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UC A-G Section AHistory / Social ScienceWASC AccreditedHonors Course

European History /
Honors Global History

600 Years of European History and Global Transformation

A rigorous, college-preparatory survey of European history. From the Renaissance to the Cold War — master historical argumentation, primary source analysis, and comparative thinking — guided by Prof. Isabelle Laurent and SofAI.

Start with Prof. Laurent
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🏰
Honors
Quick LinksHeimler's History Crash Course History All Courses
UC A-G Section A · Honors
Course Structure

Four Chronological Pillars

🎨
Period 1 — c.1450–1648

Renaissance & Reformation

  • › Italian and Northern Renaissance: humanism, printing press, Erasmus
  • › Protestant Reformation: Luther, Calvin, Counter-Reformation
  • › Age of Exploration: Columbian Exchange, Scientific Revolution
  • › Wars of Religion and early state-building in Europe
👑
Period 2 — c.1648–1815

Absolutism & Revolution

  • › Absolute monarchies: Louis XIV, Peter the Great, Frederick the Great
  • › Enlightenment thinkers: Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu
  • › French Revolution phases: causes, radical phase, Directory
  • › Napoleon: conquests, legal reforms, Congress of Vienna (1815)
🏭
Period 3 — c.1815–1914

Nationalism & Industrialization

  • › Industrial Revolution: factory system, urbanization, working-class movements
  • › Socialism and Marxism: competing ideologies of the 19th century
  • › Unification of Germany and Italy; Bismarck's realpolitik
  • › New Imperialism and the alliance system leading to WWI
🕊️
Period 4 — c.1914–present

World Wars & Cold War

  • › WWI: total war, trench warfare, Russian Revolution, Treaty of Versailles
  • › Rise of totalitarianism: fascism, Stalinism, Hitler, Holocaust
  • › WWII: causes, key events, Allied victory, post-war order
  • › Cold War, decolonization, and European integration (EU)
Historical Thinking Skills

Mastery Areas

This Honors course develops four core historical thinking skills that form the backbone of all writing, analysis, and discussion.

⚖️
Historical Causation
Identify and explain the short- and long-term causes and effects of major European developments, linking specific events to broader historical trends.
📜
Document Analysis
Evaluate primary and secondary sources by examining historical context, audience, purpose, and point of view — explaining how each factor shapes the document's meaning.
🔄
Comparative Thinking
Compare developments, regimes, and ideas across different European societies and time periods to identify meaningful patterns, similarities, and contrasts.
✍️
Argumentative Writing
Construct defensible historical arguments with a clear thesis, contextualization, and specific evidence — the foundation of all rigorous historical scholarship.

Honors Course Expectations

What distinguishes Honors-level historical work

📝

Historical Argument Essays: defensible thesis with a line of reasoning, contextualization, and specific evidence from multiple periods

📜

Document Analysis: source context, audience, purpose, and point of view for every primary source — explain HOW each shapes the argument

🔄

Comparative Response: identify and explain meaningful similarities and differences across political systems, ideologies, and societies

🏰

Periodization Thinking: understand how historians divide history into periods and why those boundaries matter for interpretation

Curriculum Aligned

Eight Units — c.1450 to Present

🎨
UNIT 1~11%

Period 1: Renaissance and Reformation (c.1450-1600)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Italian Renaissance: humanism, patronage, Petrarch, Leonardo, Michelangelo, Machiavelli
  • Northern Renaissance: Erasmus, Christian humanism, printing press (Gutenberg 1450)
  • Protestant Reformation: Luther's 95 Theses (1517), Calvin, Anabaptists, radical reformers
  • Catholic Counter-Reformation: Council of Trent, Jesuits, Index of Forbidden Books
  • Wars of Religion: French Wars of Religion, Spanish Armada, Edict of Nantes (1598)

Key Terms

humanism
Renaissance intellectual movement emphasizing human potential, classical learning, and individual achievement
Protestant Reformation
16th-century religious movement challenging Catholic authority, begun by Luther in 1517
printing press
Gutenberg's 1450 invention that mass-produced texts and spread Protestant ideas rapidly
Council of Trent (1545-1563)
Catholic Church's response to Protestantism — affirmed Catholic doctrine, reformed abuses
Edict of Nantes (1598)
French decree granting Huguenots (Calvinists) religious tolerance — ended French Wars of Religion
Erasmus
Northern humanist who criticized Church corruption through satire without leaving Catholicism
Practice Prompt

Historical Argument Practice: 'Evaluate the extent to which the Protestant Reformation challenged the political and social order of 16th-century Europe.' Write a thesis that makes a historically defensible claim using 2 categories of analysis. Then outline specific evidence for each category.

