Correlations
The American Journey, 4th Edition AP* Edition ©2008
David Goldfield, Carl Abbott, Virginia Anderson, JoAnn Argersinger, Peter Argersinger, William Barney, & Robert Weir
Correlated to the Advanced Placement* (AP*) Content Guidelines for U.S. History
AP* Guideline 1: Pre-Columbian Societies
| Early inhabitants of the Americas |
pp. 2–10 |
| American Indian empires in Mesoamerica, the Southwest, and the Mississippi Valley |
pp. 7–9 |
| American Indian cultures of North America at the time of European contact |
pp. 7–9 |
AP* Guideline 2: Transatlantic Encounters and Colonial Beginnings, 1492–1690
| First European contacts with Native Americans |
pp. 16–26 |
| Spain's empire in North America |
pp. 19–25; 71; 117–119 |
| French colonization of Canada |
pp. 26; 36–38; 72–73 |
| English settlement of New England, the Mid-Atlantic region, and the South |
pp. 41–53 |
| From servitude to slavery in the Chesapeake region |
pp. 77–84; 87–92 |
| Religious diversity in the American colonies |
pp. 57–59; 71–73; 85; 109–112 |
| Resistance to colonial authority: Bacon's Rebellion, the Glorious revolution, and the Pueblo Revolt |
pp. 73–77; 85–87; 113–114 |
AP* Guideline 3: Colonial North America, 1690–1754
| Population growth and immigration |
pp. 87–92; 104–106; 114–117 |
| Transatlantic trade and the growth of seaports |
pp. 99–104 |
| The eighteenth-century back country |
pp. 115–117 |
| Growth of plantation economics and slave societies |
pp. 79–87 |
| The Enlightenment and the Great Awakening |
pp. 109–112 |
| Colonial governments and imperial policy in British North America |
pp. 112–115 |
AP* Guideline 4: The American Revolutionary Era, 1754–1789
| The French and Indian War |
pp. 122–125 |
| The Imperial Crisis and resistance to Britain |
pp. 120–121; 133–149 |
| The War for Independence |
pp. 149–152; 158–184 |
| State constitutions and the Articles of Confederation |
pp. 195–198 |
| The federal Constitution |
pp. 209–215 |
AP* Guideline 5: The Early Republic, 1789–1815
| Washington, Hamilton, and shaping of the national government |
pp. 209–211; 221; 223; 228 |
| Emergence of political parties: Federalists and Republicans |
pp. 230–242 |
| Republican Motherhood and education for women |
pp. 221–223 |
| Beginnings of the Second Great Awakening |
pp. 282–284 |
| Significance of Jefferson's presidency |
pp. 249–255 |
| Expansion into the trans-Appalachian West; American Indian resistance |
pp. 226; 232–237; 256–257; 287–289 |
| Growth of slavery and free Black communities |
pp. 225–226; 297; 309–331 |
| The War of 1812 and its consequences |
pp. 255–264 |
AP* Guideline 6: Transformation of the Economy and Society in Antebellum America
| The transportation revolution and creation of a national market economy |
pp. 337–341 |
| Beginnings of industrialization and changes in social and class structures |
pp. 344–350 |
| Immigration and nativist reaction |
pp. 341–344; 366–367; 568–570 |
| Planters, yeoman farmers, and slaves in the cotton South |
pp. 309–311; 324–325; 522–525 |
AP* Guideline 7: The Transformation of Politics in Antebellum America
| Emergence of the second party system |
pp. 297–303 |
| Federal Authority and its opponents: judicial federalism, the Bank War, tariff controversy, and states' rights debates |
pp. 212, 226–230; 240; 291–294 |
| Jacksonian democracy and its successes and limitations |
pp. 279–280; 284–291 |
AP* Guideline 8: Religion, Reform, and Renaissance in Antebellum America
| Evangelical Protestant revivalism |
pp.283–284;329–330;423;432-433 |
| Socialism reforms |
pp. 355–359 |
| Ideals of domesticity |
p. 348 |
| Transcendentalism and utopian communities |
pp. 357–359 |
| American Renaissance: literary and artistic expressions |
pp. 358–359 |
AP* Guideline 9: Territorial Expansion and Manifest Destiny
