Synopses & Reviews
Created through a ?student-tested, faculty-approved? review process, HIST is a concise, visually appealing text that introduces the essential concepts of U.S history. This brief, affordable paperback includes a full suite of learning aids to accommodate the busy, diverse lifestyles of today?s learners, including flashcards and a fantastic ebook with primary source documents, historical simulations, maps, images, field trips, audio, video, interactive modules, and other features that allow students to study wherever they are, whenever they have time. Designed for today?s students in every detail, HIST was developed through conversations, focus groups, interviews, surveys, and input from over 100 students and over 150 faculty members like you. From its abbreviated, no-nonsense title, to its engaging, effective content, HIST is the perfect introductory U.S. History text for modern learners.
Synopsis
Created through a "student-tested, faculty-approved" review process with hundreds of students and faculty, HIST is an engaging and accessible solution to accommodate the diverse lifestyles of today's learners.
About the Author
Kevin M. Schultz is assistant professor of history and Catholic Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He received his bachelor's degree from Vanderbilt University and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, where he won awards for his teaching. He served as a Fellow at the University of Virginia's Center on Religion and Democracy prior to his current position. His articles have appeared in the Journal of American History, American Quarterly, Labor History, and other popular venues, and his first monograph, on religion, politics, and pluralism in mid-century America, is forthcoming from Oxford University Press. In addition, he is scheduled to appear in a PBS documentary on religion in America in 2009.
Table of Contents
?The magazine design made the text really fun to read. Textbooks get boring, it is the same thing page after page. The magazine feeling made me want to read it more intently.??This is totally revolutionary for me. I?m very impressed. I truly believe that its simplicity give it its strength.??The writing is clear. [Students] will like that. It is visually ?chunked? into clearly connected but manageable portions. They can read as many or as few chunks as they like at each sitting. They will like the brevity and the opportunity to follow up a reading with some online exploration. ? The text is invitingly concise yet it is fact-laden AND all the facts are presented within the context of a theme or argument. ? I like the basic organization ? a great deal. Everything is orderly and logical. I would have no trouble synchronizing my pre-existing lectures with this text. I especially like the straightforward writing, the short sections, the clear headings, and the concise nature of the explanations (with a lot of lists of causes and/or effects to lead into or to summarize a section). The writing reminds me of several of my favorite texts. ? As I stated earlier, I greatly anticipate the appearance of the print version of your text. The combination of a short text that students can develop a tactile relationship with?and that we can all bring to the class sessions?with online interactives, visuals, and written primary sources would be a perfect match for my students and my teaching style.??I think the overall vision of the product is unique and has a lot of potential especially for summer or distance learning classes. ? I love the interactive modules. I always think those are wonderful. Was nice to see links to art. ? I find myself pleasantly surprised that something so relatively short could cover what I?d want covered and do it so well.??I am interested in this text. In my experience, students find history texts a morass of details. This text does a good job of breaking the narrative into small, manageable pieces, and arranging information in clear, outline form. ? I think that dividing the material into short, manageable parts is a very good idea. Some students may benefit from the outline structure, since most students today seem not to have been taught how to create an outline.?