Fall 2025 Course Syllabus
Course: HIST-1302 (Section: 3D, CRN: 93633)
United States History II
LSCPA Logo Image
Instructor Information
Instructor Marshall Godwin
Email godwinmt@lamarpa.edu
Phone (409) 984-6320
Office Madison Monroe Educational - Room: 147
Office Hours Monday: 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM
Tuesday: 1:30 PM - 5:00 PM
Wednesday: 3:15 PM - 5:00 PM
Thursday: 9:30 AM - 11:30 AM
Friday: 8:00 AM - 9:00 AM (virtual)

My office is located in Student Center room 414.
Additional Contact Information The best way to contact me is via the email address listed above using your LSCPA student email account. If you send me an email during the week, expect a response within 24 hours of my receipt of said email. If you email me on a Friday afternoon or over the weekend, expect a reply on the first class day of the following week (usually a Monday, occasionally a Tuesday for the Fall 2025 semester). Owing to my current schedule, you should not expect a response to a weekend email until late Monday.
Course Information
Description A survey of the social, political, economic, cultural, and intellectual history of the United States from the Civil War/Reconstruction era to the present. United States History II examines industrialization, immigration, world wars, the Great Depression, Cold War and post-Cold War eras. Themes that may be addressed in United States History II include: American culture, religion, civil and human rights, technological change, economic change, immigration and migration, urbanization and suburbaniza
Required Textbooks Textbook Purchasing Statement: A student attending Lamar State College Port Arthur is not under any obligation to purchase a textbook from the college-affiliated bookstore. The same textbook may also be available from an independent retailer, including an online retailer.

OpenStax U.S. History is a free, online textbook which you will be able to access from Blackboard. There will be required reading materials in addition to your textbook, but all of these will be posted to Blackboard as well. You will NOT need to purchase any textbooks – or any other reading materials – for this course. You may access your OpenStax U.S. History via the following link:https://openstax.org/details/books/us-history

You can read the book directly online from the website. Additionally, there is a PDF copy on Blackboard which you can save to your device (laptop, tablet, external hard drive, etc.). Furthermore, there are audiobook versions of the chapters posted by OpenStax to Youtube, and I will post links to those videos in the appropriate Blackboard folders (e.g., during the week in which we read chapter 27, you will find an embedded version of the audiobook version of chapter 27).
 
Be aware that the file for the textbook is massive, and downloading a copy might take a few minutes if your connection is slow.
Additional Materials/Resources You MUST be able to access Blackboard and your LSCPA email outside of class time: this is not an option, but a necessity. In addition to the basic course textbook, you will also be required to read and analyze other materials including but not limited to primary sources, secondary sources and other articles or book excerpts germane to U.S. History after1877. All of these materials will be available to you through the course Blackboard site, and it is your responsibility as a college student to read them in preparation for class discussions, activities, tests, and in-class writing assignments. Make sure to keep up with the course schedule and to check both the Blackboard and your student email account frequently.


Additionally, it is incumbent upon the student to bring pencils with them to class during days in which we will be testing. The instructor will not provide writing utensils for you: once again, you are college students, and it is your responsibility to bring necessary materials with you to class.
Corequisites/Prerequisites
  • ENGL-0302 College Reading Skills
  • ENGL-0327 Integrated Reading and Writing
Learning Outcomes
  1. Create an argument through the use of historical evidence
  2. Analyze and interpret primary and secondary sources
  3. Analyze the effects of historical, social, political, economic, cultural, and global forces on this period of United States history
Core Objectives
  1. Communication: Students will demonstrate effective written, oral and/or visual communication.
  2. Critical Thinking: Students will engage in creative and/or innovative thinking, and/or inquiry, analysis, evaluation, synthesis of information, organizing concepts and constructing solutions.
  3. Social Responsibility: Students will demonstrate intercultural competency and civic knowledge by engaging effectively in local, regional, national and/or global communities.
  4. Personal Responsibility: Students will demonstrate the ability to connect choices, actions and consequences to ethical decision-making.
Lecture Topics Outline 08/25/25 – 08/27/25…Course Introduction
Introduction to the structure of the course, the scope of HIST 1302, the nature of history as a discipline, as well as what primary and secondary sources are. You will also study this syllabus and be required to take and pass a syllabus quiz in order to access the rest of Blackboard.

