University Curriculum Committee
Minutes of 01/24/2008
Present:
Regular Members: G.
Lapicki, J. Lewis, J. Manner, J. Neil, P. Schwager, J. Tisnado
Ex Officio Members: C. Boklage, L. Griffin, T. Jenks
Administrative: K.
Snyder
Visitors: T. Caron, L. Lee
Excused: D. Batts, R. Mitchelson
1.
Chair
J. Neil called the meeting to order at 2:00 p.m.
2.
The
minutes of the December 13, 2007 meeting were approved as amended.
3.
Old
Business: None
4.
Request
from the
5.
Request
from the
6.
Request
from the Department of English for two new courses, ENGL 3290 and ENGL 4380,
was approved. Request for two additional
courses, ENGL 3280 and ENGL 3700, was approved subject
to minor revisions. Request to change
the title of ENGL 3260 was approved.
Request to revise the existing certificate in Business and Technical
Communication was approved.
7.
New
Business: Chair Neil reviewed the
proposed revisions to the ECU Faculty
Manual (Part V, Section III). After discussion,
a motion was made, seconded and passed confirming the following:
a.
The charge
of the UCC should remain the same. The proposed
changes could eliminate the committee responsibilities related to Section 4,
items C and D.
b.
The committee agreed that the UCC
should be a part of the Request to Establish
in the Baccalaureate Degree Program Campus Approval Process Checklist. We will
ask that a new entry #f be inserted under #3, indicating that the UCC reviews a
new program and its courses before it is presented to the EPPC.
c.
On the EPPC report, Section C, Number
1, New Degree Programs, Step III, we will request that the parenthetical
included with the eighth bullet be deleted and a new bullet inserted that
indicates that the UCC reviews the request to establish a bachelor’s program.
d.
On the EPPC report, Section C,
Number 2, New Minors…, we will request that the parenthetical included with
bullet six be deleted, as the UCC does want to see requests for title changes and moving or
discontinuing programs as outlined in our charge.
8.
Meeting
was adjourned at 3:50 p.m. by Chair Neil.
Submitted
by Jan Lewis, UCC Secretary
University
Curriculum Committee (UCC)
B-104
Brewster
Minutes for Thursday,
January 24, 2008
The following Catalog revisions
were approved by the UCC:
RCLS: RECREATION AND LEISURE STUDIES
PAGE 269:
Recreation ManagementCommunity and Non-Profit
Recreation:
Cognates (22 s.h.)
ACCT 2101. Survey of Accounting (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066) or ACCT 2401. Financial Accounting
(3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066 or 2119 or 2121 or
2171)
FINA 2244. Legal Environment of Business (3)
(F,S,SS)
ITEC 3290. Technical Writing (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
MGMT 3202. Fundamentals of Management (3) (F,
S, SS) (P: ECON 2113 FC:SO)
RCLS 3104. Public and Non-Profit Recreation
(3) (F) (P: RCLS 2000 or consent of instructor; P/C: RCLS 3003, 3004)
RCLS 3300. Outdoor
Programming. (3) (S)
RCLS 4111. Design of Parks and Recreation
Facilities (4) (F) (P: Declared MRFS major or minor; RCLS 3003, 3004)
Restricted Electives (Choose 12 s.h.
from the following.):
HLTH 2125, 2126. Safety Education and First Aid (3)
(F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; C for 2125: HLTH 2126;
C for 2126: HLTH 2125)
RCLS 2400. Facilitation and Leadership of
Adventure-Based Programs (3) (F,S)
RCLS 2600. Outdoor Recreation Activities (3)
(F,S)
RCLS 2601. Leisure in Society (3) (F,S,SS)
RCLS 3120. Commercial Recreation and Tourism
(3) (S)
RCLS 3301. Recreational Interpretation of
Cultural and Natural Resources (3)
RCLS 3303. Wild Land Recreation Management (3)
(P: RCLS 2000 or consent of instructor)
RCLS 4121. Tourism Planning and Development
(3) (F) (P: RCLS 3120 or consent of instructor)
RCLS 5100. Aquatics Facilities Management (3)
RCLS 5101. Waterfront Facilities Operation (3)
Business administration minor
courses (ECON 2113 may count toward FC:SO requirement)
Exercise and sport science minor
courses (BIOL 1050, 1051, BIOL 2130, 2131 may count toward FC:SC
requirement)
Public
administration minor courses (POLS 2000, POLS 3252 may count toward FC:SO requirement)
ART: ART AND DESIGN
PAGE 323:
3975. African American Art (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) Same as ART 3975 (Non-Art Majors) P: ART 1906, 1907; or consent of the
instructor. Survey of African American art in
3980. Ceramic History of
3990. Art History and Its Methods
(3) (WI*) (F) Formerly ART 4980 Required of art history majors. P: ART 1906,
1907 or consent of instructor. Seminar in methodologies of
art history.