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

The Renaissance — AP European History
content

The Renaissance — AP European History

Heimler's History11 min
The Protestant Reformation — AP Euro
review

The Protestant Reformation — AP Euro

Crash Course World History12 min
Counter-Reformation and Wars of Religion
application

Counter-Reformation and Wars of Religion

Marco Learning10 min
🌍
UNIT 2~11%

Period 1: Exploration, Commerce, and Absolutism (c.1450-1648)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Age of Exploration: Columbus, Vasco da Gama, Magellan; motives (God, Gold, Glory)
  • Columbian Exchange: diseases, crops, animals — demographic collapse in Americas
  • Commercial Revolution: joint-stock companies, mercantilism, price revolution
  • Scientific Revolution: Copernicus, Galileo, Newton, Bacon (empiricism) — heliocentrism
  • Rise of Absolute Monarchies: Philip II (Spain), Henry IV (France), early Stuart kings (England)

Key Terms

Columbian Exchange
transfer of plants, animals, diseases, and peoples between Americas and Europe after 1492
mercantilism
economic theory: colonies exist to enrich the mother country; export > import
scientific method
empirical approach to knowledge: observation, hypothesis, experiment, conclusion (Bacon/Descartes)
heliocentric model
Copernicus's 1543 theory that Earth revolves around the Sun — overturned geocentrism
joint-stock company
business venture where shareholders pool capital and share profits/risks (Dutch East India Company)
Thirty Years' War (1618-1648)
devastating religious and political conflict across Holy Roman Empire; ended with Peace of Westphalia
Practice Prompt

Analyze TWO short-term and TWO long-term consequences of the Columbian Exchange on both Europe and the Americas. Explain the demographic, economic, and cultural effects. Then connect this to the rise of mercantilism: how did the Columbian Exchange enable the commercial revolution in Europe?

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

Age of Exploration — AP European History
content

Age of Exploration — AP European History

Heimler's History10 min
Scientific Revolution — AP Euro
content

Scientific Revolution — AP Euro

Crash Course History of Science12 min
Absolutism — AP European History
review

Absolutism — AP European History

Marco Learning11 min
👑
UNIT 3~11%

Period 2: Absolutism, Constitutionalism, Enlightenment (c.1648-1789)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Absolute Monarchies: Louis XIV ('Sun King'), Frederick the Great, Peter the Great, Catherine the Great
  • Constitutional Monarchies: English Civil War, Glorious Revolution (1688), Parliamentary sovereignty
  • The Enlightenment: Locke, Voltaire, Rousseau, Montesquieu, philosophes — reason over tradition
  • Enlightened Despotism: rulers who applied Enlightenment ideas while maintaining power
  • The French Revolution (1789): causes (fiscal crisis, Estates, Enlightenment), Phases, key events

Key Terms

absolute monarchy
ruler with unlimited power — no constitutional constraints (Louis XIV: 'L'état c'est moi')
Glorious Revolution (1688)
bloodless English overthrow of James II — established constitutional monarchy and Bill of Rights
Enlightenment
18th-century intellectual movement emphasizing reason, individual rights, and progress
social contract
Rousseau/Locke's theory: government derives authority from the consent of the governed
separation of powers
Montesquieu's principle: legislative, executive, judicial branches should be separate
Third Estate
98% of French population (commoners) who bore tax burden — trigger of 1789 revolution
Practice Prompt

Compare the political philosophies of Locke, Rousseau, and Montesquieu. How did each thinker's ideas challenge absolute monarchy? Then: trace the direct connections between Enlightenment ideas and the causes of the French Revolution. Which philosopher's ideas were most clearly embodied in the Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789)?