| Forced removal of American Indians to the trans-Mississippi West |
pp. 287–288 |
| Western migration and cultural interactions |
pp. 375–393; 341–344; 423 |
| Territorial acquisitions |
pp. 375–398 |
| Early U.S. imperialism: the Mexican War |
pp. 397–399 |
AP* Guideline 10: The Crisis of the Union
| Pro- and Antislavery arguments and conflicts |
pp. 329–330; 359–363 |
| Compromise of 1850 and popular sovereignty |
pp. 409–410; 422 |
| The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the emergence of the Republican Party |
pp. 415–419 |
| Abraham Lincoln, the election of 1860, and secession |
pp. 421–422; 427–430 |
AP* Guideline 11: Civil War
| Two societies at war: mobilization, resources, and internal dissent |
pp. 441–447 |
| Military strategies and foreign diplomacy |
pp. 445–447 |
| Emancipation and the role of African Americans in the war |
pp. 453–457 |
| Social, political, and economic effects of war in the North, South, and West |
pp. 450–451; 463–469 |
AP* Guideline 12: Reconstruction
| Presidential and Radical Reconstruction |
pp. 491–499 |
| Southern state governments: aspirations, achievements, failures |
pp. 502–507 |
| Roles of African Americans in politics, education, and the economy |
pp. 485–491 |
| Compromise of 1877 |
pp. 503–504 |
| Impact of Reconstruction |
p. 508 |
AP* Guideline 13: The Origins of the New South
| Reconfiguration of southern agriculture sharecropping and crop lien system |
pp. 522–526 |
| Expansion of manufacturing and industrialization |
pp. 515–521 |
| The politics of segregation: Jim Crow and disfranchisement |
pp. 529–541 |
AP* Guideline 14: Development of the West in the Late Nineteenth Century
| Expansion and development of western railroads |
pp. 517–518 |
| Competitors for the West: miners, ranchers, homesteaders, and American Indians |
pp. 584–609 |
| Government policy toward American Indians |
p. 587 |
| Gender, race, and ethnicity in the far West |
pp. 584–609 |
| Environmental impacts of western settlement |
pp. 596; 599; 608 |
AP* Guideline 15: Industrial America in the Late Nineteenth Century
| Corporate consolidation of industry |
pp. 552–554 |
| Effects of technological development on the worker and workplace |
pp. 554–560 |
| Labor and unions |
pp. 560–562 |
| National politics and influence of corporate power |
pp. 618–639 |
| Migration and immigration: the changing face of the nation |
pp. 562–572 |
| Proponents and opponents of the new order, e.g., Social Darwinism and Social Gospel |
pp. 558–560; 648 |
AP* Guideline 16: Urban Society in the Late Nineteenth Century
| Urbanization and the lure of the city |
pp. 572–577 |
| City problems and machine politics |
pp. 646–648 |
| Intellectual and cultural movements and popular entertainment |
p. 575 |
AP* Guideline 17: Populism and Progressivism
| Agrarian discontent and political issues of the late nineteenth century |
pp. 656–657 |
| Origins of Progressive reform: municipal, state, and reform |
pp. 645–673 |
| Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson as Progressive presidents |
pp. 664–673 |
| Women's roles: family, workplace, education, politics, and reform |
pp. 574; 605; 645–673 |
| Black America: urban migration and civil rights initiatives |
pp. 570–572; 659 |
AP* Guideline 18: The Emergence of America as a World Power
| American imperialism: political and economic expansion |
pp. 681–685 |
| War in Europe and American neutrality |
pp. 799–801 |
| The First World War at home and abroad |
pp. 709–734 |
| Treaty of Versailles |
pp. 727–728 |
| Society and economy in the postwar years |
pp. 731–733 |
AP* Guideline 19: The New Era: 1920s
| The business of America and the consumer economy |
pp. 741; 748 |
| Republican politics: Harding, Coolidge, Hoover |
