English
Degrees and Certificates
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English Major -
English Minor
Courses
ENGL 030: College Writing Lab
EN 030 provides students the necessary support and foundational knowledge to successfully write college-level paragraphs and essays using a process approach. Students scoring 18 or below on the English section of the ACT must be enrolled concurrently in ENGL130 Rhetoric and Composition. ENGL 030 does not count in hours toward graduation. Prerequisite: Placement.
Corequisites
ENGL 130: Rhetoric and Composition
An introduction to college writing and the basic forms of the essay, ENGL 130 teaches students to read and think critically, to write logical, well-developed academic essays; to write in a variety of rhetorical situations; and to develop information literacy skills. Students will write Summary-Response, Rhetorical Analysis, and Researched Analysis essays using MLA style. C or higher required.
ENGL 149: Special Topics in English
Selected topics arranged by division faculty.
ENGL 160: Literature and Composition
A continued emphasis upon the principles of expository writing and research established in ENGL 130. Students will utilize the process method to draft and revise well-developed essays. Students will develop skills for synthesizing primary and secondary texts in research papers, a close reading/explication and/or an annotated bibliography according to MLA standards. In doing so, students will examine the basic genre elements of various literature with selected works used as the basis for discussions, lectures, and student writing. C or higher required.
ENGL 200: World Literature I
An investigation of the literature of diverse cultures from antiquity to the Renaissance.
Prerequisites
ENGL 201: World Literature II
An investigation of the literature of diverse cultures from the Renaissance to the present day.
Prerequisites
ENGL 220: American Literature I
Principal writers and movements in the literature of North America from the colonial period through the Civil War.
Prerequisites
ENGL 225: American Literature II
Principal writers and movements in the literature of the United States from the Reconstruction to the present day.
Prerequisites
ENGL 230: British Literature I
Principal writers and movements in British literature from the Anglo-Saxons to the Neoclassicists.
Prerequisites
ENGL 235: British Literature II
Principal writers and movements in British literature from Romanticism to the present day.
Prerequisites
ENGL 249: Special Topics in English
Selected topics arranged by division faculty.
ENGL 250: Introduction to Creative Writing
An introduction to the techniques, processes, styles, and major genres of creative writing in a workshop setting.
Prerequisites
ENGL 260: Introduction to Film Studies
This course is an introduction to the study of film as an art form and as a product of culture. The course will require outside viewing of assigned films.
Prerequisites
ENGL 305: Advocacy and Grant Writing
This skills-based course trains students in the writing techniques necessary to create positive change in the world, both locally and globally. Students focus on effective and ethical writing about and on behalf of people and social issues, and on grant writing and fundraising. Students read, write, and revise in a variety of genres used in various professions. Emphasis is placed on empowering students to write clear, correct, and persuasive prose.
Prerequisites
ENGL 310: Movements in Film
Investigation of a major movement or period of narrative film, including components of industry and production. Narrative films are both cultural and historical texts and can provide insight into the cultures and histories within which they are created. May be repeated for credit up to 6 hours.
Prerequisites
ENGL 315: Young Adult Literature
Reading intensive study of Young Adult Literature with major emphasis on current trends, significant authors, and major themes. This course will include workshops on current trends in motivating and preparing young and reluctant young readers to explore the world of literature created specifically for them.
Prerequisites
ENGL 326: Advanced Argument
Intensive training in generating correct, clear, and forceful prose with an awareness of a specific audience. Must be taken during the sophomore or junior year.
Prerequisites
ENGL 327: Technical and Professional Writing
Intensive instruction and practice in effective writing strategies for career searches, government agencies, business, and industry. Emphasis will be placed upon information gathering and the writing of clear, correct, and properly formatted documents including, but not limited to, persuasive letters and memoranda, summaries, oral and written reports, visuals and descriptions, instructions, PowerPoint, proposals and feasibility studies.
Prerequisites
ENGL 345: Critical Theory.
This course is a survey of the major methods of literary criticism of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, beginning with Formalism and most likely including (but not restricted to) psychoanalytical criticism, Marxist criticism, deconstruction, reader-response criticism, feminist and gender criticism, new historicism, and postcolonial criticism. It focuses on how these methodologies can be used to open up literary works in new and creative ways, but rather than encouraging students to pick one or another approach, it enables them to arrive at their own way of approaching literature.
Prerequisites
ENGL 349: Special Topics in English
Selected topics arranged by division faculty.
ENGL 350: Modern Grammar
Introduction to modern grammar with special emphasis on structural and transformational grammar.
Prerequisites
ENGL 360: History of the English Language
Overview of the history of the English language from its beginnings to the present day, including grammatical changes, usage, semantics, lexicography, dialect geography, and word origins.
Prerequisites
ENGL 375: Movements in British Literature
Investigation of a major period and/or movement in British literature, from the Middle Ages to the present day. Can be repeated for a maximum of 6 credit hours.
Prerequisites
ENGL 376: Independent Study
Reading or research at a greater depth than in a normal class.
Prerequisites
Permission of instructor, division dean/chair and Vice President of Academic Affairs.
ENGL 377: Movements in American Literature
Investigation of a major movement or period in American Literature. Can be repeated for a maximum of 6 credit hours.
Prerequisites
ENGL 378: Studies in World Literature
Investigation of a major movement or period in World Literature. Can be repeated for a maximum of 6 credit hours.
Prerequisites
ENGL 380: Multi-Ethnic American Literature
An in-depth study of the literature of minority American writers from throughout American literary history within their cultural contexts.
Prerequisites
ENGL 395: Research Methods in the Humanities
Intensive training in the theory and practice of humanities research, including archival and primary text research, analysis of academic secondary sources, ethnographic research, citation, and the research process, from research questions to communication of findings, which will allow students to refine and focus their research methods.
ENGL 400: Advanced Creative Writing
An intensive craft and process-based workshop in one or more genres of creative writing, building on techniques introduced in EN 250.
Prerequisites
ENGL 431: Major Authors
Intensive study of the work of one to four significant authors in their cultural context. Authors selected for the course will vary according to the instructor. may be repeated with different authors for up to six credit hours.
Prerequisites
ENGL 449: Special Topics in English
Selected topics arranged by division faculty.
ENGL 476: Independent Study
Reading or research at a greater depth than in a normal class.
Prerequisites
permission of instructor, division dean/chair and Vice President of Academic Affairs.
ENGL 485: Senior Thesis
Students may write a substantial research paper on a literary topic, or a substantial creative project. The creative project may be a collection of poems, a collection of short stories, a dramatic script, a novella, or a substantial creative nonfiction project. The thesis will include a reflective introduction that explains the student’s critical methodology or the student’s choice of a model poet, author, or script writer.
Prerequisites
ENGL 345, ENGL 395, Senior English major. For creative thesis students must have taken an advance course that fits their genre. Prerequisite for poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, ENGL 400 or MASC 370. Prerequisite for a dramatic script, THEA 270, ENGL 310, or MASC 375.