CT Virtual Learning - Academic Course Offering
All courses (except AP TEST PREP Courses) must have a minimum of 12 students to begin.
2008-2009 Rolling Enrollment
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2008-2009 Year Round
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2008-2009 Term 1
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2008-2009 Year Round Exam Prep
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2009 Term 2
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Rolling Enrollment: September 8, 2008 - June 12, 2009 - Public High School
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Registration: June 9, 2008 - February 23, 2009
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Drop: March 25, 2009
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Music Appreciation (Semester Long Course)
This one-semester course introduces students to the elements, instrumentation, and historical periods of music. Students will learn the significance of surroundings and time periods and how they both influenced the music of the day. Students will listen to and evaluate several types of music, and will be assessed through projects, presentations, and exams on the knowledge and understanding of music. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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US History Part A
One Semester (half Year) Welcome to American History 1607 - 1917!
This is a challenging class which will require you to think and act like a historian to be successful. This class will cover the time period of 1607 - 1917 but the class' focus is not on historical events in their chronological order. There are four units of study for this class which are entitled:
An American Beginning
Shaping a New Nation
The Civil War
A Changing Nation
Don't be confused! A unit is generally a huge chunk of American history. The units require a lot of reading. For example "An American Beginning" unit covers two chapters while "The Civil War" unit covers seven book chapters plus readings from the Internet. Units also vary in duration. The following list provides you with the number of weeks we will spend on each unit. Notice that the total is 18 weeks.
Introductory Unit - 1 Week
An American Beginning - 2 Weeks
Shaping a New Nation - 3 Weeks
The Civil War - 7 Weeks
A Changing Nation - 4 Weeks
Wrap up week - 1 Week
View the Course Description.
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US History Part B
One Semester (half year) Welcome to American History 1917 - 1992!
This is a challenging class which will require you to think and act like a historian to be successful. This class will cover the time period of 1917 - 1992 but the class' focus is not on historical events in their chronological order. There are six units of study for this class which are entitled:
U.S. Rise Onto World Stage and WWI
Prosperity to Depression
World War II: Costs and Benefits
The Legacy of John F. Kennedy
The Vietnam War
Four Presidents
Don't be confused! A unit is generally a huge chunk of American history. The units require a lot of reading. For example "U.S. Rise Onto World Stage" unit covers three chapters while "World War II: Costs and Benefits" unit covers four book chapters plus readings from the Internet. Units also vary in duration. The following list provides you with the number of weeks we will spend on each unit. Notice that the total is 18 weeks.
Introductory Unit - 1 Week
U.S. Rise Onto World Stage and WWI - 2 weeks
Prosperity to Depression - 4 weeks
World War II: Costs and Benefits - 5 weeks
The Legacy of John F. Kennedy - 2 weeks
The Vietnam War - 1 week
Four Presidents - 2 weeks
View the Course Description.
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Algebra I Part A
Session 1
Semester Long (half-year) Course. Algebra I is the foundation! The skills you’ll acquire in this course contain the basic
knowledge you’ll need for all your high school math courses. Relax! This stuff is important, but
everyone can do it. Everyone can have a good time solving the hundreds of real-world problems that
are answered with algebra.
Each module in this course is presented in a step-by-step way right on your computer screen. You won’t have to stare at the board from the back of a classroom. There are even hands-on labs to make the numbers, graphs and equations more real. It’s all tied to real-world applications like sports, travel, business and health.
This course is designed to give you the skills and strategies for solving all kinds of mathematical
problems. It will also give you the confidence that you can handle everything that high school math has in store for you. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Algebra I Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course (half-year). Algebra I is the foundation! The skills you’ll acquire in this course contain the basic
knowledge you’ll need for all your high school math courses. Relax! This stuff is important, but
everyone can do it. Everyone can have a good time solving the hundreds of real-world problems that
are answered with algebra.
Each module in this course is presented in a step-by-step way right on your computer screen. You won’t have to stare at the board from the back of a classroom. There are even hands-on labs to make the numbers, graphs and equations more real. It’s all tied to real-world applications like sports, travel, business and health.
This course is designed to give you the skills and strategies for solving all kinds of mathematical
problems. It will also give you the confidence that you can handle everything that high school math has in store for you. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Algebra II Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course. COURSE DESCRIPTION: Algebra II expands on the mathematical content of Algebra I and Geometry. While the topics in Algebra 2 are interesting and important in their own right, they also serve as a basis for the material presented in subsequent mathematics courses, e.g. trigonometry and calculus. Emphasis will be on functions and algebraic solutions to various types of problems. Abstract thinking skills (including some proofs, and the notion of 'generality of a statement') will be introduced and cultivated.