pp. 734, 746–747; 733–734,745; 762–763 |
| The culture of Modernism: science, the arts, and entertainment |
pp. 752–758 |
| Responses to Modernism: religious fundamentalism, nativism, and Prohibition |
pp. 750; 758; 657–658 |
| The ongoing struggle for equality: African Americans and women |
pp. 772; 773; 828, 877 |
AP* Guideline 20: The Great Depression and the New Deal
| Causes of the Great Depression |
p. 775 |
| The Hoover Administration's response |
pp. 781–783 |
| Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the New Deal |
pp. 791–792 |
| Labor and union recognition |
pp. 792–793 |
| The New Deal coalition and its critics from the Right and the Left |
pp. 783–801; 884 |
| Surviving hard times: American society during the Great Depression |
pp. 776–779 |
AP* Guideline 21: The Second World War
| The rise of fascism and militarism in Japan, Italy, and Germany |
pp. 799–801 |
| Prelude to war: policy of neutrality |
p. 813 |
| The attack on Pearl Harbor and United States declaration of war |
pp. 814–816 |
| Fighting a multifront war |
pp. 815; 820; 832 |
| Diplomacy, war aims, and wartime conferences |
p. 829 |
| The United States as a global power in the Atomic Age |
pp. 856–859 |
AP* Guideline 22: The Home Front During the War
| Wartime mobilization of the economy |
pp. 844–848 |
| Urban migration and demographic changes |
|
| Women, work, and family during the war |
pp. 777; 825; 793–794 |
| Civil liberties and civil rights during wartime |
pp. 848; 849 |
| War and regional development |
pp. 846–847 |
| Expansion of government power |
|
AP* Guideline 23: The United States and the Early Cold War
| Origins of the Cold War |
p. 843 |
| Truman and containment |
p. 856 |
| The Cold War in Asia: China, Korea, Vietnam, Japan |
pp. 558–559 |
| Diplomatic strategies and policies of the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations |
pp. 875; 892–893 |
| The Red Scare and McCarthyism |
pp. 733–734; 758; 865–868; 868; 875 |
| Impact of the Cold War an American society |
pp. 843–868 |
AP* Guideline 24: The 1950s
| Emergence of the modern civil rights movement |
pp. 893–897 |
| The affluent society and "the other America" |
p. 882 |
| Consensus and conformity: suburbia and middle-class America |
pp. 87–83; 882 |
| Social critics, nonconformists, and cultural rebels |
pp. 880–881 |
| Impact of changes in science, technology, and medicine |
pp. 596; 822; 902 |
AP* Guideline 25: The Turbulent 1960s
| From the New Frontier to the Great Society |
pp. 889; 901 |
| Expanding movements for civil rights |
pp. 893–897 |
| Cold War confrontations: Asia, Latin America, and Europe |
pp. 558–559; 845; 857; 890 |
| Beginning of Détente |
|
| The antiwar movement and the counterculture |
pp. 916–917 |
AP* Guideline 26: Politics and Economics at the End of the Twentieth Century
| The election of 1968 and the "Silent Majority" |
pp. 926–927 |
| Nixon's challenges: Vietnam, China, Watergate |
pp. 884; 932–934; 929 |
| Changes in the American economy: the energy crisis, deindustrialization, and the service economy |
pp. 936; 991–992 |
| The New Right and the Regan revolution |
pp. 950–951 |
| End of the Cold War |
pp. 964–965 |
AP* Guideline 27: Society and Culture at the End of the Twentieth Century
| Demographic changes: surge of immigration after 1965, Sunbelt migration, and the graying of America |
pp. 970–971 |
| Revolutions in biotechnology, mass communication, and computers |
pp. 954; 992–993 |
| Politics in a multicultural society |
p. 1000 |
AP* Guideline 28: The United States in the Post-Cold War World
| Globalization and the American economy |
p. 1007 |
| Unilateralism vs. multilateralism in foreign policy |
|
| Domestic and foreign terrorism |
p. 987 |
| Environmental issues in a global content |
p. 931 |