Readings:
             Syllabus and Introductory Module on Blackboard
Activities or Assignments:
             Syllabus Quiz


MODULE ONE:
09/01/25 – 09/17/25…A Tale of Today: America During the Gilded Age
For the first three weeks of September, we will cover the Gilded Age (1870s through 1890s), and discuss the many challenges and changes by urbanization, political corruption, mass immigration, monopolism, and by the rapid spread of the industrial revolution throughout the U.S. during and after the Civil War. We will also learn about movements that sought to reform the country, especially the women’s suffrage and populist movements.
                           
Please note that 09/01/25 is Labor Day this year, and as such we will not be holding a class session on that day (the campus will be closed). You are still obligated to do your readings in preparation for class time on 09/03/25.
 
Readings:
              Chapters 18 – 20 in OpenStax U.S. History
              Additional Readings on Blackboard in Module One Readings folders
Activities and Assignments:
              Knowledge Check, Chapter 18 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, Chapter 19 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, Chapter 20 (formative)
              Journal no. 1
              Journal no. 2
              Module One Test (09/17/25)


MODULE TWO:

09/22/25 – 10/08/25…Empire of Liberty: The Reign of Imperialism and Progressivism
During the next three-week period, we will focus on the progressive movements and their close associate, the imperialist movement. Often intertwined, progressivism and imperialism shaped national politics and culture from the 1890s through the 1920s. Having now catapulted itself onto the stage of geopolitics, though, the U.S. could no longer realistically maintain its isolationist stances on foreign policy, and it would soon be dragged into the First World War.
 
Readings:
              Chapters 21 – 23 in OpenStax U.S. History
              Additional Readings on Blackboard in Module Two Readings folders
Activities and Assignments:
              You will receive instructions for the research assignment on 10/01/25
              Knowledge Check, chapter 21 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 22 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 23 (formative)
              Journal no. 3
              Journal no. 4
              Module Two Test (initially slated for 10/08/25, but will probably be done in class on 10/06/25 owing to scheduling problems created by Port Arthur I.S.D.).
 
 
MODULE THREE:
10/13/25 – 10/29/25…The Modern Dark Age: The Depression, the Second World War and the Holocaust
Despite the superficial economic florescence of the 1920s, the truth was that poor financial decisions by federal officials, elected politicians, financial institutions and ordinary Americans precipitated the Great Depression, and nearly collapse the entire economy. The Franklin Roosevelt administration led efforts to reorganize the government and economy to combat the Depression, with many successes. Meanwhile, fascist regimes seized power in Germany, Japan and other nations, and plunged the world into the bloodiest conflict in all human history: the Second World War.
 
Readings:
              Chapters 24 – 27 in OpenStax U.S. History
              Additional Readings on Blackboard in Module Three Readings folders
Activities and Assignments:
              Knowledge Check, chapter 24 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 25 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 26 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 27 (formative)
              Journal no. 5
              Journal no. 6
              Module Three Test (10/29/25)
 

MODULE FOUR:
11/03/25 – 11/19/25…Brave New World: The Cold War and Its Aftermath

At the end of the Second World War, only two major powers remained: the United States and the Soviet Union. The geopolitical history of the remainder of the twentieth century was largely defined by the ideological conflict between the two, as the U.S. promoted democracy and capitalism while the Soviet Union promoted totalitarian communism. Despite the ever-present threat of a Third World War, all was not bleak, as the Civil Rights and Women’s Liberation movements achieved many victories during this period.
 
Readings:
              Chapters 28 – 31 in OpenStax U.S. History
              Additional Readings on Blackboard in Module Four Readings folders
Activities and Assignments:
              Knowledge Check, chapter 28 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 29 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 30 (formative)
              Knowledge Check, chapter 31 (formative)
              Journal no. 7
              Journal no. 8
              Module Four Test (11/19/25)
 

MODULE FIVE:
11/24/25 – 12/03/25…Into the Unknown: Questions and Conflicts of the Early Twenty-First Century

In the final module of the course, we will learn about some of the problems that confront the U.S. today and the crucial events and developments that have shaped our lives from the turn of the century to the present day.
 
