English

ENG 1110: Literature and Faith (5)

Offerings

Examines the treatment of belief and disbelief in literature shaped by various Christian traditions and by a variety of social and literary contexts. Instructor may choose to focus on American, British, or contemporary literature.

Attributes: WK Humanities

ENG 1220: Film and Faith (5)

Offerings

Explores the issue of faith through the medium of film. Examines how belief and disbelief are expressed in culture through this dominant form of contemporary storytelling.

Attributes: WK Humanities

ENG 2215: Imaginative Writing (3)

Offerings

Fosters the vision and skills necessary for effective creative writing.

ENG 2221: Good Poems (5)

Offerings

Explores poetry of all kinds as a means of expressing what it means to be human including especially the capacity for love.

Attributes: WK Humanities

ENG 2223: Fantasy and Science Fiction (5)

Offerings

Explores how the literary genres of fantasy and/or science fiction re-conceive the concerns of the present using imaginary worlds of space and time. Themes may include nature, technology, war, utopia/dystopia, and the conflicts of moral duty.

Attributes: WK Humanities

ENG 2225: Literary Interpretation (5)

Offerings

Prepares students for majoring in English with university-level practice in literary interpretive strategies, including close attention to craft as well as writing and academic research. Recommended especially for freshmen and sophomore students.

Attributes: Writing "W" Course

ENG 2234: Literature by Women (5)

Offerings

A study of poems, stories, plays, and essays written in English by women. The course will include classic as well as rediscovered women writers, and will examine the significant themes, the literary forms, and the social contexts of literature written by women.

Attributes: WK Humanities

ENG 2248: International Fiction (5)

Offerings

Explores contemporary international literature written in English, with attention to the ways in which conditions of colonialism, migration, and globalization have re-shaped national identities and belonging.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, WK Humanities

ENG 2251: English Literature: Beginnings through Milton (5)

Offerings

Surveys the first three periods of English literary history: Old English, including the eighth-century Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf; Middle English, including Chaucer's Canterbury Tales; and English Renaissance, concluding with Milton's 17th-century Paradise Lost. Typically offered: Autumn.

ENG 2252: English Literature: Restoration through Victorian (5)

Offerings

Continues the survey of English literary history, from the Enlightenment through to the end of Victoria's reign. Authors include satirists such as Swift and Wilde, poets such as Pope and Wordsworth, novelists such as Austen and Dickens. Typically offered: Winter.

ENG 2253: American Literature: Beginnings to 1900 (5)

Offerings

Surveys major authors, themes, genres, and movements in American literature from the colonial era to the modern period, including intellectual and social contexts. Typically offered: Spring.

ENG 3000: Study Abroad Orientation (1-3)

Offerings

Orients students to the academic work and cultural landscape of the ensuing study abroad program. Addresses issues of cultural diversity and interpersonal behavior as well as practical matters such as finances, travel safety, and other appropriate topics. May be repeated for credit up to 12 credits.

Attributes: Upper-Division

ENG 3003: Literature and Medicine (5)

Offerings

A consideration of the role of the health care provider from a literary perspective. By reading, discussing, and writing about stories, novels, movies, and plays representing illness, suffering, and medical care, aspiring doctors and nurses will learn how to interact with patients with compassion, empathy, and humanity. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Ways of Engaging, Writing "W" Course

ENG 3004: Literature, Gender, and Sexuality (5)

Offerings

Explores diverse perspectives on gender and sexuality in literary texts, criticism, and theory. Typical topics include social constructions of masculinity and femininity (including methods of reinforcement and resistance); sexual identities; historically evolving conceptions of the body and desire; and representations of sex and gender in relation to various other identities, such as race, class, nationality, and religion.

Attributes: Upper-Division

ENG 3150: The Sentence (3)

Offerings

Treats the craft of writing sentences with clarity and grace. Less interested in grammar for its own sake, the course shows students how to deploy grammatical strategies for desired effect in writing. Shows students how to write with substance through style.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3180: Advanced Grammar (3)

Offerings

This basic grammar course brings insights from both traditional and generative-transformational approaches to explain how language works. The course also introduces students to parts of speech, phrases, and clauses, as well as to grammatical and mechanical rules for generating standard American English.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3205: Issues and Practices in Workplace Writing (3)

Offerings

Develops abilities associated with writing tasks in the professions, including reports, correspondence, proposals, and procedure manuals. Emphasizes role of persuasion in routine and special writing tasks. Also addresses visual design in the preparation of documents and the impact of digital technologies on writing in the professional workplace.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3209: Writing as Design: Introduction to UX Writing and Content Design (3)

Offerings

User Experience (UX) Writing involves the words used in a website, app, or other digital experience flow. The job of UX Writing is to make sure those words help make that experience simple, conversational, and easy to use. This course will use design thinking to guide you through solving complex UX issues using workshops, real-world examples, and creating your own unique UX writing flows. Typically offered: Winter.

Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Art for Social Change, Creative Writing, English, English Literature, English Professional Writing, Journalism, Visual Communication Majors, Minors, Concentrations only.

ENG 3301: Advanced Expository Writing (5)

Offerings

Moves students beyond the academic essay and shows them techniques for addressing an audience beyond the academy. Focuses on the exploratory, open-ended essay as a lens for examining topics chosen by students in consultation with the instructor. Typically offered: Spring.