By the end of this course, students will be conversant with a number of mathematical topics (see the Course Description for a list of these topics). Students will have enough computational skill with each topic that they will be able to correctly apply that skill whenever such skill is required in a subsequent mathematics course. Students will come away with an understanding and appreciation of where the topics arise in real world applications.
Part A.
1 Absolute value
2 Systems of linear equations
3 Polynomials
4 Complex numbers
5 Quadratics
6 Conic sections
A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Algebra II Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. Algebra II expands on the mathematical content of Algebra I and Geometry. While the topics in Algebra 2 are interesting and important in their own right, they also serve as a basis for the material presented in subsequent mathematics courses, e.g. trigonometry and calculus. Emphasis will be on functions and algebraic solutions to various types of problems. Abstract thinking skills (including some proofs, and the notion of 'generality of a statement') will be introduced and cultivated.
By the end of this course, students will be conversant with a number of mathematical topics (see the Course Description for a list of these topics). Students will have enough computational skill with each topic that they will be able to correctly apply that skill whenever such skill is required in a subsequent mathematics course. Students will come away with an understanding and appreciation of where the topics arise in real world applications.
Part B.
1 Composition of Functions
2 Exponential and Logarithm Functions
3 Counting
4 Sequences and Series
5 Mathematical Induction
A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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American Government Civics (Semester Long Course)
Session 1
(Semester Long Course) Responsible citizenship means more than just paying taxes. It means understanding the principles and practices of government. It also means defining your beliefs as to what good government is. In this course, you will take on the role of a Washington D.C. intern and spend time working throughout the nation’s capital with all three branches of the government- and beyond. As you progress through the internship you will gain a greaterunderstanding on the history of the country's beginnings, and knowledge of how government functions at the local, state and national levels.
The purpose of this course is to help you become an informed and active citizen. In part, the Constitution asserts that, “Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed.” Make yours an informed consent. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Earth-Space Science Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course. Why did early explorers risk their lives to reach the North Pole? Why does our earth look so beautiful when seen from space? What is really down at the bottom of the ocean? Discovering new things about our earth has been the dream of scientists and explorers for centuries. Today, it is your turn to continue that journey of discovery.
In this course, you’ll take a look at the sky above, the oceans below, and the rocks beneath our feet. Since the beginning of time our earth has been changing. You’ll discover that our earth is still changing, sometimes by natural forces, sometimes by the things that we humans do. What does not change, however, is the need to take good care of our planet.
In this course you’ll learn to think like a scientist. You’ll examine ancient fossils and perform scientific labs. You’ll explore the past, present and possible future of this place we call home. And you won’t have to go to the North Pole to do it. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Earth-Space Science Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. Why did early explorers risk their lives to reach the North Pole? Why does our earth look so beautiful when seen from space? What is really down at the bottom of the ocean? Discovering new things about our earth has been the dream of scientists and explorers for centuries. Today, it is your turn to continue that journey of discovery.
In this course, you’ll take a look at the sky above, the oceans below, and the rocks beneath our feet. Since the beginning of time our earth has been changing. You’ll discover that our earth is still changing, sometimes by natural forces, sometimes by the things that we humans do. What does not change, however, is the need to take good care of our planet.
In this course you’ll learn to think like a scientist. You’ll examine ancient fossils and perform scientific labs. You’ll explore the past, present and possible future of this place we call home. And you won’t have to go to the North Pole to do it. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English I Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course. This introductory English course combines the
study of literary genre with a focus on composition skills. Students will learn
effective communication skills by focusing on the 6+1 Traits of writing developed by the Northwest Regional Education Laboratories. Oral communication and research skills are included. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English I Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. This introductory English course combines the
study of literary genre with a focus on composition skills. Students will learn
effective communication skills by focusing on the 6+1 Traits of writing developed by the Northwest Regional Education Laboratories. Oral communication and research skills are included. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English II Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course. This intermediate English course combines the study of world literature along with a continued focus on composition skills. Students will read, reflect, synthesize, and respond to several different types of world literature. A research paper is a requirement.A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English II Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. This intermediate English course combines the study of world literature along with a continued focus on composition skills. Students will read, reflect, synthesize, and respond to several different types of world literature. A research paper is a requirement. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English III Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course. English III is a comprehensive English class that combines a study of language, composition, oral communication, thinking skills, research, and literature. The literary focus is literature of America, beginning with the early 19th century and progressing to the modern era. The goal is to help students become effective independent thinkers, readers, writers, listeners, viewers, and speakers. Each unit combines appropriate skills in these areas with a specific literary focus. The course begins with a diagnostic writing assignment that will help the teacher identify student strengths and weaknesses.
