Well the first quarter out here in Colorado ended last week and we start Q2 tomorrow. I will be teaching U.S. History A and B, last quarter I taught Economics and U.S. Government.
My first unit (U.S. History A) will be on Pre-1492 America and a lot of my material is from Charles C. Mann’s excellent book 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus (Knopf, 2005).
Too often American Indians are portrayed as unmindful nomads without sophistication, education, art, and culture. Europeans landed, took over, and the rest is as they say history. But what Mann does an excellent job of pointing out, is that the Indians were not helpless and did play a role in history. They made alliances, war, and peace, and the results of which played a role in their demise. They played a role, which is the key, they were not helpless.
But most importantly, we need to teach the incredible achievements of American Indians pre-1492. They were urban dwellers, built huge cities, sophisticated with culture and religion, had a 365 day calendar and had utilized the number Zero. They had empires and built temples, one of which was bigger than some Egyptian pyramids.
The Inca, Mayan, and Aztec empires rival anything the Western world had. They cleared massive forests, build wondrous cities, and altered the earth they occupied as impressively as anyone had.
Chris, — Good luck on the new term. I also used Mann’s book to supplement my lectures. When you get to the early colonial period I highly recommend Alan Taylor’s book, _The Colonies_.
Thanks Kevin! I will get a copy of Taylor’s book thanks for the suggestion!
C