Note that 11/26/25 is a campus holiday and that we will not have a class session that day. You are still expected to keep up with your readings for this unit in preparation for our classes during the first week of December.
 
Readings:
              Chapters 32 in OpenStax U.S. History
              Additional Readings on Blackboard in Module Five Readings folders
Activities and Assignments:
              Knowledge Check, chapter 32
              Research Assignment due by 11:59 PM on 12/01/25
 
 
12/08/25 – 12/10/25…FINAL EXAM WEEK
Our final exam will be on Monday, 12/08/25. The final exam is cumulative, and will assess your knowledge of all material taught in the course.

Major Assignments Schedule Below are the due dates for our major assignments. The four module tests and the final exam will be done in class during class time. The Journal assignments are multifaceted sorts of critical thinking assignments which must be turned in on Blackboard before 11:59 PM on the final day of the module (e.g., Journals nos. 3 and 4 are due before 11:59 PM on 10/08/25). Likewise, the research assignment must be turned in before 11:59 PM on its due date.

Excepting students with certain kinds of Accommodations Memoranda, students faced with a documented medical or family crisis which the instructor can authenticate by way of contacting and/or meeting with a third party and students who are pregnant or parenting a child younger than 18, all due dates are set in stone and late work will result in a grade of zero. Bear in mind that you still need to complete all assignments for a module before you can move on to the next one, however, so even if you earned a zero for Journal no. 2 because it was late, you will still need to turn in acceptable work before you can access Module Two.

 

Module
Assignment Due Date
Intro Syllabus Quiz No due date
 
One
Journal no. 1 09/17/25
Journal no. 2 09/17/25
Module One Test 09/17/25
 
Two
Journal no. 3 10/08/25
Journal no. 4 10/08/25
Module Two Test 10/06/25*
 
Three
Journal no. 5 10/29/25
Journal no. 6 10/29/25
Module Three Test 10/29/25
 
Four
Journal no. 7 11/19/25
Journal no. 8 11/19/25
Module Four Test 11/19/25
Five Research Assignment 12/01/25
Final Final Exam 12/08/25
 
*Probable, due to scheduling problems created by P.A.I.S.D.
Final Exam Date December 8, 2025 - 1:40 PM   Through  December 8, 2025 - 2:55 PM
Grading Scale Assignments are all graded on a percentage basis, and your grade in the course likewise will consist of a percentage score. Letter grades correspond to the following percentages:


A
90.00 and above
B 80.00 – 89.99
C 70.00 – 79.99
D 60.00 – 69.99
F 59.99 and below
 
I do not round grades. If you score an 89.5% on an assignment, your letter grade is a B and your numerical grade remains an 89.5%: it will not be rounded up to a 90%/A. You scored what you scored, and that is that. This also goes for course grades: if your final course average is a 59.9%, then you failed the course. A grade of D requires that you score a percentage average of 60%, and 59.9 ≠ 60.
Determination of
Final Grade
Assignment Type Weight
Final Exam 15%
Module Tests 7.5% each / 30% collectively
Journals 3.75% each / 30% collectively
Syllabus Quiz 1%
Research Assignment 9%
Attendance & Participation 15%

Course Policies
Instructor Policies Syllabus Policy
The instructor reserves the right to adjust this syllabus and all of its contents – including but not limited to assignment instructions, due dates, and course materials – as needed. Should the instructor decide to make any changes to the syllabi, these changes will not be made “quietly:” rather, I will announce via Blackboard and LSCPA email that the syllabus has been altered and what about the syllabus has been altered. This semester (Fall 2025), due to changes on LSCPA campus and other factors, as well as the increasing likelihood of tropical cyclones in this part of the world, you should anticipate that minor changes will occur (e.g., office hours might change, classrooms might change, a class session might be cancelled or an activity/assignment rescheduled due to inclement weather, etc.).
 

Student Email Policy
It is incumbent upon you as a college student to routinely check your LSCPA email. I would recommend signing in to check it no less than once every twenty-four hours. You will receive communiques from me through the LSCPA email account.
 
As mentioned above, please note that I will not respond to any email sent to me from an account that IS NOT an LSCPA student email account. You MUST use your LSCPA email to communicate with me.
 