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

Louis XIV and Absolutism — AP Euro
content

Louis XIV and Absolutism — AP Euro

Heimler's History12 min
The Enlightenment — AP European History
content

The Enlightenment — AP European History

Crash Course History11 min
French Revolution Causes and Phases
application

French Revolution Causes and Phases

Marco Learning14 min
⚔️
UNIT 4~11%

Period 2: French Revolution, Napoleon, and Industrial Origins (c.1789-1815)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • French Revolution phases: Constitutional Monarchy → Republic → Terror → Directory → Napoleon
  • Napoleon: legal reforms (Napoleonic Code), conquests, Continental System, Waterloo (1815)
  • Congress of Vienna (1815): Metternich, balance of power, Concert of Europe, restoration
  • Industrial Revolution origins: Britain's advantages (coal, capital, colonies, cotton, canals)
  • Textile industry, steam engine (Watt), factory system — working conditions and social change

Key Terms

Reign of Terror
1793-94 radical phase of French Revolution: Robespierre, Committee of Public Safety, guillotine
Napoleonic Code
1804 French legal code standardizing law, property rights, and equality before the law
Congress of Vienna (1815)
European summit after Napoleon: restored pre-revolutionary borders, created Concert of Europe
balance of power
Metternich's principle: no single nation should dominate Europe
Industrial Revolution
late 18th-century transformation from agrarian to manufacturing economy (began in Britain)
enclosure movement
conversion of common English farmland to private ownership — pushed peasants to urban factories
Practice Prompt

Document Analysis Practice: 'Evaluate the extent to which Napoleon embodied or betrayed the ideals of the French Revolution.' Write a thesis with a line of reasoning (not just a claim). Then list 3 types of primary sources you would want to analyze and explain what perspective each would provide.

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

The French Revolution and Napoleon — AP Euro
content

The French Revolution and Napoleon — AP Euro

Heimler's History13 min
Congress of Vienna — AP European History
review

Congress of Vienna — AP European History

Marco Learning9 min
Industrial Revolution Origins — AP Euro
content

Industrial Revolution Origins — AP Euro

Crash Course History11 min
🏭
UNIT 5~11%

Period 3: Industrialization and Social Change (c.1815-1870)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Spread of industrialization: from Britain to Belgium, France, Germany, Russia (railways)
  • Urbanization: living conditions, cholera, sanitation, Robert Owen, reform movements
  • Social ideologies: liberalism, conservatism, socialism, Marxism (Marx and Engels, 1848)
  • Revolutions of 1848: Spring of Nations — causes, events, failures, consequences
  • Women's roles: domestic sphere ideology, early feminist movements, Seneca Falls comparison

Key Terms

Marxism
Marx's theory: capitalism exploits workers; class struggle leads inevitably to communist revolution
proletariat
Marx's term for the working class — alienated from labor and surplus value
bourgeoisie
Marx's term for the capitalist middle class that owns means of production
Revolutions of 1848
widespread European uprisings for liberal constitutions and national self-determination — mostly failed
liberalism (19th century)
ideology favoring constitutional government, individual rights, free trade, and limited government
conservatism (Metternich)
ideology defending traditional order, monarchy, Church, and aristocracy against revolutionary change
Practice Prompt

Short Answer Practice: 'Explain how industrialization changed the social structure of European society.' (a) Describe ONE way industrialization changed the lives of the working class. (b) Describe ONE way a social reformer responded to these conditions. (c) Explain how Marxism offered an alternative explanation for industrial society's problems.

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

Industrialization and Social Change — AP Euro
content

Industrialization and Social Change — AP Euro

Heimler's History12 min
Marxism and Socialism — AP European History
content

Marxism and Socialism — AP European History

Crash Course History10 min
Revolutions of 1848 — AP Euro
review

Revolutions of 1848 — AP Euro

Marco Learning9 min
🗺️
UNIT 6~11%

Period 3: Nationalism, Imperialism, and New Order (c.1870-1914)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Unification of Germany (Bismarck) and Italy (Cavour/Garibaldi) — realpolitik
  • New Imperialism: motives (economic, social Darwinism, 'civilizing mission'), scramble for Africa
  • The Belle Époque: mass culture, science, leisure, consumer society
  • Second Industrial Revolution: steel, electricity, chemicals, corporations
  • Triple Alliance vs. Triple Entente — road to WWI (nationalism, militarism, imperialism, alliance system)