1. Introduction
2. The New Nation
3. Transcendentalism
4. New Directions
5. Research
6. Realism and Naturalism
7. The New Woman
A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English III Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. English III. is a comprehensive English class that combines a study of language, composition, oral communication, thinking skills, research, and literature. The literary focus is literature of America, beginning with the early 19th century and progressing to the modern era. The goal is to help students become effective independent thinkers, readers, writers, listeners, viewers, and speakers. Each unit combines appropriate skills in these areas with a specific literary focus. The course begins with a diagnostic writing assignment that will help the teacher identify student strengths and weaknesses.
1. The Harlem Renaissance
2. Their Eyes Were Watching God
3. Death of a Salesman
4. Modern Voices
5. The Poetry of Song Lyrics
6. Independent Project
A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English IV Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course. This is a class that will prepare students for the skills they will need to be successful in college and in life. When they have completed the class, students will have acquired the reading and critical thinking skills necessary for understanding challenging new material, analyzing that material to deduce meaning, and applying what they have learned to our world. They will have the composition skills needed to communicate their understanding effectively to a variety of audiences. Students will read and analyze classic works of literature because these works contain literary qualities that merit study and provoke thinking, not because of a requirement to know a particular work or author. They will also look at modern and contemporary works as they examine all genres: plays, short storied, poetry, essays, and novels.
Students will learn to apply critical literary terms as tools for learning, understanding, and communication. Learning activities include close reading, paraphrasing, discussions, essays, short answer exams, research papers, reflective journals, web quests, oral presentations, and others.
Unit 1: Introduction to the course
Unit 2: Observing, Thinking and Learning: an introduction to the analysis of literature
Unit 3: Oedipus the King; Persuasive essay
Unit 4: Reading Sills and Literary Terms: Tools for understanding
Unit 5: Novel: Introduction to Literary Research
Unit 6: Research Paper
Unit 7: Poetry Analysis
Unit 8: Exam Review
A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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English IV Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. This is a class that will prepare students for the skills they will need to be successful in college and in life. When they have completed the class, students will have acquired the reading and critical thinking skills necessary for understanding challenging new material, analyzing that material to deduce meaning, and applying what they have learned to our world. They will have the composition skills needed to communicate their understanding effectively to a variety of audiences. Students will read and analyze classic works of literature because these works contain literary qualities that merit study and provoke thinking, not because of a requirement to know a particular work or author. They will also look at modern and contemporary works as they examine all genres: plays, short storied, poetry, essays, and novels.
Students will learn to apply critical literary terms as tools for learning, understanding, and communication. Learning activities include close reading, paraphrasing, discussions, essays, short answer exams, research papers, reflective journals, web quests, oral presentations, and others.
Unit 1: Medieval Literature
Unit 2: Hamlet
Unit 3: Romanticism
Unit 4: Realism and the 20th Century: The Changing Focus of Literature
Unit 5: Independent Thematic Study: The Individual in Society
A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Geometry Part A
Session 1
Semester Long Course (half-year). One day in 2580 B.C., a very serious architect stood on a dusty desert with a set of plans. His
plans called for creating a structure 480 high, with a square base and triangular sides, using stone
blocks weighing two tons each. The Pharaoh wanted the job done right. The better our architect
understood geometry, the better were his chances for staying alive.
Geometry is everywhere, not just in pyramids. Engineers use geometry to bank highways and
build bridges. Artists use geometry to create perspective in their paintings, and mapmakers help
travelers find things using the points located on a geometric grid. Throughout this course, we’ll
take you on a mathematical highway illuminated by spatial relationships, reasoning, connections,
and problem solving.
This course is all about points, lines and planes. Just as importantly, this course is about
acquiring a basic tool for understanding and manipulating the real world around you. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Geometry Part B
Session 1
Semester Long Course. One day in 2580 B.C., a very serious architect stood on a dusty desert with a set of plans. His
plans called for creating a structure 480 high, with a square base and triangular sides, using stone
blocks weighing two tons each. The Pharaoh wanted the job done right. The better our architect
understood geometry, the better were his chances for staying alive.
