Apr 03, 2026  
2026-2027 Catalog (BETA) Cal State East Bay 
    
2026-2027 Catalog (BETA) Cal State East Bay

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HIST 111 - The United States Since 1877


Units: 3 ; Breadth Area: GE-4; US-1, US-3
Major developments in United States since the Civil War, including California state and local government, in context of American diversity and socio-economic change. California as microcosm for understanding freedom, equality, democracy. Practice in civic engagement, historical thinking, and collaborative learning.

Breadth Area(s) Satisfied: GE-4 - Lower Division Social and Behavioral Sciences, US-1, US-2
Possible Instructional Methods: On-ground, or Hybrid, or Online-Asynchronous, or Online-Synchronous.
Grading: A-F or CR/NC (student choice).
Course Typically Offered: Fall & Spring


Student Learning Outcomes - Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
  1. Participate in American civic life with an understanding of American and California diversity, California state and local government, and U.S. history since the Civil War (“modern U.S.”);
  2. Identify major turning points in the influence of the U.S. in world history;  
  3. Read and interpret varieties of sources relating modern U.S. and California history;
  4. Compare and contrast diverse Americans’ abilities to enjoy citizenship in modern U.S. and California;
  5. Collaborate with peers in evaluation of difficult problems relating to citizenship in modern U.S. and California;
  6. Recognize the impact of modern U.S. and California on our own time;
  7. Demonstrate capacity to tolerate differences of interpretation and listen to others actively and fairly;
  8. Communicate complex ideas in writing and speaking;
  9. Understand history as an academic discipline essential to civic participation.


GE-4. Lower-division Social and Behavioral Sciences Electives Learning Outcomes
  1. Explain how social, political, and economic institutions and/or principles intersect with each other.
  2. Describe how people produce, resist, and/or transform social, political, and economic institutions/principles.
  3. Investigate contemporary and/or historical events/issues from a social science perspective.

US-1. U.S. History Learning Outcomes
  1. Explain the causes and consequences of major historical events in a period of at least a hundred years of U.S. history.
  2. Describe the contributions of major social movements and ethnic groups in a period of at least a hundred years of U.S. history.
US-3. California Government Learning Outcomes
  1. Describe the similarities and differences between the California Constitution and the U.S. Constitution.
  2. Describe the historical and/or contemporary relationship between California and the federal government.
  3. Describe how communities in California solve problems through political processes at various levels of government.



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