U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B

Modern history: so recent, you might even remember it.

  • Credit Recovery Enabled
  • Course Length: 18 weeks
  • Course Type: Basic
  • Category:
    • History and Social Science
    • High School

Schools and Districts: We offer customized programs that won't break the bank. Get a quote.

Get a Quote

Shmoop's U.S. History: 1877-Present course has been granted a-g certification, which means it has met the rigorous iNACOL Standards for Quality Online Courses and will now be honored as part of the requirements for admission into the University of California system.

This course has also been certified by Quality Matters, a trusted quality assurance organization that provides course review services to certify the quality of online and blended courses.


Ever wondered what made the Twenties roar? Why the Cold War was cold? Who Roe and Wade were? No? Well, you should, because as every great historian has mumbled at some point or another, "those who do not take a Shmoop history course and learn about the past are doomed to repeat it." We're paraphrasing, of course, but the spirit is the same: study our history and maybe you'll be able to make the future a little less messed up.

This 11th grade U.S. history course, aligned to Florida and California Social Studies standards, will help you do just that. This semester covers the recent past—which, thanks to our personal biases, is often the hardest period to understand. But never fear; we'll guide you through the muddied waters of political scandals, global wars, international trade agreements, and domestic riots, and bring you to the other side an enlightened student of history. We'll even have a few laughs while we're at it.

With creative projects, quizzes, and activities of every kind your heart desires, you'll

  • take a ride on America's economic rollercoaster, tracing the highest highs of the Roaring Twenties to the lowest lows of the Great Depression—then you'll learn where Reaganomics fits into the picture.
  • trace America's development from Somewhat Important Nation to Unrivalled Global Leader, and debate whether or not that's a good thing.
  • understand how frustration has repeatedly boiled over into outright protest—against wars, poverty, police brutality, political oppression, institutionalized racism and sexism, global trade, and everything in between. 
  • find the origins of contemporary problems, such as terrorism, environmental degradation, and urban decay, in recent historical events.
  • analyze literature, music, and art from the Twenties through today to see how American culture has reacted to changing political and economic conditions. Yes, there will be punk rock.
  • get your historiography on by conducting research of secondary sources and taking a position on one of the major debates in the study of U.S. history.

Unit Breakdown

7 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - The Roaring Twenties

What was that? We can't hear you over the roar of our new Model T and our raging consumerism. You might think you know everything about the Twenties, but we've got news for you—this decade wasn't all ridiculous wealth, wacky dancing, and moonshine. There was also a conservative backlash that'll make your head spin. Luckily the Harlem Renaissance was there to tip the scale in favor of the awesome.

8 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - The Great Depression and the New Deal

What goes up must come down. This unit covers the crashiest of stock market crashes, the most depressing of all depressions, and the dustiest of dust bowls. Then we'll take the glass-half-full perspective and see how FDR aimed to "deal" with all that. Get it?

9 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - World War II

Is it weird that the bloodiest conflict in human history is known as "the last good war"? Definitely. Are there valid reasons why people call it that? Surprisingly, yes. This unit will walk you through some of the greatest tragedies of all time, and then try to cheer you up by telling you that the Great Depression was over and women and black people caught a tiny break for once.

10 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - The 1950s and the Cold War

Ahh, the Cold War. That war that wasn't a war, but somehow involved multiple wars. World War II was over, the Nazis were defeated, and the world was ready for peace. Except that the U.S. and the Soviet Union hated each other's guts and dragged the whole world into their little feud. On the home front, conformity was king and everyone thought everyone else was a communist. Whoopdeedoo.

11 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - The Civil Rights Movement

Finally, a unit about positive change! Yes, civil rights activists faced brutal, sometimes deadly resistance from the agents of white supremacy, but taken as a whole this period saw more legislation, more agitation, more hope for racial equality than any period since Reconstruction. This unit covers the events, the main players, and the ideologies that put civil rights in the spotlight, and inspired future generations to stand up for justice.

12 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - Good Morning, Vietnam!