Geometry is everywhere, not just in pyramids. Engineers use geometry to bank highways and
build bridges. Artists use geometry to create perspective in their paintings, and mapmakers help
travelers find things using the points located on a geometric grid. Throughout this course, we’ll
take you on a mathematical highway illuminated by spatial relationships, reasoning, connections,
and problem solving.
This course is all about points, lines and planes. Just as importantly, this course is about
acquiring a basic tool for understanding and manipulating the real world around you. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Life Management Skills (Semester Long Course)
Session 1
(Semester Long Course) This course is all about you and the important decisions you make. It’s also about having the correct information before making those decisions. We’ll deal with real issues like nutrition, substance abuse, coping with stress, and what to do about sex.
Good health is both mental and physical. Making good decisions starts with knowing the facts, understanding the consequences, and having the confidence to choose well. A series of signposts will take you through the course providing information, direction, and a little encouragement. We’ll also offer some important tools for communicating your feelings and opinions. We’ll even talk about being a savvy consumer in a world of advertising, credit cards, and designer blue jeans.
This is a course comes with a long-term payoff. The good decisions you make now will set a positive direction you can follow for a lifetime. A Pace Chart for course completion schedule must be submitted in the first week with a half year schedule that you work out with your local school mentor.
View the Course Description.
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Year Round: September 8, 2008 - June 12, 2009 - Public High School
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Registration: June 9, 2008 - September 8, 2008
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Drop: October 8, 2008
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Japanese I (Full Year Course)
(Full Year Course)Japanese I has been carefully designed to meet the standards of the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL). These standards call for a method of teaching that focuses on successful communication through speaking, writing, reading, and listening, as well as a thorough grounding in aspects of culture. Each unit embodies all of these standards in accordance with the theories described in this document. Unit activities blend different forms of communication and culture to ensure that the student meets all standards. Course strategies include warm-up activities, vocabulary study, reading, threaded discussions, multi-media presentations, self-checks, practice activities and games, oral and written assignments, projects, quizzes, and exams. Learning activities in each unit are focused upon a specific theme.
Computers will need to be outfitted with a microphone for this course.
View the Course Description.
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Mandarin Chinese I. (Full Year Course)
Session 1
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Registration: June 9, 2008 - September 8, 2008
Drop/Add ends September 19, 2008
This is a beginning level course that will introduce the student to a variety of areas of Mandarin Chinese (simplified). In this course, the student will learn listening, speaking, reading and writing skills through activities that are based on pedagogically proven methods of foreign language instruction. Grammar is introduced and practiced in innovative and interesting ways with a variety of learning styles in mind.
Semester Outline:
Introduction to Chinese
Greetings
Numbers
My Family
School Life
View the Course Description.
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Term 1: September 8, 2008 - April 24, 2009 - Public High School
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Registration: June 9, 2008 - September 8, 2008
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Drop: October 8, 2008
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AP Art History (Full Year Course)
This course will provide students with college level instruction in the history of art. Students will examine major forms of artistic expression from the past and present and from a variety of cultures. Students will learn to look at these works of art critically, with intelligence and sensitivity, and to articulate what they see or experience.
View the Course Description.
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AP Calculus (Full Year Course)
This course introduces limits, differentiation, and integration of functions. Students will find and evaluate finite and infinite limits graphically, numerically, and analytically. They will find derivatives using a variety of methods including The Chain Rule and Implicit Differentiation. They will use the First Derivative Test and The Second Derivative Test to analyze and sketch functions.
Subsequently, students will find antiderivatives using a variety of methods including substitution. They will evaluate integrals using a variety of methods including numerical integration. They will understand and apply Riemann sums, definite integrals, and The Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. In particular, they will differentiate and integrate logarithmic, exponential, and inverse trigonometric functions. They will solve simple differential equations that can be solved by separation of variables and use them to solve applied problems. They will use integration to determine the area between two curves, volume, and surface area. Finally, they will apply integration to determine work, center of mass, and fluid force.
The use of a graphing calculator is considered an integral part of the course and students will use a graphing calculator throughout this course.
View the Course Description.