4900. Northern Renaissance Art
History (3) (WI*) P:
ART 1906, 1907; or consent of instructor. Northern European
painting, sculpture, and architecture from 1300-1600.
4910. Northern Baroque Art (3) (WI*)
P: ART 1906, 1907;
or consent of instructor. Painting, architecture, and sculpture in
4916. Art of
4920. Nineteenth-Century Art (3)
(WI*) (F) P: ART
1906, 1907; or consent of instructor. Neo-classicism,
romanticism, realism, impressionism, post-impressionism, and related trends of
nineteenth century.
4940. Survey
of Twentieth-Century Painting and SculptureModern
Art 1900-1950 (3) (WI*) (F) P: ART 1906, 1907; or consent of instructor. Art movements from first half
of twentieth-century, including Fauvism, Futurism, Dadism, and Surrealism.
4942. Survey of Twentieth-Century Modern Art:
1950 to the Present (3) (F) (FC:FA) Formerly ART 4990
Same as ART 4942 (Non-Art Majors) P: ART 1906, 2907; or consent of instructor. Art form second half of twentieth century.
4944. Studies in
Contemporary Art: Post 1960s Art (3) Formerly ART 5981 P: ART 1906, 1907 or
consent of instructor. A critical look at the art since the
1960s dealing with the political economy of representation.
4946 Studies in
Contemporary Art: Post 1980s Art (3) P: ART 1906, 1907 or consent
of instructor. A critical look at the art since the 1980s
that has been engaged in representing a political economy.
4948. Art of the
4950. Twentieth-Century Architecture
(3) P: ART 1906,
1907; or consent of instructor. Sources and developmentof contemporary architecture of the world.
4970. History of Nineteenth- and
Twentieth-Century Design (3) (S) Same as ART 4970 (Non-Art
Majors) P: ART 1906, 1907; or consent of
instructor. Major artists and movements in history of
textile, ceramic, metal, wood, and graphic design.
4990. Survey of
Contemporary Art: 1950 to the Present (3) (F) (FC:FA)
Same as ART 4990 (Non-Art Majors) P: Junior standing; ART 1906, 1907; or
consent of instructor. Art from second half of twentieth
century.
5900. Art of the P: ART 1906, 1907. Painting, sculpture, architecture, design, and
crafts in
5981. Studies in
Contemporary Art: (3) P: ART 1906, 1907. Selected
topics in art from 1945 to present.
ART: ART HISTORY COURSES FOR NON-ART
MAJORS
1906. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) Same as ART 1906 (Art; Art History) P: ART 1905 or 1910; or consent of
instructor. History of art from prehistoric times to
Renaissance.
1907. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) Same as ART 1907 (Art; Art History) P: ART 1905 or 1910; or consent of
instructor. History of art from Renaissance to modern times.
1910. Art Appreciation (2) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA) For General College student. P: Non-art major. Visual experience to enhance student’s understanding and enjoyment
of art.
2905. Masterpieces in the Visual
Arts and Literature (3) (FC:FA) For General College student. Not
open to those who have credit for ART 1907. P: Non-ART major. Comparative study of selected visual and literary works from the
Renaissance to modern times.
2906. West and Central African Art
(3) (S) (FC:FA) For General College student. Not open to those who
have credit for ART 3970 nor to art history minors. P:
Non-ART major. Art from west and central
3975. African American Art (3) (F,S) (FC:FA) Same as ART 3975 (Art History) P: ART 1906, 1907; or consent of the
instructor. Survey of African American art in
4942. Survey of Twentieth-Century Modern Art:
1950 to the Present (3) (F) (FC:FA) Formerly ART 4990
Same as ART 4942 (Art History) P: ART 1906, 2907; or consent of instructor. Art form second half of twentieth century.
4970. History of Nineteenth- and
Twentieth-Century Design (3) (S) Same as ART 4970 (Art
History) P: ART 1906, 1907; or consent of
instructor. Major artists and movements in history of
textile, ceramic, metal, wood, and graphic design.
4990. Survey of Contemporary Art: 1950 to the Present (3) (F)
(FC:FA) Same as ART 4990 (Art History) P: Junior standing; ART
1906, 1907; or consent of instructor. Art from second half of
twentieth century.