Blackboard Message Policy
I do not respond to Blackboard messages, as they are a less reliable form of communication (and in frank honesty, I do not always receive them). Do not send me questions via Blackboard: log in to your LSCPA email account and email me directly.


Class Recording Policy
Unless explicit permission is provided by the instructor, you DO NOT have the right to record class sessions. Exceptions might be made upon request at the discretion of the instructor or in the event that recordings are necessitated by an Accommodations Memorandum. If you record without instructor permission, you will be counted absent for the day and disciplinary actions might be taken.
 

Phone Use During Class Policy
Unless you are explicitly authorized by the instructor to take out your phone OR unless you have an Accommodations Memorandum necessitating your use of your phone as a recording device for notetaking purposes, you ARE NOT allowed to ever have your phone out during class. If you do use your phone for any reason during class time without express authorization of the instructor, you will be counted absent for that class period and further disciplinary action might be taken as the case warrants. As well, since you are not allowed to have your phones in class anyways, I will report you to the high school, district, to dual credit and to LSCPA student services.
 

Classroom Etiquette Policy
I take the issue of civility seriously and expect everyone in the classroom to behave civilly toward one another. This means firstly that I will not tolerate any form of discriminatory remarks or actions by any student(s) against any other person(s) on the basis of race, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, immigration status, ethnicity, descent, religion, or any other factor whatsoever. I don’t care who you are or what your identity is nor do I care what individual or identity you discriminated against, it won’t be tolerated.
 
Secondly, you will be kind and respectful toward your peers during class discussions and lectures: listen when someone else is talking and show others the courtesy that ought to be shown to you. Unless someone is behaving in a discriminatory manner, you have no reason to interrupt your fellow students – regardless of how much you might disagree with their perspectives. Civil disagreement is crucial to a healthy, functioning republic, so my advice when someone says something you disagree with? Deal with it. The world does not consist of clones of you.
 
Thirdly, you will be respectful of the learning environment. Disruptive students – e.g., students who talk on their phones during class or who talk while other students are presenting – will be reprimanded. If circumstances require it, the instructor will request the offending student leave the room, and will mark the offending student absent for that class session.
 
Fourthly, you will be quiet during roll call unless the instructor has called your name. Students talking loudly during roll call to the point that the instructor cannot hear if another student has responded to their name being called will be found in violation of this etiquette policy and might be counted absent themselves.
 
Finally, if there are any acts of violence or threats of violence by any student(s) against any other student(s) or against the instructor, the offending student(s) will be removed both from the classroom and from the course entirely.
 
If a student violates any portion of this etiquette policy, they can be counted absent for the day, regardless of whether they remain in the classroom or not. If a student’s presence is so disruptive that other students cannot complete their tasks, the offending student will be asked to leave the room, or security will escort them out if necessary. If such an incident were to occur on a test day, the offending student would receive an automatic zero for the test without any possibility of retaking it.
                    

Pregnant and Parenting Student Policy
In accordance with state law, pregnant and students caring for a child of minority age are afforded certain considerations that other students are not. Pregnant or parenting students are allowed up to five excused absences per course per semester, and while they do not have to present college instructors with the same kinds of documentation required of other students, they do need to inform the instructor that they will be absent as a result of an issue related to pregnancy or childcare. Pregnant and parenting students do not need to acquire Accommodations Memoranda from the Office for Disability Services in order to receive these excused absences, although the instructor must be alerted. Additionally, pregnant and parenting students can meet with the instructor to determine the wheres, whens and hows of making up assignments missed due to pregnancy or parenting issues or crises.
 

A Note on Accommodations Memoranda
Students who provide the instructor with an Accommodations Memorandum are entitled to work with the instructor so that they can best implement the necessary accommodations within the confines of the course. That said, the instructor is unable to implement any accommodations if an Accommodations Memorandum is not presented to the instructor. federal law requires that students be afforded the same opportunities as all other students unless certain other legally-defined criteria are met. What this means is that I cannot implement accommodations for you unless/until I receive an Accommodations Memorandum. In accordance with other federal legislation meant to protect students and ensure fairness in the classroom, accommodations are not retroactive, so they cannot be instituted until after I receive the Memorandum from you.
 

