Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
English Studies and Translation Studies at the University of Maribor Tirana, 21 January 2011 Tomaž Onič, Aleksandra Nuč
Advertisements

1 R-2 Report: Graduation A presentation to the Board of Education by Brad Stam, Chief Academic Officer Instructional Services Staff Research and Assessment.
Jeopardy Terms ITerms IITerms III Terms IV Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy Genres.
Four Year Planning Your Road Map to Graduation Gateway Middle School Class of 2018.
GRADE NINE COURSE SELECTION SESSION Choices for High School Students.
The Course Unit Curriculum in the English Department at Stetson An Introduction for Returning Students.
GENERAL EDUCATION ASSESSMENT Nathan Lindsay January 22-23,
Deana Holinka, MA, CRC, Administrative Coordinator,
Effective Fall  A major that reflects the interests and talents of our students and faculty  A major that reflects the state of our field.  A.
HOPKINS ACADEMIC OFFERINGS PLANNING YOUR CHILD’S PROGRAM.
CREATING A FOUR YEAR PLAN Office of First and Second Year Advising Rubango and Lennon.
B.A. (Hons.) in English Language & Literature Programme Structure Majors60 Units Major Required Courses:27 units (including Honours Project) Major Elective.
Five Options Requirements 19 Required core credits 7 Elective credits 26 or more total credits 5 Options.
Warm Up #12 Write a poem about something you have experienced recently.
Department of English & Foreign Languages B.A. in English CIP Code: Program Code: Program Quality Improvement Report
John Champe High School Department of English Course Selections
Your Virginia Tech English Degree Consists of 120 hours: Liberal Ed Requirements (roughly 36 hrs) Major Requirements (51-55 hrs) Free University Electives.
Warm Up #11 Write a short poem in which you use an example of metonymy or synecdoche.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study English and Creative Writing? At the heart of the English program is a passion for critically, creatively, and professionally.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Women’s & Gender Studies? A majority of occupations deal with women as clients, co- workers, students, making it important.
Some Areas of Literary Study 1.Postcolonial 2.National (Canadian, American, British, Russian) 3.Regional (Caribbean, African, commonwealth) 4.Classical.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Women’s & Gender Studies? A majority of occupations deal with women as clients, co- workers, students, making it important.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Mathematics? The B.S. in Mathematics program is a rigorous, but flexible program. All students enroll in the core of.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Mathematics? The B.S. in Mathematics program is a rigorous, but flexible program. All students enroll in the core of.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Interdisciplinary Studies? The Interdisciplinary Studies Program offers students degree programs which provide a broad.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Women’s & Gender Studies? A majority of occupations deal with women as clients, co- workers, students, making it important.
Parent Portal opens Wednesday, February 17. Parent Portal will remain open until Friday, March 4. Student schedules will not be available until late.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why Study Psychology? The Bachelor of Science in Applied Developmental Psychology prepares students for entry-level work and.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Music? We believe the study and enjoyment of music inspires students to be informed, responsible, and appreciative.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Women’s & Gender Studies? A majority of occupations deal with women as clients, co- workers, students, making it important.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why Study Psychology? The Bachelor of Arts in psychology prepares students to pursue a wide variety of occupations as well as.
Department of History Portfolio Review Stage II. History at Sussex Our History Asa Briggs and Social History Peter Burke and Cultural History “A New Map.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Communication? Effective communication not only underpins aspects of your professional and personal life, but is also.
Major Academic Plan (MAP) Why study Biology? A BS in Biology is a gateway to many careers including professional health sciences, natural resource sciences,
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
New Graduation Requirements
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
ASL/Eng Interpreting Program
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Advanced Placement Literature and Composition
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Signed paper version skyward
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Major Academic Plan (MAP)
Presentation transcript:

Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013

A Little History…. O The old major (last year, 2006–07) O A traditional, historically grounded major O Requirements: O 11 courses O ENGL 67, Literary Interpretation [1 course] O Historical distribution [5 courses] O Two pre-1700 courses O Two courses, 1700–1900 O One course, 1900–present O Three free electives (at least two, 100–199) [3 courses] O Senior seminar (ENGL 170) [1 course] O Senior exercise: second senior seminar or senior thesis [1 course]