ENGL: ENGLISH
PAGE 126:
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
Bruce Southard, Chairperson, 2201
Bate Building
BA in English
Minimum degree requirement is 126
s.h. of credit as follows:
1. Foundations curriculum (See
Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree
Programs.).............................................................................................42
s.h.
2. Foreign language through level
1004........................................................................................12 s.h.
3. Core (exclusive of freshman
composition)..............................................................................12
s.h.
Shakespeare
Choose 3 s.h. from:
ENGL 4070. Shakespeare: The Histories (3)
(F-EY) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 4080. Shakespeare: The Comedies (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 4090. Shakespeare: The Tragedies (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL 1200)
Historical Survey I: Literature to 1700
Choose 3 s.h. from:
ENGL
3000. History of
British Literature to 1700 (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:HU) (P:
ENGL major, minor, or consent of dept; ENGL 1200)
ENGL
3600. Classics
from Homer to Dante (3) (WI) (F) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL
1200)
Historical Survey II: Literature after 1700
Choose 3 s.h. from:
ENGL 3010. History of British Literature, 1700
- 1900 (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL major, minor,
or consent of dept; ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3020. History of American Literature to
1900 (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL major, minor, or
consent of dept; ENGL 1200)
ENGL 4360. World Literature in English (3)
(WI) (S-EY) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL 1200)
Language Study–Creative Writing, Linguistics, Rhetoric and
Composition, or Technical and Professional Communication
Choose 3 s.h. from:
ENGL 2700. Introduction to Language Studies
(3) (F,S) (FC:HU) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 2710. English Grammar (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 2730. Functional Grammar (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 2740. Language in the
ENGL 2760. Afro-Caribbean
Language and Culture. (3) (S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3030. Introduction to Rhetorical Studies
(3) (WI) (S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3040. Introduction to Professional Writing
(3) (WI) (F) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL
3700. History of the English Language (3) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3720. Writing Systems of the World (3)
(F) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3730. The Structure of English: Phonology
and Morphology (3) (F) Formerly ENGL 5501 (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3740. The Structure of English: Syntax
and Semantics (3) (S) Formerly ENGL 5502 (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3750. Introductory Linguistics (3) (S)
(FC:HU) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL
3770. Language Universals (3) (WI) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL
3815. Introduction to Creative Writing (3) (F,S)
(P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3830. Introduction to Play Writing (3)
(F) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3835. Persuasive Writing (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3840. Introduction to Poetry Writing (3)
(F,S,SS) (P : ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3850. Introduction to Fiction Writing (3)
(F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3860. Introduction to Nonfiction Writing
(3) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3870. Introduction to Editing and
Abstracting (3) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 4730. Language and Society (3) (S) (P:
ENGL 1200)
ENGL 5500. Linguistic and Cultural History of
the English Language (3) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities
requirement.
4.
Electives........................................................................................................................................24 s.h.
Choose an additional 24 s.h. of ENGL electives 2000 or
above.
5. Senior writing portfolio.
6. Minor and general electives to
complete requirements for graduation.
English Minor
Required ENGL
courses (exclusive of freshman composition)....................................................24
s.h.
A minimum of 12
s.h. must be selected from courses numbered above 2899. CLAS 3460 may be
counted.
ENGL 2710 and 2730 may not be
counted. Students interested in minoring in English
should consult with the director of undergraduate studies in the department to
plan their minor programs.
Department Certificate
in Business and Technical Communication
For licensure, sStudents must register with the department and maintain a minimum average
of B.
1. Core
..................................................................................................................................................3 s.h.
ENGL 3880. Writing for Business and Industry
(3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
2. Electives....................................................................................................................Minimum
of 12 s.h.
COMM
2420. Business and Professional Communication (3) (F,S,SS)
(FC:FA)
ENGL 2710. English Grammar (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200) or ENGL 2730. Functional Grammar (3) (WI*)
(F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL
3030. Introduction to Rhetorical Studies (3) (WI) (S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL
3040. Introduction to Professional Writing (3) (WI) (F) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3810. Advanced Composition (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3820. Scientific Writing (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3835. Persuasive Writing (3) (WI) (S) (P:
ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3860. Introduction to Nonfiction Writing
(3) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3870. Introduction to Editing and
Abstracting (3) (F,S) (P: ENGL 1200)
ENGL 3885. Writing and Publications
Development/Process (3) (WI) (S) (P: Consent of instructor)
ENGL 3895. Topics in Technical and
Professional Writing (3) (WI) (S) (P: Consent of instructor)
ENGL 4890. Practicum: Careers in Writing (3)
(F,S,SS) (P: Consent of instructor) or ENGL 4891.