Key Terms

realpolitik
Bismarck's approach: politics based on power and practical interests, not ideology
new imperialism
late 19th-century European colonization driven by economic, racial, and geopolitical motives
social Darwinism
misapplication of Darwin's evolution to justify racial hierarchy and empire
Berlin Conference (1884-85)
European powers divided Africa among themselves with no African input
nationalism
belief that people sharing language/culture deserve their own state — both unifying and destabilizing
Entente Cordiale
1904 alliance between Britain and France — part of the alliance system leading to WWI
Practice Prompt

Compare Bismarck's realpolitik approach to German unification with Cavour's approach to Italian unification. In what ways were their methods similar? How did they differ in terms of ideology, international diplomacy, and the role of nationalism? Which was more effective and why?

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

Bismarck and German Unification — AP Euro
content

Bismarck and German Unification — AP Euro

Heimler's History11 min
New Imperialism — AP European History
content

New Imperialism — AP European History

Crash Course History10 min
Road to WWI — AP Euro
application

Road to WWI — AP Euro

Marco Learning12 min
🌍
UNIT 7~11%

Period 4: World Wars and Totalitarianism (c.1914-1945)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • WWI: causes (MAIN — Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, Nationalism), trench warfare, total war
  • Russian Revolution (1917): February + October; Lenin, Trotsky, Bolsheviks, NEP
  • Rise of totalitarianism: Fascism (Mussolini, Hitler), Stalinism — comparison of methods
  • Nazi Germany: anti-Semitism, Nuremberg Laws, Holocaust, totalitarian state
  • WWII: causes (appeasement, Hitler's aims), key events, Holocaust, Allied victory

Key Terms

MAIN acronym
WWI causes: Militarism, Alliance system, Imperialism, Nationalism
total war
entire society mobilized for war effort — civilians, economy, propaganda, rationing
Bolsheviks
Lenin's revolutionary party that seized power in October 1917 — created the Soviet Union
fascism
authoritarian nationalism glorifying the state, leader, and military over individual rights
appeasement
Britain/France policy of granting Hitler's demands (Munich 1938) to avoid war — failed
Holocaust
Nazi Germany's systematic genocide of 6 million Jews and millions of others 1941-1945
Practice Prompt

Historical Argument Practice: 'Evaluate the extent to which the Treaty of Versailles caused the rise of Adolf Hitler and Nazism.' Write a thesis with a nuanced line of reasoning (consider: economic devastation, humiliation, political instability, pre-existing anti-Semitism). Then outline 3 categories of evidence you would use and explain their relative importance.

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

World War I — AP European History
content

World War I — AP European History

Heimler's History13 min
Russian Revolution — AP Euro
content

Russian Revolution — AP Euro

Crash Course History12 min
Rise of Hitler and WWII Causes
application

Rise of Hitler and WWII Causes

Marco Learning11 min
🕊️
UNIT 8~11%

Period 4: Cold War, Decolonization, and European Integration (c.1945-present)

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Cold War in Europe: Marshall Plan, Berlin Blockade, NATO, Warsaw Pact, détente, fall of the wall (1989)
  • Decolonization: end of British and French empires; Algeria, India, African independence
  • European integration: ECSC → EEC → EU — motives and evolution
  • Social movements: 1968 student revolts, women's liberation, environmental movement
  • Collapse of USSR (1989-1991): Gorbachev (glasnost, perestroika), Eastern European revolutions

Key Terms

Marshall Plan (1948)
US economic aid to rebuild Western Europe — also aimed at preventing communist influence
NATO
North Atlantic Treaty Organization — collective defense alliance; Article 5 commits members to mutual defense
détente
1970s easing of Cold War tensions between US/USSR under Nixon and Brezhnev
glasnost/perestroika
Gorbachev's reforms: openness (glasnost) and restructuring (perestroika) — unintentionally led to USSR's collapse
European Union
economic and political integration project begun 1993 — common market, Eurozone, free movement
decolonization
post-WWII process of European empires granting independence to colonies, mostly 1945-1975
Practice Prompt

Historical Argument Practice: 'Evaluate the extent to which the Cold War transformed European society and politics between 1945 and 1991.' Write a complete essay thesis with contextualization (what happened before 1945 that set the stage?), two categories of evidence, and a complexity statement that qualifies your argument.

