Students first discover what they want from their education, then build a plan to get there. This content takes students through the steps to successfully navigate their journey in higher education. Topics include planning for success, choosing a career path, setting and attaining goals, understanding financial management, developing critical thinking skills, making healthy choices, using effective communication, managing time, developing learning strategies, developing meaningful relationships. Content is available in PDF and Open Document formats and is licensed CC BY. Learning Objectives also are provided. Full course offering available at https://www.cengage.com/c/opennow-college-success-1e-opennow-cengage
U.S. & World History Textbooks and Full Courses
Students first discover what they want from their education, then build a plan to get there. This content takes students through the steps to successfully navigate their journey in higher education. Topics include planning for success, choosing a career path, setting and attaining goals, understanding financial management, developing critical thinking skills, making healthy choices, using effective communication, managing time, developing learning strategies, developing meaningful relationships. Content is available in PDF and Open Document formats and is licensed CC BY. Learning Objectives also are provided.
Chapter 15 War, Prosperity, and Collapse is a community college level chapter of a history book used in the class.
- Subject:
- History
- Material Type:
- Homework/Assignment
- Lecture
- Reading
- Textbook
- Date Added:
- 02/07/2017
Chapter 18 is a part of a text book that is being used for a 100 level history course at a community college.
- Subject:
- History
- Material Type:
- Diagram/Illustration
- Homework/Assignment
- Interactive
- Reading
- Textbook
- Date Added:
- 02/08/2017
Chapter 19 Social Revolution is a chapter out of a text book being used at a community college for a 100 level college history course.
- Subject:
- History
- Material Type:
- Diagram/Illustration
- Homework/Assignment
- Lecture Notes
- Reading
- Student Guide
- Textbook
- Date Added:
- 03/20/2017
History Text book Early America
- Subject:
- History
- Material Type:
- Diagram/Illustration
- Textbook
- Date Added:
- 05/09/2016
Chapter 20 is a portion of a text book that we use for a 100 level community college History 112 course.
- Subject:
- History
- Material Type:
- Diagram/Illustration
- Interactive
- Lecture
- Textbook
- Date Added:
- 03/15/2017
History Text Book Chapter 2 Roots of Colonization
- Subject:
- History
- Material Type:
- Diagram/Illustration
- Textbook
- Date Added:
- 05/09/2016
(and where to find them)
Short Description:
A student-authored textbook, exploring beliefs, ideas, and religions of traditional China throughout history.
Long Description:
Based on the course with the same name: A cultural history of the strange in pre-modern China. How did the Chinese people explain the existence of ghosts, demons, immortals, fox spirits, (maybe even unicorns) and many other strange creatures? What do the encounters between humans and these creatures tell us about the pre-modern Chinese worldview? And how much of that tradition is still alive in China now?
Word Count: 43949
(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided as part of a bulk import process.)
- Subject:
- Cultural Geography
- History
- Social Science
- World History
- Material Type:
- Textbook
- Author:
- Tineke D'Haeseleer
- Date Added:
- 08/19/2022
Portraits de femmes engagées pour le bien commun
Short Description:
Série de 31 portraits de femmes engagées pour le bien commun, de la Révolution française à 2014, sur tous les continents.
Long Description:
Ce livre propose 31 portraits de femmes engagées pour le bien commun réalisés par les femmes et les hommes inscrits au séminaire « Communication, citoyenneté et démocratie » du Département d’information et de communication de l’Université Laval à l’automne 2014, dirigé par Florence Piron.
Word Count: 45460
(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided as part of a bulk import process.)
- Subject:
- History
- Political Science
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Textbook
- Provider:
- Éditions science et bien commun
- Date Added:
- 12/09/2014
This class is intended to introduce students to understandings of the city generated from both social science literature and the field of urban design. The first part of the course examines literature on the history and theory of the city. Among other factors, it pays special attention to the larger territorial settings in which cities emerged and developed (ranging from the global to the national to the regional context) and how these affected the nature, character, and functioning of cities and the lives of their inhabitants. The remaining weeks focus more explicitly on the theory and practice of design visions for the city, the latter in both utopian and realized form. One of our aims will be to assess the conditions under which a variety of design visions were conceived, and to assess them in terms of the varying patterns of territorial “nestedness” (local, regional, national, imperial, and global) examined in the first part of the course. Another will be to encourage students to think about the future prospects of cities (in terms of territorial context or other political functions and social aims) and to offer design visions that might reflect these new dynamics.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Architecture and Design
- Arts and Humanities
- History
- Social Science
- Sociology
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Davis, Diane
- Vale, Lawrence
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2004
This course investigates the relationship between urban architecture and political, social, and cultural history of Athens in the 5th and 4th centuries BC. It surveys and analyzes archeological and literary evidence, including the sanctuary of Athena on the Acropolis, the Agora, Greek houses, the histories of Herodotus and Thucydides, plays of Sophocles and Aristophanes, and the panhellenic sanctuaries of Delphi and Olympia.