Ahh, the Vietnam War. That war that everyone hated, but somehow went on for ten years and we still lost. This unit explains exactly why this war is known as a "quagmire," and yes, it will also explain what "quagmire" means. It'll also cover the other major events of the '70s, including the anti-war movement (oh, the folk songs you'll sing), the rejuvenated women's movement, the start of the environmental movement, and Nixon. All of the Nixon.

13 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - The Rise of Conservatism and the 1980s

As Jan Brady once said, "Reagan, Reagan, Reagan!" Reagan hogged all the attention in the '80s, partly because he slapped his name on everything—Reaganomics, Reagan Doctrine, Reagan puzzlingly radiant hair. But the reality was that Reagan was a symbol for a changing America, an America that was frankly getting old, and was tired of rabble-rousing. '80s America was a material girl that just wanted to have fun and be conservative, even when AIDS, environmental disasters, and a slowly neutralizing Cold War were raging around it.

14 U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester B - The 1990s and the New Millennium

We're here! We made it! This unit covers things that happened in your own lifetime. Everything looked different in the post-Cold-War world, from the economy (world trade agreements like whoa) to the technology (viral videos, anyone?). But perhaps the thing that had changed most was the political sphere—America saw itself being pulled more and more into conflicts in the Middle East, and experienced unprecedented acts of terror committed by extremists at home and abroad. Welcome to your world, Shmoopers. Learn about it. Make it better.


Recommended prerequisites:

  • U.S. History: 1877-Present—Semester A

  • Sample Lesson - Introduction

    Lesson 9.04: Race in War

    A war poster depicting a Tuskegee airman looking nobly into the distance. The text reads: 'Keep us flying! Buy war bonds.'
    "I'm sorry, I can't hear your racism over the sound of how awesome I look."
    (Source)

    Now, here's a shocker: wars never occur in isolation from the people and cultures that fight them. That means that WWII wasn't just a series of battles and military strategies—it was a massive, whole-scale event that interacted with every single facet of American culture.

    And here's another shocker: one of the most important and pervasive issues in American society was race. We've talked about the broken promises of Reconstruction, the rise of Jim Crow, and the increase in racial violence. By the 1940s, African Americans and other people of color were still confronted with every kind of discrimination, segregation, oppression, and straight-up racism twentieth-century America could invent. And then World War II landed in the middle of it.

    Today we'll be talking about some of the ways that the war changed American perceptions of race for the better, and some of the ways that African Americans, Native Americans, and Asian Americans simultaneously fought for both their country and their human rights.

    First, we've got the Navajo code talkers, who stepped up to the plate when the Japanese were figuring out all of our codes. The idea: just pass all of our communications in Navajo. Translate that, suckers.

    Then we'll talk about the Tuskegee Airmen, a unit of Black men trained to fly planes at the Tuskegee Institute. In a time when the American military was still segregated, these dudes—the very first Black aviator team—piloted planes over Sicily, North Africa, and the Mediterranean.

    Let's add into the "new opportunities for minorities" bucket the 442nd Regimental Combat team, a group of second-generation Japanese men mostly from Hawaii. The 442nd were instrumental in many European battles, not least of which was breaking through German forces so the Allies could bring about Germany's ultimate surrender and the end of World War II.

    So, given these incredible contributions to the war effort, nobody back home could have any doubt that people of color deserved equal rights, could they? Oh, they totally could.


    Sample Lesson - Reading

    Reading 9.9.04: Breaking Codes and Flying Planes

    Talkin' Code

    Let's start by getting a behind the scenes look at Navajo code talkers and how vital they were to the U.S. Marine Corps. While you're reading, think about why Navajo was an insanely perfect language for cryptographers, in terms of its syntax and patterns of use—talk about a uniquely helpful group of Americans.

    Tuskegee or Bust

    Read this overview and this article on the obstacles faced by the Tuskegee Airmen (besides enemy planes...) and the stats on how many planes and destroyers these men really shot down. While you're reading, think about what the Tuskegee Airmen proved to American military culture, and how their wartime efforts may have contributed to the American civil rights discussion on the home front. President Truman desegregated the Armed Forced in 1948—how might the Tuskegee Airmen have helped this long-overdue decision along?