Practice with Prof. Laurent →

Curated Video Lessons

Cold War in Europe — AP European History
content

Cold War in Europe — AP European History

Heimler's History11 min
European Integration — AP Euro
content

European Integration — AP Euro

Marco Learning9 min
Fall of the USSR — AP European History
review

Fall of the USSR — AP European History

Crash Course History12 min
Honors Assessment

Three Core Assessment Types

European History Honors writing develops the same skills demanded by rigorous college courses. Mastering these three formats will prepare you for success in any advanced history or social science course.

Writing Coach →
📝

Historical Argument Essay

Write a structured argumentative essay responding to a historical prompt. Must include a defensible thesis, contextualization, and at least two pieces of specific evidence supporting a clear line of reasoning.

Skills Assessed
Thesis construction with a clear line of reasoning
Contextualization — situating the topic in broader history
Specific evidence integration from multiple sources
Complexity — addressing counterarguments or multiple causes
Honors Tip

A strong thesis argues WHY something happened or changed — not just WHAT happened. Claim a category of analysis (economic, political, social) and defend it with evidence. Contextualization belongs BEFORE your thesis: describe broader history around the period.

📜

Document Analysis

Analyze primary and secondary source documents by evaluating historical context, audience, purpose, and point of view. Explain how each factor shapes the document's meaning, argument, and reliability.

Skills Assessed
Historical Context: when and where was this created?
Audience: who was this document written for?
Purpose: why was this document created?
Point of View: how does the author's position shape their argument?
Honors Tip

Don't just identify audience or purpose — explain HOW it shapes what the author says or omits. That's the difference between a surface-level and a sophisticated analysis. The word 'because' is essential: 'The author argues X because their position as Y made them likely to emphasize Z.'

🖊️

Short Answer Response

Concise, direct historical analysis organized in structured parts (a, b, c). Each part requires a historical claim, specific evidence, and a brief explanation of significance. No introduction or thesis required.

Skills Assessed
Make a clear historical claim in the first sentence
Support every claim with specific names, dates, or events
Explain the significance using the word 'because'
Keep responses to 3–5 sentences per part — clarity over length
Honors Tip

Short answer responses reward precision. Go straight to the content: Claim → Evidence → Explanation. 'X happened because Y, as demonstrated by Z.' Vague statements like 'there were many effects' earn no points; specific ones always do.

From Prof. Isabelle Laurent

Six Keys to Honors Success

🎯

Master Contextualization First

Contextualization is the most frequently missed skill in historical writing. For every essay prompt, practice writing a 3–5 sentence context paragraph that describes broader history BEFORE or AROUND the period — not a summary of the period itself. Connect that broader context to your specific argument.

📜

Analyze Every Source for Context, Audience, Purpose, and Point of View

For each primary source, annotate: when and where it was created (context), who it was written for (audience), why it was written (purpose), and how the author's position shapes their perspective (point of view). Always explain HOW these factors influence what the author says and what they leave out.

⚖️

Write Defensible Theses — Not Descriptions

A thesis must take a position: argue a CATEGORY of analysis (economic, political, social) and claim WHY something happened, changed, or was significant. 'There were many causes of the French Revolution' is NOT a thesis. 'The French Revolution was primarily caused by Enlightenment ideology because philosophes provided a framework for challenging royal authority' IS a thesis.

🔁

Practice Causation and Continuity Arguments Across All Four Periods

Continuity and Change over Time (CCOT) is a foundational historical thinking skill. For every major development, ask: what stayed the same? What changed? What caused those changes? Practice writing one CCOT argument per week using specific events and figures from each period.

🏰

Build a Deep Evidence Bank Across All Eight Units

Compelling historical writing requires specific evidence — names, dates, events, and ideas. For each of the eight units, build a list of at least 5 specific examples you could use in an essay. Broad generalizations like 'the Industrial Revolution hurt workers' become powerful when grounded in specific figures like Robert Owen, Friedrich Engels, or the Luddite movement.

📊

Connect Across Periods for Historical Complexity

The most sophisticated historical writing identifies connections across time periods. Look for long-term causes that span multiple periods, continuities that persist through change, and ways that earlier developments set the conditions for later events. Connecting the Enlightenment to both the French Revolution AND modern democracy demonstrates exactly this kind of depth.