A Lot Less History…. O The new major (last year, 2010–11) O An open, student-directed major O Requirements: O 11 courses O ENGL 67, Literary Interpretation [1 course] O An eight-course path, selected and proposed by the student O Ex.: Poetry and Poetics; High & Low Genres; Remaking Myths; Writing the World O Senior seminar (ENGL 170) [1 course] O Senior exercise: second senior seminar or senior thesis [1 course]

Technical Difficulties O The new major was a creative idea; in practice, it was … sort of a nightmare O A late-declaring major might have 6, 7, 8 English courses already on her transcript. Did they really fall on a thought- out path? O A good (early) plan required very good information about upcoming course offerings … but life happens (study abroad; faculty leaves; etc.) O Different faculty members had differing notions of just how broad or narrow a path could/should be. O I used to tell my advisees: A path is not a plot [of ground]. O Are we comfortable graduating an English major who has never studied literature before the twentieth century, or after the Glorious Revolution, or has never studied poetry?

The New Major, v. 2.0 (2011–13) O Think, the new majorwith no path, no map. O Requirements: O 11 courses O ENGL 67, Literary Interpretation [1 course] O Eight free electives (free means free) [8 courses] O Senior exercise: Senior seminar + senior thesis, or two senior seminars [2 courses]

Philosophical Difficulties O In the words of one English department faculty member: Weve abdicated our responsibility to our students. O If we have one obligation to our majors, its not uniformity of experience, but diversity. O And diversity has more than one dimension: its not just historical O There are, ultimately, a handful of experiences that we want our graduating seniors to have, questions we want them to have wrestled with.

The New, New Major (anticipated, Fall 2013) O Twelve courses (up from eleven) O Seven categories of experience O I.Methods of Literary Study O II.Historical Breadth Requirement O III.Genre Requirement O IV.Single-Author Study O V.Interpretive Lenses O VI.Senior Seminar O VII.Senior Exercise O VIII.Electives

I. Methods of Literary Study O Two courses: O ENGL 67, Literary Interpretation O Prerequisite for ENGL 170 & ENGL 191 O One course designated theory-intensive (Th) O Pre- or co-requisite for ENGL 191

A Word about Designations O Starting in Fall 2013, each course in the English listing in the catalog will carry a designation(s) indicating which requirement(s) it can satisfy. O Most courses will carry multiple designations; one course can be used to satisfy, at most, two requirements. O Example: ENGL 161, James Joyce (Sa, H5, Pr) O Sa=Single-author; H5=Historical period 5; Pr=Prose

II. Historical Breadth Requirement O Courses in four of the following five periods: O Medieval (H1) O Renaissance/Early Modern (H2) O 18 th Century (H3) O 19 th Century (H4) O 20 th -21 st Century (H5)

III. Genre Requirement O One course focused on the study of poetry (Po) O One course focused on the study of prose (Pr)

IV. Single-Author Study O One course focusing on the study of an individual author (Sa)

V. Interpretive Lenses O Courses in two of the following three areas: O Race & Class (RC) O Gender & Sexuality (GS) O Diaspora & Geopolitics (DG)

VI. Senior Seminar O ENGL 170 O Unchanged from the current requirement

VII. Senior Exercise O Seminar Option: O A second ENGL 170 O ENGL 190, Senior Exercise/Seminar Option O Unchanged from current major O Thesis Option: O ENGL [195], Literary Interpretation: Advanced Methods New course O ENGL 191, Senior Thesis (2 semesters, 1 credit)

VIII. Electives O Seminar Option: 0–5 O Thesis Option: 0–4

Sample Program of Study O ENGL 67, 1 credit O ENGL 126, California Poetry (Po; H5), 1 credit O ENGL 140, Literature of Incarceration (RC), 1 credit O ENGL 134, Women Medieval Authors (GS, H1), 1 credit O ENGL 145, Gothic Tradition (H3, Pr), 1 credit O ENGL 141, Shakespearean Drama (H2, Sa), 1 credit O ENGL 170L, Genre Theory (Th), 1 credit O Seminar Option Thesis Option O ENGL 170I, Tragedy & Phil., 1 credit ENGL [195], Lit. Interp.: Adv., 1 cr. O ENGL 190, Senior Ex./Seminar, n.c. ENGL 191, Senior Ex./Thesis, 1 cr. O Free electives, 4 credits Free electives, 3 credits