Practicum: Careers in Writing (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Consent
of instructor)
ENGL
5770. Advanced Editing (3) (P: ENGL 3870 or consent of instructor)
ENGL
5780. Advanced Writing for Business and Industry (3) (P: ENGL 3880 or
consent of instructor)
ENGL 5860. Advanced Nonfiction Writing (3) (P:
ENGL 3860 or consent of instructor)
With departmental approval, certain
other courses may be substituted.
PAGE
376:
ENGL: ENGLISH
2700. Introduction to Language
Studies (3) (F,S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis on origins of
language, historical development of English, acquisition of language,
relationship of meaning and language use, and role of linguistic diversity.
2710. English Grammar (3) (F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P:
ENGL 1200. Traditional grammar. Emphasis
on syntax, forms and usages, and punctuation.
2730. Functional Grammar (3) (WI*)
(F,S,SS) May not count toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement.
P: ENGL 1200. Practical English grammar. Emphasis on application, sentence patterns, and informational
writing.
2740. Language in the
2760. Afro-Caribbean Language and
Culture (3) (WI*) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Description and analysis of the languages
spoken by the descendents of Africans in the
2900. Introduction to Film Studies
(3) (F,S) (FC:HU) 3 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: 1000-level writing
intensive course or advanced placement or consent of instructor. Analyze and
critique films.
3000. History of British Literature
to 1700 (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL major, minor, or consent of dept;
ENGL 1200. British literary history to 1700.
3010. History of British Literature,
1700-1900 (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL major, minor, or consent of
dept; ENGL 1200. British literary history 1700 to 1900.
3020. History of American Literature
to 1900 (3) (WI) (F,S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL major, minor, or consent of
dept; ENGL 1200. American literature history to 1900.
3030. Introduction to Rhetorical
Studies (3) (WI) (S) P:
ENGL 1200. Introduces rhetoric, including classical and modern theories, and to
research and citation practices. Attention to practical application of rhetorical
principles in written texts of popular culture, mass media, and education.
3040. Introduction to Professional
Writing (3) (WI) (F) P:
ENGL 1200. Overview of professional writing principles,
current communication issues, research practices, and emerging technologies.
3230. Southern Literature (3) (WI*)
(F) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Survey of southern literature from Antebellum writers, through the Southern Renascence period,
to contemporary writers.
3240.
3250. Native American Literatures
(3) (WI*) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis
on twentieth century.
3260. BlackAfrican American Literature
in (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis
on twentieth century.
3270. The Frontier in American
Literature (3) (WI*) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Westward expansion in
3280. African Literature (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Overview of African literature in English from the twentieth and
twenty-first centuries.
3290. Asian American Literature (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Overview of Asian American literature from twentieth and
twenty-first centuries.
3300. Women and Literature (3) (WI*)
(F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Literature by and
about women.
3330. Early Twentieth-Century Drama
(3) (WI*) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Drama
from Ibsen to World War II. Selected plays of Ibsen,
Strindberg, Chekhov, Synge, Shaw, Pirandello, and O’Neill.
3340. Contemporary Drama (3) (WI*)
(F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Trends in dramatic
literature from World War II to present.
3410. Introduction to Poetry (3)
(WI*) (F) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Narration, description,
metrics, tone and attitude, imagery, and theme in poetry.
3420. The Short Story (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. History, development, and
analysis of short story.
3430. Mystery Fiction (3) (WI*)
(S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Development of detective,
crime, suspense, and espionage fiction during last century.
3450. Northern European Mythology
(3) (WI*) (F,S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major
myths of Norse and Celtic people and their impact on English and American
literature.
3460. Classical Mythology (3) (WI*)
(S) (FC:HU) Same as CLAS 3460 P: ENGL 1200. Major
myths of ancient
3470. Modern Fantasy (3) (WI*)
(S-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. History, development, types,
and nature of fantasy during past century.
3480. Science Fiction (3) (WI*) (F,S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Development of genre from
turn of century.
3490. Satire (3) (F) P: ENGL 1200. Representative works of literary satire.
3570. American Folklore (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Types of American folklore
with concentration on legends and tales.
3600. Classics from Homer to Dante
(3) (WI) (F) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Classical
and Medieval literature from Homer to Dante.
3610. Human Values in Literature (3)
(WI*) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Great works of literature that express enduring human values.
3630. The Bible as Literature (3)
(WI*) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Various literary
genres in the Bible.
3640. Literature and Religion (3)
(WI*) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Interrelationships
of literature and religion. Exemplary literary artists vary.
3660. Representing
Environmental Crisis (3) (F) P: ENGL 1200. Introduction to
discursive and narrative representations of environmental crisis in various texts.