- Subject:
- Ancient History
- Applied Science
- Architecture and Design
- Arts and Humanities
- English Language Arts
- History
- Literature
- Reading Literature
- World History
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Broadhead, William
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2014
This course surveys the social science literature on civil war. Students will study the origins of civil war, discuss variables that affect the duration of civil war, and examine the termination of conflict. This course is highly interdisciplinary and covers a wide variety of cases.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- History
- Political Science
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Petersen, Roger
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2010
Although attention will be devoted to the causes and long-term consequences of the Civil War, this class will focus primarily on the war years (1861-1865) with special emphasis on the military and technological aspects of the conflict. Four questions, long debated by historians, will receive close scrutiny:
What caused the war?
Why did the North win the war?
Could the South have won?
To what extent is the Civil War America’s “defining moment”?
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- History
- Philosophy
- Political Science
- Social Science
- U.S. History
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Smith, Merritt
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2005
Using the American Civil War as a baseline, the course considers what it means to become “modern” by exploring the war’s material and manpower needs, associated key technologies, and how both influenced the United States’ entrance into the age of “Big Business.” Readings include material on steam transportation, telegraphic communications, arms production, naval innovation, food processing, medicine, public health, management methods, and the mass production of everything from underwear to uniforms—all essential ingredients of modernity. Students taking the graduate version must complete additional assignments.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- History
- U.S. History
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Smith, Merritt
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2015
Roman Literature of the Golden Age of Augustus Caesar, produced during the transition from Republican to Imperial forms of government, was to have a profound and defining influence on Western European and American societies. These writings ultimately established lasting models of aesthetic refinement, philosophical aspiration, and political ambition that continue to shape modern cultures. This class will be exploring the Golden Age of Latin Literature from an historical perspective in order to provide an intensive examination of the cultural contexts in which these monumental works of classical art were first produced. Readings will emphasize the transition from a Republican form of government to an Empire under the rule of Augustus Caesar and the diversity of responses among individual authors to the profound structural changes that Roman society was undergoing at this time. Particular attention will be devoted to the reorganization of society and the self through textuality, the changing dimensions of the public and the private, the roles of class and gender, and the relationship between art and pleasure. Writings covering a wide variety of literary genres will include the works of Caesar, Cicero, Catullus, Livy, Virgil, Horace, and Ovid, with additional readings from Cassius Dio for background.
- Subject:
- Ancient History
- Arts and Humanities
- English Language Arts
- History
- Literature
- Philosophy
- Reading Literature
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Cain, James
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2004
This course will introduce you to the Western philosophical tradition through the study of thinkers such as Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, Cavendish, Hume, and Kant. You’ll grapple with questions that have been significant to philosophy from its beginnings: Questions about the nature of the mind, the existence of God, the foundations of knowledge, and the good life. You’ll also observe changes of intellectual outlook over time, and the effect of scientific, religious, and political concerns on the development of philosophical ideas.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- English Language Arts
- History
- Literature
- Philosophy
- Reading Literature
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Haslanger, Sally
- Phillips-Brown, Milo
- Richardson, Kevin
- Saillant, Said
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2016
Short Description:
A new and annotated translation of the French Prime Minister’s memoir of his friend, the most famous Impressionist painter.
Long Description:
In 1928, the former French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau published Claude Monet: Les Nymphéas (The Water-Lilies), a memoir of his longtime friend. Bruce Michelson has produced a new English translation, presented here with useful notes and illustrations.
Michelson’s translations of three short essays on art by Clemenceau, originally published by La Justice in the late XIX c., are included as appendices.
Published by Windsor & Downs Press, part of the Illinois Open Publishing Network (IOPN). IOPN is a project of the University Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Word Count: 40724
ISBN: 978-1-946011-00-8
(Note: This resource's metadata has been created automatically as part of a bulk import process by reformatting and/or combining the information that the author initially provided. As a result, there may be errors in formatting.)
- Subject:
- Art History
- Arts and Humanities
- History
- Visual Arts
- Material Type:
- Reading
- Textbook
- Provider:
- Windsor and Downs Press
- Author:
- Georges Clemenceau
- Date Added:
- 07/06/2020
This seminar examines the history and legacy of the Cold War on American science. It explores scientist’s new political roles after World War II, ranging from elite policy makers in the nuclear age to victims of domestic anti Communism. It also examines the changing institutions in which the physical sciences and social sciences were conducted during the postwar decades, investigating possible epistemic effects on forms of knowledge. The subject closes by considering the place of science in the post-Cold War era.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- History
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Kaiser, David
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2008