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AP English Literature Composition (Full Year Course)
For a year, participate in an AP upscale dining experience in the AP Literature and Composition course. Students act as food critics of exquisite literary cuisine. Menu items include reading, analyzing, writing, rewriting, and discussing creations by the master chefs, renowned authors. With intensive concentration on composition skills and on authors' narrative techniques, this dining experience equips students with recipes for success in college, in a career and the AP exam.
View the Course Description.
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AP Statistics (Full Year Course)
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Registration: June 9, 2008 - September 8, 2008
Drop/Add ends September 25, 2008
AP Statistics data analysis is dependent on the use of technology. Students should have access to computers that include software capable of doing data analysis. Students will be required to interpret output generated by statistical software programs. Students are not expected to learn how to use various statistical programs. In addition one of the following Texas Instruments calculators is required, TI-83, TI-83+, TI-84, TI-84+, or a TI 89. The TI-83+ is the most popular calculator for AP Statistics. In most cases the calculator is sufficient but the fundamental tool of data analysis is the computer.
View the Course Description.
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AP U.S. History (Full Year Course)
This course covers all of the material outlined by the College Board as necessary to prepare you to pass the AP U.S. History exam. Students will:
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• Demonstrate comprehension of a broad body of
historical knowledge.
• Express ideas clearly in writing.
• Work with classmates to research an historical issue.
• Interpret and apply data from original documents.
• Identify underrepresented historical viewpoints.
• Write to persuade with evidence.
• Compare and contrast alternate interpretations of
an historical figure, event, or trend.
• Explain how an historical event connects to or causes a larger trend or theme.
• Develop essay responses that include a clear,
defensible thesis statement and supporting evidence.
• Effectively argue a position on an historical issue.
• Critique and respond to arguments made by others.
• Raise and explore questions about policies,
institutions, beliefs, and actions in an historical
context.
• Evaluate primary materials, such as historical
documents, political cartoons, and first-person
narratives.
• Evaluate secondary materials, such as scholarly
works or statistical analyses.
• Assess the historical significance and cultural impact of key literary works (e.g. Common Sense, Uncle
Tom's Cabin).
View the Course Description.
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Year Round Exam Prep: September 15, 2008 - May 29, 2009 - Public High School
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Registration: September 15, 2008 - May 29, 2009
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Drop: June 28, 2009
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AP Exam Prep Calculus AB
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep Computer Science A
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep English Language
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep English Literature
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep European History
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep French Language
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep Macroeconomics
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep Microeconomics
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep Psychology
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep Spanish Language
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep Statistics
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep US Government & Politics
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep US History
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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AP Exam Prep World History
Session 1
This self paced online test preparation environment is designed specifically for students preparing to take the Advanced Placement Exam. There is no online teacher for this course.
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Term 2: January 12, 2009 - April 24, 2009 - Public High School
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Registration: September 23, 2008 - January 16, 2009
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Drop: February 15, 2009
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AP Macroeconomics (Semester Long Course)
AP Macroeconomics is an emphasis on how the economic system works as a whole. Students study how the economy is measured by using concepts such as gross domestic product (GDP) and other indicators. They examine concepts such as inflation, unemployment, world trade patterns, and the role of the Federal Reserve Bank. Students engage in decision-making processes to create an environment where high employment and a higher standard of living are achievable by using the economic tools of fiscal and monetary policy. This course prepares stu¬dents for the AP Exam in Macroeconomics.
View the Course Description.
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AP Microeconomics (Semester Long Course)
Microeconomics emphasizes how individuals make choices with limited resources. Students will examine concepts such as supply and demand, factors of production, roles of labor and management, the relation¬ship between the environment and the economy, and the impact of the government on individual decision making processes. Students study the stock market as an investment option and trace various stocks through the semester using the Wall Street Journal and the Internet as resources. This course prepares students for the AP Exam in Microeconomics.
View the Course Description.
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AP Psychology (Semester Long Course)
AP Psychology provides an overview of current psychological research methods and theories. Students will explore the therapies used by professional counselors and clinical psychologists and examine the reasons for normal human reactions: how people learn and think, the process of human development and human aggression, altruism, intimacy, and self-reflection. They'll study core psychological concepts, such as the brain and sense functions, and learn to gauge human reactions, gather information, and form meaningful syntheses. Along the way, students will also investigate relevant concepts like study skills and information retention. The equivalent of a 100-level college sur¬vey course, AP Psychology prepares students for the AP Exam and for further studies in psychology and life sciences.
View the Course Description.
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