3670. Narrating Food and
Environment (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Introduction
to literary narratives of the connection between nature, culture, and food
production.
3700. History of the English Language (3) P: ENGL 1200. Development of English language and culture; standardization;
colonial and post-colonial Englishes.
3710. Advanced English Grammar (3)
(S) May not count
toward foundations curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 2710 or
equivalent. Principles of modern linguistic theory presented and applied to contemporary
American English. Utilizes transformational-generative
grammar model. Emphasis on practical applications to
English language and literature.
3720. Writing Systems of the World
(3) (F) P: ENGL
1200. Writings systems and their relationship to language, literacy,
and multicultural communication.
3730. The Structure of English:
Phonology and Morphology (3) (F) Formerly ENGL 5501 May not count toward foundations
curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Contemporary
linguistic theory and its practical application to teaching phonological and
morphological components of English language.
3740. The Structure of English:
Syntax and Semantics (3) (S) Formerly ENGL 5502 May not count toward foundations
curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Contemporary
linguistic theory and its practical application to teaching syntactic and
semantic components of English language.
3750. Introductory Linguistics (3)
(S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Methods and techniques of
linguistic analysis. Sample problems on phonological,
morphological, syntactic, graphemic, and historic reconstruction
levels. Emphasis on non- Indo-European languages.
3760. Linguistic Theory for Speech
and Hearing Clinicians (3) (F,S) May not count toward foundations curriculum
humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Linguistic theory for
precise formalization of adult language systems on morphophonological,
syntactic, and semantic levels. Emphasis on practical applications
to clinical speech therapy.
3770. Language Universals (3) (WI) P: ENGL 1200. Analysis
of components of human language and how they are uniquely configured within the
human species, shaped by the brain and evolution.
PAGE 379:
4050. Prose and Poetry of the
English Renaissance (3) (WI) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Emphasis
on beginnings of forms and types.
4070. Shakespeare: The Histories (3)
(WI*) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and
critical study.
4080. Shakespeare: The Comedies (3)
(WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and critical
study.
4090. Shakespeare: The Tragedies (3)
(WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Close reading and critical
study.
4100. Seventeenth-Century Literature
(3) (WI) (F-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Prose
and poetry of seventeenth century
4120. Eighteenth-Century Literature
(3) (WI) (S-EY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Prose
and poetry of neo classic and pre-romantic periods in British literature.
4150. The Romantic Period (3) (WI)
(S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major poets.
4170. Victorian Literature (3) (WI)
(F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major writers.
4200. American Literature, 1820-1865
(3) (WI) (F-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major writers of Transcendental period. Poe, Emerson,
Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, and Whitman.
4230.
4250. American Literature, 1865-1920
(3) (WI) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Representative
writers of period between the Civil War and World War I. Twain,
4300. Recent British and American
Writers (3) (WI) (S) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Major
works and trends in literature since World War II.
4340. Ethnic American Literature (3)
(WI) (S-OY) (FC:HU) P: ENGL 1200. Examines
multicultural literature, including African American, Native American, Jewish
American, Hispanic American, and Asian American writers.
4360. World Literature in English
(3) (WI) (S-EY) (FC:HU) Formerly ENGL 3100 P: ENGL 1200. Examines literature
written in English worldwide, exclusive of the
4370. Literature and
Environment (3) (F) P: ENGL 1200. Survey of American and/or
British literary narratives focusing on the relationship between imagination
and nature.
4380. Studies in African-American and African
Diaspora Literatures (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Topics in African
American and African diaspora literatures from the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
4510, 4520. Directed
4530, 4540. Special Topics Seminars (3,3) (WI*) (F,S) P: Consent of instructor; ENGL 1200. Topics announced by
instructor at preregistration period.
4550, 4555. Senior Honors Seminar (3,3) (F,S) 2 3-hour units in succession, but no grade or credit is recorded
until the completion of the second 3-hour unit. P: ENGL 1200. Tutorially directed readings in selected area and research writing.
4710. Teaching English as a Second Language:
Theories and Principles (3) (F) Formerly ENGL 5503May not count toward foundations
curriculum humanities requirement. P: ENGL 1200. Current theories and
principles of teaching English to non-native speakers or speakers of
nonstandard dialects.
4720. Applied Linguistics for
Language Teachers (3) (S) Formerly ENGL 5504 May not count toward foundations curriculum
humanities requirement. P: ENGL 4710. Pedagogical application
of linguistic theory. Emphasis on teaching English as
a second language.
4730.
Language and Society (3) (S) P: ENGL 1200. Explores language in
relation to society.