Curated for Honors Success

Practice Tests & Resources

🏛
OFFICIALFREE

CollegeBoard AP European History

Official CED, historical thinking skills guide, and scoring guidelines — excellent reference for Honors-level rigor.

Open resource
📂
ESSAY PRACTICEFREE

Past AP Euro FRQs (1999–2024)

Every past essay prompt and scoring rubric. Use as writing practice — aim for thesis + contextualization + 2 specific examples.

Open resource
🎥
HIGHLY RECOMMENDEDFREE

Heimler's History AP Euro

The best European History YouTube series — all 4 periods with document analysis and essay writing strategy integrated.

Open resource
📚
ESSAY STRATEGY

Marco Learning AP European History

In-depth essay and document analysis strategy with model responses. Excellent for understanding what strong historical writing looks like.

Open resource
📺
CONTENT REVIEWFREE

Crash Course History

European history episodes covering Reformation through Cold War. Watch for narrative understanding of complex developments.

Open resource
🎓
COMPREHENSIVEFREE

Fiveable AP European History

Unit summaries, document sets for analysis practice, and live study sessions. Ideal for essay preparation and content review.

Open resource
🎬
DEEP CONTENTFREE

Tom Richey AP Euro

College-level lectures on European history content — excellent for understanding the why behind major events and intellectual movements.

Open resource
📝
PRACTICE QUESTIONS

Albert.io AP European History

Stimulus-based practice questions for all 4 periods. Excellent for reinforcing content and practicing source analysis.

Open resource
AI-Powered Progress

16-Week Honors Study Plan

Weeks 1–4

Phase 1: Period 1 — Renaissance Through 1648

  • Build a timeline: mark all major events 1450–1648 with cause and effect connections
  • Master key figures: 15 people from the Renaissance and Reformation with what they believed and why it mattered
  • Document analysis practice: read 2 primary sources per week and annotate for context, audience, purpose, and point of view
  • Short answer practice: 2 structured responses from Period 1 per week — Claim, Evidence, Explain
Weeks 5–8

Phase 2: Period 2 — Absolutism, Enlightenment, French Revolution

  • Compare absolute monarchy (Louis XIV) vs. constitutional monarchy (William III) — specific evidence for each
  • Master Enlightenment philosophers: Locke, Rousseau, Voltaire, Montesquieu — specific ideas and political impact
  • Write one full historical argument essay on a Period 2 topic under timed conditions (45 min)
  • Essay practice: write 2 essays on Period 2 topics — focus on thesis with a line of reasoning
Weeks 9–12

Phase 3: Period 3 — Industrialization Through WWI

  • Industrialization causes: compare Britain's advantages to Continental Europe's delayed development
  • Nationalism and imperialism: know the Berlin Conference (1884), Scramble for Africa, and MAIN causes of WWI
  • Write one complete document analysis essay on an industrialization or imperialism topic
  • Structured reading: for each unit, identify 5 specific people, events, and ideas you can use as evidence in any essay
Weeks 13–16

Phase 4: Period 4 and Portfolio Completion

  • Cold War, decolonization, and EU integration — build cause-and-effect chains for each development
  • Write two full practice essays weekly (historical argument + document analysis) under timed conditions
  • Review all essays for thesis strength — confirm every claim has a specific line of reasoning
  • Final review with Prof. Laurent (SofAI chat): oral thesis practice on any historical prompt — defend your argument
Agentic AI Tutoring

Your Honors History AI Tutor

Prof. Isabelle Laurent is your European History expert — every essay argument, every document analysis, and every historical thinking skill. SofAIconnects European History to every other subject you're studying.

📜 Help me write a strong thesis with a line of reasoning for this historical prompt: [paste prompt]👑 Quiz me on 10 key figures from Periods 1 and 2 — I'll name what they believed and you grade me🔍 Walk me through how to analyze a primary source for context, audience, purpose, and point of view✍️ Help me write a contextualization paragraph for the French Revolution from scratch
🏰

Ready to Master European History?

Enroll in a rigorous, AI-powered Honors European History course. WASC accredited. UC A-G Section A approved. Build the historical thinking skills that will serve you in every advanced course ahead.

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WASC Accredited · UC A-G Approved · Honors Course · History / Social Science

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