of Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society
- Identify the legal advances made in the area of civil rights
- Explain how Lyndon Johnson deepened the American commitment in Vietnam
- Explain the strategies of the African American civil rights movement in the 1960s
- Discuss the rise and philosophy of Black Power
- Identify achievements of the Mexican American civil rights movement in the 1960s
Module 30: Political Storms at Home and Abroad 1968-1980
- Describe the counterculture of the 1960s
- Explain the origins of the American Indian Movement and its major activities
- Assess the significance of the gay rights and women’s liberation movements
- Explain the factors responsible for Richard Nixon’s election in 1968
- Describe the splintering of the Democratic Party in 1968
- Discuss Richard Nixon’s economic policies
- Discuss the major successes of Richard Nixon’s foreign policy
- Describe the events that fueled antiwar sentiment in the Vietnam era
- Explain Nixon’s steps to withdraw the United States from the conflict in South Vietnam
- Describe the actions that Nixon and his confederates took to ensure his reelection in 1972
- Explain the significance of the Watergate crisis
- Describe Gerald Ford’s domestic policies and achievements in foreign affairs
- Explain why Gerald Ford lost the election of 1976
- Describe Jimmy Carter’s domestic and foreign policy achievements
- Discuss how the Iranian hostage crisis affected the Carter presidency
Module 31: From Cold War to Culture Wars 1980-2000
- Explain Ronald Reagan’s attitude towards government
- Discuss the Reagan administration’s economic policies and their effects on the nation
- Discuss the culture wars and political conflicts of the Reagan era
- Describe the Religious Right’s response to the issues of the Reagan era
- Describe the successes and failures of Ronald Reagan’s foreign policy
- Compare the policies of Ronald Reagan with those of George H. W. Bush
- Explain the causes and results of the Persian Gulf War
- Discuss the events that constituted the end of the Cold War
- Explain political partisanship, antigovernment movements, and economic developments during the Clinton administration
- Discuss President Clinton’s foreign policy
- Explain how George W. Bush won the election of 2000
Module 32: The Challenges of the Twenty-First Century
- Discuss how the United States responded to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001
- Explain why the United States went to war against Afghanistan and Iraq
- Describe the treatment of suspected terrorists by U.S. law enforcement agencies and the U.S. military
- Discuss the Bush administration’s economic theories and tax policies, and their effects on the American economy
- Explain how the federal government attempted to improve the American public education system
- Describe the federal government’s response to Hurricane Katrina
- Identify the causes of the Great Recession of 2008 and its effect on the average citizen
- Describe the efforts to reduce the influence of immigrants on American culture
- Describe the evolution of twenty-first-century American attitudes towards same-sex marriage
- Explain the clash over climate change
- Describe how Barack Obama’s domestic policies differed from those of George W. Bush
- Discuss the important events of the war on terror during Obama’s two administrations
- Discuss some of the specific challenges facing the United States as Obama’s second term draws to a close