    442nd to the Rescue

    In this reading on the 442nd Regimental Combat team, we'll learn all about the soldiers who called each other Buddhaheads (a term for Hawaiian soldiers) and kotonks (mainland soldiers) and why they got sweet slang names (where's Shmoop's slang name?). As we learn about the conflict between these soldiers we will also get to know just how many times the 442nd saved the butts of their fellow American soldiers. Spoiler alert: it was more than the number of times we've walked into a glass door.

    While you're reading, think about the prejudices that Japanese Americans had to confront to become soldiers, as well as the unique skill-set that they brought to the army.

    Also, keep an eye out for the liberation of the Lost Battalion—a Texas-based unit that was rescued by the 442nd. When it came time for Congress to vote on admitting Hawaii as a state, the Texan representatives in Congress were majorly influential and swung the vote in Hawaii's direction. Why? Turns out our Texan congressmen all said the 442nd rescue of the Lost Battalion in WWII was a big part of their decision. So, we should all thank the 442nd for every vacation we've had (or dreamed of having...sigh) in the beautiful state of Hawaii. Turns out wartime actions can really influence cultural and political opinions on the home front.

    Race on the Home Front

    But, while you might have hoped that this was the end of racism in America, WWII brought few tangible changes for African Americans. Lawful segregation continued to limit access to public facilities in the South, laws restricting Black suffrage remained intact, and the threat of economic reprisal and death at the hands of whites prevented Black citizens from owning land and gaining economic independence.

    Still, one thing had changed: Black veterans returned home transformed. With their wartime experiences came new frustrations, and a more urgent desire to take charge of their lives and protest ill treatment. The fear and anger they felt on the battlefield didn't fade at war's end, but instead intensified. Many Black veterans were determined to discard any semblance of "that's just the way things are" nonsense. The "status quo" meant white people degrading, humiliating, and terrorizing Black communities, and while many Black soldiers were eager to return to civilian life, a return to that life was unthinkable. 

    "I had spent five years with white men, and women, from Africa to Italy, through Paris, and into the Fatherland itself," Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins reflects in Devil in a Blue Dress, a novel by Walter Mosley. "I ate with them and slept with them, and I killed enough blue-eyed young men to know that they were just as afraid to die as I was."

    Black soldiers returning from World War II would provide the fuel for the growing Civil Rights Movement. But more on that in the next few units.


    Sample Lesson - Activity

    Activity 9.04: The Next Maya Lin

    Do you know Maya Lin? If not, you should, because, well, she was awesome. She was also a student when she designed the Vietnam War Memorial. Yes, as in of all the people in the whole wide country who wanted to design this important memorial, including all the super-famous artists, a 21-year-old college student designed the winning submission. Pret-ty baller, if you ask us.

    In this activity, you'll take a page out of her book. Pick one of the special fighting forces you read about in the readings, and draw a design for a memorial commemorating it and its members' contributions in World War II.

    Get creative with this one. You'll want to figure out what the memorial will look like, what text will be on it, how it will highlight the contributions of the fighting force and its members, and how it will educate the general public.

    You can go traditional by planning a big stone monument, a little crazy with a 20-foot high original poem, a little weird with a piece of abstract art, or think out of the box with a museum and/or virtual simulation experience. Whatever it is, it'll need a visual component. You can design it on the computer, or sketch it out and take a picture (or scan it)—either way, include a few bullet points describing what it will look like.

    You never know, maybe your designs will be featured in a reality television show where history students design national monuments. It could happen.

    But in order to really push your designs (and your knowledge of these fighting groups and their contribution to American history) over the edge—and in case future reality television shows require an application—you will write 2 – 3 paragraphs explaining your designs and how they represent the specific contributions of your chosen special fighting force.

    Upload your memorial plan and your paragraphs below!