Sunday, August 29, 2010

ACADEMIC HONESTY

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HONESTY

Students are encouraged to assist one another with the completion of take-home tests and quarter projects, and utilize outside resources (articles, books, parents/grandparents, and the Internet). Remember, however: anytime you use a book, magazine article, or website as a source for a paper or take-home test, you must paraphrase (rewrite in your own words) the writing and give credit to the source. Even when you assist one another, the writing must be unique to each individual student. To be perfectly clear: copying and pasting words from a website into a paper, and then submitting that paper as your own work, is the same thing as cheating on a test. More importantly, it’s not the way one prepares him/herself for success in college.

CURRENT ASSIGNMENT

Civil War Take-Home Essay Examination due 2/28/12:
CLICK HERE

WELCOME TO UNITED STATES HISTORY!

WELCOME TO UNITED STATES HISTORY!
This 1851 painting of Washington crossing the frozen Delaware River in December of 1776 is beautiful and famous, but German-American artist Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze painted a false image of this historic event--to make a larger point. Can you guess what Leutze got wrong? And why?
History is like a road map. We can’t find our way somewhere new unless we know where we are now. History tells us where we are, how we got there, and with any luck, how to get where we want to go. It's everything that's ever happened to anybody--and it's the story of how people not unlike us said and did things that changed the world.

This class--called a survey class because we will survey some of the most influential people and events over the course of more than 500 years, all in just one nine-month school year--will focus, specifically, on the history the United States of America. It's been a wild ride these last 500 years, and learning the stories and trying to sort out what it all means for us today is so much more than names, dates, places--and tests. This is going to get interesting.

Questions? Email Mr. Novick at jnovick@roycemoreschool.org

The lovely Catskill Mountains (New York) in autumn. After the Revolution ended in 1783, locals began to move into these beautiful hills. The theme of westward expansion runs throughout American history.