A Note on Documentation of Medical and Other Crises
If you are absent due to a routine doctor’s appointment, that does not constitute a medical crisis in this course and your absence will not be excused. If there is danger to life or limb, that constitutes a medical crisis and the instructor is willing to work with the student to schedule making up any missed work and to excuse the absence, provided documentation of said crisis is provided.
 
Documentation here means that a third party (no, your parents and family members do not count) has written to me that you were in the Emergency Room, that you had to undergo this or that operation, etc., and that you were incapacitated and thus unable to fulfill your obligations as a college student. Of course, students (and to be blunt, especially dual enrollment students) fake doctor’s notes all the time, so a note from a doctor’s office is just not enough. I will be researching the individual who wrote (or “wrote”) your letter and contacting them and their hospital, clinic or practice directly. If you give me a fake doctor’s note, you will not only be counted absent for the relevant class days but will be reported to your high school, to the dual credit department here, and I will write up a student behavior report for the Student Services department here on campus.
 
If another crisis befalls you – e.g., you are involved in an automobile collision on the way to campus – I will similarly need documentation of that incident in order to excuse your absence or allow you to make up missed assignments. Police reports, an officer to contact, and so on will be required, and I will be getting in touch with the relevant authorities before excusing your absence and allowing make up work.
 
If you cannot provide me with documentation of a crisis, then I cannot excuse your absence and cannot allow you to make up any missed assignments.

 
Late Work Policy
Excepting students with an Accommodations Memorandum that necessitates different assignment timelines, students faced with a documented and authenticatable medical or other crisis, and students who are pregnant or parenting a child of minority age, assignments are due when they are due, and that is that. If the aforementioned conditions do not apply to you and you have not finished and submitted Journal no. 2 by 11:59 PM on 09/17/25, then you earned a zero for that assignment.
 
Note that this also applies to tests: as a college student, you are expected to keep track of your schedule and to be in class during test days. If you miss a test and the aforementioned conditions do not apply to you, then you’ve earned a zero for that test.
 
Note that if you miss them, you will still have to complete the Journal assignments in order to progress through Blackboard, though, so you’ll still have work to do, although you will still ultimately earn a zero on it. If you Journal work is inappropriate and does not meet the assignment standards, though, it will be sent back to you, and you will have to do it again in order to get past that assignment and onto the rest of Blackboard.
 
 
Making Up Missed Assignments
For the majority of you, this is a nonissue: you do not get to make up missed assignments. If you missed it, you earned a zero, and that is that. If, however, you have a relevant memorandum clause, crisis, or are pregnant or parenting, you might be able to make up missed work. The specifics will be handled on a case-by-case basis, as no two of any of the aforementioned sorts of conditions are ever quite the same, but provided you meet one of the above criteria, the instructor might allow you to make up missed work as befits your particular situation.
 
 
Extra Credit Policy and Bonus Assignment Policy
I will not create bespoke extra credit work for individual students because they did badly earlier in the semester or failed a test. Please do not insult me by asking me to do so. If you send me an email asking me to create extra credit work for you because “you really need to get a higher grade in the course,” you will not receive a response. The answer is no.
 
I have from time to time offered bonus assignments to the entire class. I do this on a discretionary basis, and typically they take the form of offering bonus points on an upcoming test if such-and-such bonus assignment is done well. I reserve the right to create classwide bonus assignments that are equally available to everyone.


Artificial Intelligence Policy
AI use is strictly prohibited in this course, and assignments which are made – either wholly or partially – with the use or assistance of AI software will be considered in violation of the college’s Academic Honesty and Integrity policies. This includes but is not limited to Grok, ChatGPT, Grammarly, and any other AI programs. If I suspect AI use in your assignment, you will be required to come meet with me in my office to discuss your assignment with me.
 
Also, on a somewhat separate note, do you really want the soulless large corporations that create these programs and wrangle them to do your thinking for you? Do you really want Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman or some other Silicon Valley techbro to be the one authoring your thoughts? Consider your own personal dignity before using AI.
 

Plagiarism Policy
Academic integrity is essential to truly learning any subject or discipline. You are to submit your own work, not the work of peers, friends, or anyone – or anything – else. By cheating, you not only jeopardize your own academic future, you are cheating your future self out of your own education.
 
