Cornell Notes
Lecture, reading/chapter/novel/article
during class, power point, movies (if need to collect info.)
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Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Cornell Notes Template
Class Contract and Expectations
AP United States History
Welcome
to AP American History. This course will develop your knowledge and skills with
the express purpose of allowing you the ability to pass this class, the
Regents, and the National AP exam. The
course will be aligned with the required standards and the work will resemble
the Regents and AP exams. Most
importantly, this will be treated as a college course. You will be expected to work hard each day,
both inside and outside the classroom.
If you cannot handle the course load, you will be removed from this AP
course.
GRADING:
·
Exams, Long
Essays, DBQ essays
40%
·
Quizzes, Short
Essays 30 %
·
Classwork/Class
Participation 15 %
·
Homework 15 %
* All grades
can be monitored on PUPIL PATH.
MATERIALS:
*YOU MUST:
*YOU MUST:
- WEAR YOUR LANYARDS IN CLASS...EVERY DAY!
- BRING YOUR BINDERS TO CLASS...EVERY DAY!
- BRING BLUE/BLACK PENS AND HI-LIGHTERS TO CLASS...EVERY DAY!
1. Text: America's History- 9th Edition- Henrietta, Edwards, Hindertaker, Self
·
Each student will
receive a text book. The text will be
used as a source for secondary information. Each week there will be an update of chapters and/or pages on the blog that covers the week's material. Reading the text is an excellent resource for content.
2. Review Book: The Princeton Review: Cracking the AP U.S.
History Exam 2020Edition
·
Each student must purchase a review book in December. This is an excellent resource for assessment reviews and obviously, AP Exam review. The content is brief and is an excellent supplement to go with the text and packet materials.
3. Supplemental Readings :
·
AP Packets (Primary
Source/Historical Sources): Over the course of the year, you will receive 22 AP
Packets. They will be analyzed and
assessed both inside and outside the classroom.
Most homework assignments come from these supplements. They will be hole-punched
so you can add them to your binder. If
you would rather a folder, be sure to keep the sources dated to allow for easy
test preparation. I also recommend using
highlighters to pull important information from these documents. While working on specific units, those
packets MUST be brought to class every day.
GUIDELINES:
1. Attendance/Punctuality: Your attendance in the class is of the utmost
importance. Copious amounts of documents
will be analyzed and discussed each day.
It is YOUR responsibility to make up all the work that is missed. I do not tolerate lateness. It is a distraction to the entire class. It is amazing how much time 4 minutes is if
you directly head to class immediately following the bell.
2. Classwork/Participation: We will be
discussing major historic events each day, including the analysis of primary
and secondary sources, the debating of controversial topics, and evaluation of
daily essential questions. The more
active the class is, the more the class will achieve each day. I expect each and every student to have an
active voice during the class period.
You should also take notes every day.
I will go over note taking strategies early in the semester.
(recommended strategy is using Cornell notes)
3. Homework: You will
receive weekly homework assignments, mainly from unit packets. All assignments will be posted on my APUSH
blog. (see below) Homework is expected
to be done promptly and with effort, as it will greatly assist you in the
understanding of the topics. Homework
will be assessed using a specific rubric. (Separate paper)
4. Assessments: There will be a plethora of assessments throughout
each marking period, including multiple choice quizzes, DBQ’s, short and long essays,
and unit exams. The tests will be aligned
to the AP exam. Answering the practice
questions at the end of each text chapter and the review book are the best ways
to prepare for the tests.
5. Effort: I expect
each of my students to work hard every day.
The more effort you put into this course, both inside and outside the
classroom, the better chance you will have in excelling. As the old adage suggests, “You can lead a
horse to water, but you cannot make him drink.”
Understand?
6. Open Door
Policy: If you ever need to discuss
anything with me, see me in my office room 400.
No appointments necessary. I believe in the element of honest and mature
face to face conversation. Just talk to
me. We can work out any issue. Problems only grow larger if not stopped early
on, like a snowball rolling down a steep hill.
Don’t be a snowball! J
BLOG:
I set up a blog for this class at ciampiapush.blogspot.com. It will serve as
information bulletin throughout the school year. All assignments, due dates, assessment dates,
etc. will be posted weekly. You are required to check the blog every
day!
AP EXAM:
· This is an advanced placement class. I expect each student to take the AP exam in
May. THIS YEAR THE EXAM IS ON FRIDAY MAY 8 I will be teaching this course
aligned with the AP exam curriculum, and the assessments will be based on AP
exam material. There will be review
classes set up during the second term to aid in the preparation for the AP
exam.
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