English
Classes
ENG 092 : Composition I Studio
Credits
3Corequisites
ENG-101
ENG 101 : Composition I: College Writing
Credits
3ENG 102 : Composition II: Writing about Literature
Credits
3ENG 214 : Intermediate Composition: Research Writing
Credits
3ENG 215 : Technical Writing
Credits
3- Recognize and address the needs of different audiences.
- Create a variety of technical and business documents, including letters, memorandums, short reports, formal emails and so on, employing the writing process.
- Demonstrate mastery of the different formats for business and technical documents.
- Display solid proofreading skills relative to grammatical, mechanical, and usage issues.
- Work within groups and collaboratively create technical and business documents.
- Undertake research, identifying relevant print and electronic documents and, when appropriate, developing such applications for primary source investigation as surveys, questionnaires, interviews, and experiments.
ENG 217 : Writings from the Margins of Contemporary American Literature
Credits
3- Critically analyze literary works in general.
- Demonstrate understanding of themselves in relation to the cultural contributions of other cultures.
- Increase their awareness and understanding of what it means to be a person of one’s own ethnicity, race, gender, or class in America culture.
- Engage in discovery through the reading of literature of the values, beliefs, and experiences of people with perspectives different from one’s own, and understand their uniqueness and commonalities.
- Analyze and explicate your interpretation for minority cultures and the themes of race, gender, class, ethnicity, religion, sexuality, as represented in the assigned readings.
- Demonstrate how common or culturally specific heritage, perspectives, histories and/or belief systems influenced the writers in this course and the forms or genres in which they wrote.
- Develop a well-supported interpretation of a literary text.
- Illustrate critical thinking skills in well-developed thesis statements and paragraphs with relevant examples and details from literary text being analyzed.
ENG 230 : Film
Credits
3- Identify the components of the visual language of film.
- Describe three basic techniques of editing.
- Define and use the terms in the glossary of their film text.
- Identify and describe the four elements of sound used in film.
- Describe the role of the director and discuss the auteur theory.
- Distinguish between expressionistic and realistic styles in film.
- Discuss the significant aspects of various historical periods in film.
- Identify the major characteristics of selected film genres.
- Write a critical analysis of a selected film.
ENG 233 : Poetry Writing Seminar
Credits
3ENG 251 : World Literature I
Credits
3- Explain how the religious views of a particular culture directly influenced its literature.
- Identify common thematic concerns throughout literature from diverse time periods and cultures.
- Compare and contrast similar stories told from different cultural perspectives.
- Analyze verse and summarize the role that it plays in story telling.
- Examine the life of an author and explain how his or her upbringing and culture influenced the issues and ideas expressed in the literature.
- Evaluate literary criticism and determine its usefulness in literary studies.
ENG 252 : World Literature II
Credits
3- Explain how the thematic concept of “Other” is illustrated in works of literature from diverse time periods and cultures.
- Explain how the rise of the Gothic influenced the development of world literature.
- Read diverse texts and discern the implied social commentaries that are embedded in them.
- Examine the life of an author and explain how his or her upbringing and culture influenced the issues and ideas expressed in the literature.
ENG 253 : English Literature I
Credits
3- Perceive that English literature, like all national literature, draws upon inherited stories, genres, and styles.
- Reflect on the ways that literature echoes the history and cultural values of the writer and of the times while offering significant meaning for us as individuals and for our own time.
- Realize that reading literature well requires both an ability to examine a work thoughtfully, but also to enter imaginatively into the world of the text.
- Discern that writing back in response to literature, as well as speaking with others and sharing writing, enables students to become thoughtful and empathetic readers and writers.
ENG 254 : English Literature II
Credits
3- Discover historical, thematic and stylistic connections among the various works that we study.
- Gain an understanding as to the evolution of the British empire from the time of the Industrial Revolution through the Colonial and Postcolonial periods.
- Develop a way of reading that is active and thoughtful.
ENG 255 : American Literature Precolonial to 1865
Credits
3- Further their critical thinking and writing skills about literature gained in ENG 102.
- Recognize ways in which changing beliefs and attitudes about race, gender, religion, ethnicity, social class, disability, sexual orientation, and linguistic background influence who and gets published – no longer canonical writers only.
- Challenge their own assumptions or expectations about what American literature is and who its authors are.
- Identify various literary styles and genres, some European in origin and some specifically American.
- Articulate major values, beliefs, and traditions of different cultures as reflected in the literature.
- Recognize and demonstrate the social and historical circumstances that shaped the values, beliefs, and traditions of different cultures as reflected in the literature.
- Understand and illustrate that writers of different cultures are influenced by each other.
- Recognize that literature is a means of creating identification of self and society.
ENG 256 : American Literature Post Civil War to Present
Credits
3- Further skills gained in ENG 102, such as critical writing, writing, and research.
- Recognize ways in which evolving attitudes about race, gender, religion, ethnicity, social class, disability, sexual orientation, and linguistic background affect both writers and readers.
- Challenge their own assumptions or expectations about what characterizes American literature and its body of authors.
- Identify various literary styles and genres, some traditional to the dominant culture, some traditional to an indigenous or a minority culture, some a combination or adaptation of those just mentioned.
- Articulate values, beliefs, and traditions particular to individual cultures as reflected in literature.
- Perceive and explicate how values, beliefs, and traditions of different cultures, as reflected in the literature, are shaped by social and historical circumstances.
- Realize that literature is a means of creating identification of self and society and that such identification is dynamic.
ENG 257 : African-American Literature
This class introduces students to stories, novels, autobiographies, speeches, essays, poems, memoirs, and/or plays by and about celebrated African American writers to examine the historical, cultural, and social dimensions of the African American experience. This course will explore how these literatures raise fundamental issues relevant to people of all races and ethnicities. Historical time periods and genres of significant focus may include slave narratives, the Harlem Renaissance, the Civil Rights era, Afrofuturism, and social justice movements of the present day. Readings may include works of Maya Angelou, Octavia Butler, Audre Lorde, Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, Phyllis Wheatley, Frederick Douglass, Zora Neale Hurston, James Baldwin, Nella Larsen, Roxanne Gay, Colson Whitehead, Jesmyn Ward, and others
Credits
31. Articulate the particular importance of African Americans expressing themselves. 2. Describe the connections between social and cultural histories and common themes in literature. 3. Interpret texts by taking into consideration the biographical backgrounds of authors. 4. Apply relevant theory to the analysis of literature. 5. Analyze ways in which issues in literature intersect with the lives of readers. 6. Recognize significant historical movements in African American literary studies. 7. Identify key genres and themes of African American literature.
ENG 258 : Shakespeare: His Plays
Credits
3- Critically read a Shakespearean play and accommodate for the nuances of Shakespearean grammar.
- Distinguish between a history play, a comedy, and a tragedy.
- Analyze and respond to filmed and live performances of these plays.
- Evaluate literary criticism and determine its usefulness in literary studies.
- Apply both analytical and reflective rhetoric in prose and oral communication.