2014-2015 Catalog FINAL VERSION - Closed for Revisions
English
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Michael Williams, Chair
Room 486, Collins Classroom Center
Phone: 715-346-4757
Email: m2willia@uwsp.edu
Web: www.uwsp.edu/english
This department is in the College of Letters and Science .
Faculty: D Arnold, M Balhorn, J Berry, M Bowman, C Brickner, WJ Coletta, P Dyjak, K Eiler, E Felt, P Gott, T Kuribayashi, D Kuzmanovic, W Lawlor, R Lorenz-Schumacher, W Mahon, J Marshall, L Morgan, T Nowak, S Pogell, D Roloff, L Schmeling, M Sievert, R Sirabian, J Snowbarger, M Steffes, R Stephens, C Williams, M Williams.
Definition: English is the study of literature, language, literary theory, rhetorical theory, and culture, with the simultaneous development of effective writing skills.
English Assessment/Placement Procedure
All entering freshmen take the freshman English entrance assessment that measures writing competence based on an essay composed at the university during orientation. If your performance on the writing assessment indicates superior writing ability, you may be exempt from ENGL 101 and placed in ENGL 150 . Successful completion of ENGL 150 then satisfies the freshman English requirement.
Notes for English:
- English majors (general and teacher certification) should take ENGL 201 as early as possible. In some cases ENGL 200 may substitute for ENGL 201 with permission of the department chair.
- Sophomores may take 300 level courses with approval of the department chair. English majors may take 200 level courses as second semester freshmen.
- ENGL 345 , ENGL 375 , and ENGL 381 count toward the English major/minor and the writing minor ONLY for those seeking teacher certification, or for those who need them as collateral requirements in other departments.
- ENGL 274 and ENGL 275 will count for the English major/minor for teacher certification ONLY if you need them as collateral requirements in another area such as elementary education.
English Honors
English Honors provides outstanding English majors the opportunity to demonstrate their ability to produce scholarly, creative, or pedagogical work comparable with that published in discipline-appropriate academic journals. To graduate with the designation “English Honors” you must:
- Have a 3.5 GPA in the English major.
- Complete the requirements for the English major including ENGL 496 - Senior Honors Project: Product (3 cr) and its prerequisite, ENGL 495 (3 cr pass/fail which do not count toward the major). This will satisfy the Capstone Experience (Honors) requirement.
Contact the English Department for application procedures and complete requirements for the two-semester honors project.
Notes for Teacher Certification:
- Because of enrollment limits in the teacher certification program, some qualified students may not be admitted to English Education courses.
- Before applying to the program, you must have completed 12 credits of English beyond freshman English and have at least a 3.00 GPA in those credits, including transfer credits.
- Admission will be determined by GPA in English, evaluation of a portfolio of writing, one brief letter of recommendation, and an interview (if possible). Admission decisions will be made before spring semester registration. See the English Department for further details.
- Also see information about the Professional Education Program and the secondary education curriculum for teacher certification in the Education section of this catalog.
English Education Methods Block
English education majors must take a spring block of classes (second semester junior year) preceding the fall block of English methods classes (first semester senior year).
- Spring block, 9 credits: ENGL 345 , ENGL 375 , ENGL 381 . There are no limits on number of credits you may take in addition to these.
- Fall block, 12 credits: ENGL 355 , ENGL 356 , ENGL 393 , ENGL 497 , and E ED 396 . We highly recommend that you take no more than 15 credits during this semester.
Note for Writing Minors:
A student may declare a Creative Writing Minor or a Professional Writing Minor, but not both. Neither Writing Minor is teacher certifiable, but a Writing Minor is generally favored by public school employers as a complement to the English Major.
English as a Second Language
For the ESL teacher certifiable minor, see the World Languages and Literatures section of this catalog. For intensive ESL courses for non-native speakers, see English as a Second Language Program following this section.
Academic Standards for English
- Anyone may declare a major/minor in English or a minor in writing, or English for elementary education. To be approved for graduation you need to have a cumulative grade point average of 2.00 (2.75 to student teach), including transfer credits, regardless of any declaration of academic bankruptcy.
- You must have department chair consent before you will be allowed to repeat grades of D in ENGL 101 , ENGL 202 , and ENGL 150 , as well as English courses numbered 200 and above in which you received passing grades.
- English courses are open, subject to availability, to students who are not declared majors or minors.
Credit-by-Exam Policy for English
If you wish to obtain credit-by-exam for any English general education course other than ENGL 101 , contact the English Department chair. The faculty member who most recently taught the course will confer with you regarding date, site, question format, exam length, materials allowable (or necessary) during the exam, etc.
The written comprehensive exam will be based on material normally covered in the course. The faculty member will administer the exam and notify you in writing of your score within two weeks of taking the exam. A passing score is a B- or better. You may not take an exam for credit more than once for the same course. A nominal fee may be charged for administrative purposes.
Medieval and Renaissance Studies Interdisciplinary Certificate
Mary Bowman, Coordinator
Room 433, Collins Classroom Center
Phone: 715-346-4338
Email: mbowman@uwsp.edu
English Latent Courses: Not offered recently. See full course description in indicated (xx-xx) catalog.
142 Basic English Grammar, 3 cr, (01-03)
170 Folklore, 1-3 cr, (97-99)
195 Freshman Seminar, 1 cr, (97-99)
251 Business Writing, 3 cr, (01-03)
281 African Literature, 3 cr,(07-09)
362 World Literature, 3 cr, (07-09)
364/564 Canadian Literature, 3 cr, (03-05)
390/590 Independent Reading 1 cr, (01-03)
397 Practicum, 1-3 cr, (03-05)
551 Advanced Business Writing, 3 cr, (07-09)
719 American Novel, 3 cr, (07-09)
745 Censorship, 3 cr, (07-09)
750 Writing Nonfiction, 3 cr,(07-09)
752 Workshop in Fiction, 3 cr, (07-09)
753 Workshop in Poetry, 3 cr, (07-09)
756 Measuring Growth in English, 3 cr, (07-09)
757 Writing Centers: Theory and Practice, 3 cr, (07-09)
762 Seminar in American Literature, 3 cr, (07-09)
772 Poetry: Forms, Functions, Meanings, 3 cr, (07-09)
781 Reading in the English Classroom, 3 cr, (07-09)
ProgramsMajorMinorCertificateCoursesEnglishPage: 1
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