Content Assessment Week 15

Questions to respond to: Was Reconstruction a revolution? Is change different than progress? How?

200-300 word written post and  you must reference at least one source from each day and at least 2 pieces of information from lecture to receive full marks.

As a reminder, the weekly readings/lectures were:

Week 14: Reconstruction
April 18: 1865
Listen or read: Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address, 1865.
Read: the Thirteenth Amendment

Read: Herman Melville, The Martyr

View: John Frederick Peto, Reminisces of 1865

April 20: How Free is Free?
Read: the Fourteenth and Fifteenth  Amendments
Read: W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk, “Of the Dawn of Freedom,” 1903.

Content Assessment Week 15

Questions to respond to: Was Reconstruction a revolution? Is change different than progress? How?

200-300 word written post and  you must reference at least one source from each day and at least 2 pieces of information from lecture to receive full marks.

As a reminder, the weekly readings/lectures were:

Week 14: Reconstruction
April 18: 1865
Listen or read: Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address, 1865.
Read: the Thirteenth Amendment

Read: Herman Melville, The Martyr

View: John Frederick Peto, Reminisces of 1865

April 20: How Free is Free?
Read: the Fourteenth and Fifteenth  Amendments
Read: W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk, “Of the Dawn of Freedom,” 1903.

Content Assessment Week 15

Questions to respond to: Was Reconstruction a revolution? Is change different than progress? How?

200-300 word written post and  you must reference at least one source from each day and at least 2 pieces of information from lecture to receive full marks.

As a reminder, the weekly readings/lectures were:

Week 14: Reconstruction
April 18: 1865
Listen or read: Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address, 1865.
Read: the Thirteenth Amendment

Read: Herman Melville, The Martyr

View: John Frederick Peto, Reminisces of 1865

April 20: How Free is Free?
Read: the Fourteenth and Fifteenth  Amendments
Read: W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folk, “Of the Dawn of Freedom,” 1903.