All research papers will be screened for plagiarism. For a more thorough definition of plagiarism, please refer to the “Academic Policies” section of the Student Handbook.
 
Below are the consequences for acts of plagiarism in this course:
  1. First Offense: For your first plagiarism offense, you will receive a grade of 0% on the assignment. You will be required to come to my office and discuss plagiarism with me, something I am sure we both want to avoid.
  2. Second Offense: A second plagiarism offense will result in yet another grade of 0% for the plagiarized assignment, and the student’s name and all documented offenses will be forwarded to the proper LSCPA officials.
  3. Third or Further Offense(s): The student will receive grades of 0% for all offensive assignments and, in severe cases might even fail the course entirely and face additional consequences.
  
Blackboard Respondus LockDown Monitor Policy
In order to complete your Journal assignments and the Syllabus Quiz, you will be required to download and use the Respondus Lockdown browser and to allow the browser access to your webcam and screen. This is done to prevent cheating and to force you to actually do your own work on course assignments.
 
The following stipulations apply to all assignments done with the Respondus Monitor system:
  • If you leave the field of vision of the camera for even a portion of a second, you will automatically receive a zero on the assignment without the possibility of retaking it.
  • If you consistently look away from your screen, you will receive a zero on the assignment.
  • If you keep looking down or if your phone is ever visible on the screen, you will receive a zero for the assignment.
  • If you are in a dark room and the glare of your phone screen can be seen, you will receive a zero for the assignment.
  • If someone else can be heard offscreen saying anything relevant to the assignment, you will receive a zero for that assignment.
  • If you ever go to any websites or files that are not directly relevant to the assignment, you will receive a zero for that assignment.
  • If you do not show your student ID card to the camera or if the person performing the assignment does not match your on-file photograph, you will receive a zero for the assignment.
 
Be sure you are ready before you do your journal work, and be sure that you set aside time when you have access to a device with a camera and microphone. This device should not be an iPad, as the Respondus system will not work with it (and you will thus be unable to do your work on it). You might need to go to the Library or computer lab if you do not have an adequate device at home.
Attendance Policy

Attendance will be taken at the beginning of the class period. When the instructor calls your name, you will state it clearly and audibly. You will also remain silent while the instructor is calling roll. If you are not present when attendance is called, you will be counted tardy. Additionally:
  • If you are not present in class within ten minutes of the start of our session, you will be counted as absent for that session, even if you do show up later.
  • If you show up to class but leave before at least 50 minutes have passed, you will be counted as absent for that session, even if you attended an earlier portion of class.
  • Uncivilized behavior – especially use of your cell phone during class or violations of the etiquette policy outlined above – can also earn you an Attendance absence for a class session, even if you attend the entire session. If you use your phone during class, and particularly if you are asked to put your phone away but refuse to obey immediately, you will be counted absent.
 
Absences will ONLY be excused in the event of a documented and authenticatable crisis or school-authorized academic event. Students who are pregnant or parenting a child of minority age are also entitled to five excused absences in accordance with Texas law. Aside from these such instances, though, there are no excused absences. This is college, not high school: even if the high school excuses your absence for a particular day, that does not mean your absence is excused for this course.
 
Unlike the other grading criteria, your attendance points are yours to lose: everyone will begin the semester with a score of “100%” for their Attendance grade. If you are repeatedly absent, leave early, are often late by more than ten minutes or behave in an uncivilized manner, you will lose points. Your Attendance score will be graded according to the table below:
 
Absences Effect on Grade
Four or fewer absences -0 (max. attendance grade of 100%)
Five absences -33.34 (max. attendance grade of 66.66%)
Six absences -66.67 (max. attendance grade of 33.33%)
Seven absences -100 (max. attendance grade of 0%)
Eight absences FAILURE OF ENTIRE COURSE
 
You read that correctly: if you are absent or counted absent eight times, you will fail the entire course, period, no questions asked. Make sure you attend class.
Additional Information Below is a list of important dates for the Fall 2025 semester. Some of these dates have no direct effect on this course, but might affect your other courses and the flow of college life during the semester.
 
Event Date
First Day of Fall 2025 semester 08/25/25
First Day of HIST 1302 08/25/25
Labor Day 09/01/25
Census Day 09/10/25
Module One Test 09/17/25
Final day to drop w/o penalty 09/29/25
Research Assignment begins 10/01/25
Module Two Test 10/06/25
Module Three Test 10/29/25
Module Four Test 11/19/25
Final day to drop w/ penalty 11/24/25
Energy Conservation Day (campus closed) 11/26/25
Thanksgiving (campus closed) 11/27/25 – 11/28/25
All Research Assignments due 12/01/25
Final Exam 12/08/25
Last class day 12/10/25
Final Day of the Fall 2025 semester 12/11/25
 
 
Offensive Materials
This last bit is less a policy per se than it is a disclaimer.

We will be studying history in this course, and since we are doing so at a college level, nothing will be censored. In the context of this class, you are considered to be adults and expected to act as mature adults ought to act. That means that you will likely read about, see, discuss, or otherwise encounter materials that you might find shocking, repulsive, offensive or – perhaps the most frightening thing of all – which cause you to take a step back and question your preconceived notions about people, society, yourself and U.S. history. There's really nothing else to say here, other than that you need to be able to confront ideas and facts that might make you uncomfortable both in order to pass this course and in order to be a functioning, mature adult. Be ready to be offended. 
Institutional Policies
MyLSCPA Be sure to check your campus email and Course Homepage using MyLSCPA campus web portal. You can also access your grades, transcripts, academic advisors, degree progress, and other services through MyLSCPA.
Academic Honesty Academic honesty is expected from all students, and dishonesty in any form will not be tolerated. Please consult the LSCPA policies (Academic Dishonesty section in the Student Handbook) for consequences of academic dishonesty.
ADA Considerations The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal anti-discrimination statute that provides comprehensive civil rights for persons with disabilities. Among other things, this legislation requires that all students with disabilities be guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable accommodation of their disabilities. If you believe you have a disability requiring an accommodation, please contact the Disability Services Coordinator, Room 117, in the Student Sucess Center. The phone number is (409) 984-6241.
COVID 19 Information The Lamar State College Port Arthur (LSCPA) Student Code of Conduct COVID 19 Policy requires students who have been diagnosed with COVID 19 to report their condition directly to their local health department. Students should also contact their course faculty to report their quarantine status. In addition, this policy requires all students to wear face coverings when directly exposed to COVID 19 in compliance with the criteria included in the policy. For more information please refer to the COVID 19 link on the LSCPA website.
Facility Policies No food or tobacco products are allowed in the classroom. Only students enrolled in the course are allowed in the classroom, except by special instructor permission. Use of electronic devices is prohibited.
HB 2504 This syllabus is part of LSCPA's efforts to comply with Texas House Bill 2504.
Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse and Neglect As per Texas law and LSCPA policy, all LSCPA employees, including faculty, are required to report allegations or disclosures of child abuse or neglect to the designated authorities, which may include a local or state law enforcement agency or the Texas Department of Family Protective Services. For more information about mandatory reporting requirements, see LSCPA's Policy and Procedure Manual.
Title IX and Sexual Misconduct LSCPA is committed to establishing and maintaining an environment that is free from all forms of sex discrimination, including sexual harassment, sexual violence, and other forms of sexual misconduct. All LSCPA employees, including faculty, have the responsibility to report disclosures of sexual misconduct, including sexual harassment, sexual assault (including rape and acquaintance rape), domestic violence, dating violence, relationship violence, or stalking, to LSCPA's Title IX Coordinator, whose role is to coordinate the college's response to sexual misconduct. For more information about Title IX protections, faculty reporting responsibilities, options for confidential reporting, and the resources available for support visit LSCPA's Title IX website.
Clery Act Crime Reporting For more information about the Clery Act and crime reporting, see the Annual Security & Fire Safety Report and the Campus Security website.

Grievance / Complaint / Concern If you have a grievance, complaint, or concern about this course that has not been resolved through discussion with the Instructor, please consult the Department Chair.
Department Information
General Education and Developmental Studies
Chair:Dr. Steven Zani
Email:zanisj@lamarpa.edu
Phone:(409) 984-6431