Attributes: Advanced Academic Writing, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3302: Writing Across Cultures (3-5)

Offerings

Uses writing within specific cultural or ethnic contexts as a way to examine and explore those contexts, fostering understanding of cultural, racial, ethnic, or gender differences. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3310: Elements of Prosody (3)

Offerings

For English majors and others interested in exploring in greater depth the workings of poetry, with particular attention paid to the relationship between the elements that make up the poem (rhythm, structure, sound qualities, the "music" of the poem) and where those elements take us. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3311: Elements of Narrative (3)

Offerings

For English majors and others interested in exploring in greater depth the field of narrative studies, with particular attention paid to the relationship between the elements of storytelling, character, plot, time, setting, closure, etc., and their larger philosophical implications. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3316: Workshop in Writing Poetry (3)

Offerings

Refines skills and techniques necessary for the writing of formal styles of poetry (the sonnet, the sestina, etc.). Students examine the work of professional poets from the perspective of apprentices to the craft.

Attributes: Upper-Division

ENG 3317: Workshop in Writing Fiction (3)

Offerings

Refines skills and techniques necessary for the effective writing of short fiction. Students analyze the work of professional fiction writers from the perspective of apprentices to the craft.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: ENG 2215: C- or better

ENG 3318: Creative Nonfiction (3)

Offerings

Examines the literary essay, emphasizing contemporary authors such as Diane Ackerman, Annie Dillard, and Barry Lopez; "schools" such as the new journalists and the environmental essayists; and publications such as The New Yorker and The Atlantic. Special attention will be paid to students' development as writers of nonfiction. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3325: Film and Story (5)

Offerings

Examines the elements of film storytelling in the context of literary studies, including theme, character, genre, plot, setting, and point-of-view. Pays close attention to the technology and craft of film-making as a means of exploring film's unique aesthetic power. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3332: African American Literature (5)

Offerings

Introduces students to African American literature from the nineteenth century to the present. Topics include slavery and resistance, the Harlem Renaissance, the Black Arts movement, and black popular culture. We will read such authors as Harriet Jacobs, Lanston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, and Toni Morrison. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3334: United States Multi-Ethnic Literature (5)

Offerings

Textual and cultural study of U.S. multiethnic literatures, such as Indigenous/Native American, African American, Asian American, Jewish American, and Latinx literatures. Paying close attention to the dynamics of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, socioeconomic class, immigrant status, regional culture, and religion, this course invites students to develop more complex understandings of what it means to be “American.”

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, WK Humanities

ENG 3335: Celtic Literature and Culture (5)

Offerings

Investigates the literature and culture of Ireland and Scotland across genres, national borders, and time periods, considering key questions about the role that stories play in speaking truth to history, forging personal and national identity, and navigating faith in a context of war and peacemaking.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, WK Humanities, Writing "W" Course

ENG 3339: United States Latinx Literature (5)

Offerings

Introduces students to English-language literature written by North American Latinos and Latinas. Topics include the legacy of Spanish colonialism, the dissemination of Mexican, Cuban, Puetro Rican, and Dominican cultures, the development of "Spanglish," and the controversy over immigration and the border. We will read such authors as Rudolfo Anaya, Richard Rodriguez, Sandra Cisneros, Ana Castillo, Jimmy Santiago Baca, and Junot Diaz. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3345: Medieval English Literature (5)

Offerings

This course covers the Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Norman, and high-medieval periods of early English literature. It examines Old English heroic verse, the literature of chivalry and the courtly love tradition, and the accounts of medieval mystics such as Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3346: English Renaissance Literature (5)

Offerings

Considers the Golden Age of Elizabeth I and the revolutionary, adventurous days that followed, as seen through the works of Wyatt, Sidney, Raleigh, Shakespeare, Bacon, Milton, Donne, Herbert, and Marvell. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3347: Literature of Enlightenment and Revolution (5)

Offerings

Studies 18th and early 19th century literature in the context of the Age of Reason and Revolution. Focuses on emerging western thought about individualism, freedom, and gender, through the works of writers such as Defoe, Swift, Sterne, and Austen. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3348: Romantic Poetry and Fiction (5)

Offerings

Studies selected works of such British Romantic writers, including Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Keats, and the Shelleys. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Honors Course, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3351: Victorian Literature (5)

Offerings

Studies selected works from the age of Queen Victoria in Britain, including such authors as Dickens, the Brontes, G. Eliot, and Wilde. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3380: African Literature (5)

Offerings

Examines the work of a variety of authors from the continent of Africa in the light of colonialism and its aftermath. Focuses primarily on English-language writers such as Achebe, Coetzee, Dangarembga, Fugard, Gordimer, Adichie and Soyinka. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Honors Course, Upper-Division, Ways of Engaging, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3381: Middle-Eastern Literature (5)

Offerings

Examines the work of a variety of authors from the East/Middle East, especially stories of crossing between East and West. Particular attention will be paid to the concept of hybrid identities, exile, diaspora. Authors may include Ruffo, Mernissi, Hosseini, and Pamuk, as well as Arab-American short stories. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, Ways of Engaging, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3382: South Africa-Stages of Protest and Democracy (5)

Offerings

This study abroad course will analyze protest narratives, ranging from popular and award-winning works like J. M. Coetzee's Age of Iron and Trevor Noah's Born a Crime to performances of AIDS survivors and state narratives intended to avoid civil war and attempt transitional justice. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Equivalents: SJC 3382 Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Honors Course, Upper-Division, Ways of Engaging

ENG 3383: Arab Spring: Gender, Islam, Democracy (5)

Offerings

Considers how literature and electronic texts create venues for political and social change in the historical region bordered by Morocco and Spain. Explores how texts, ideas, media and people circulate and cross trans-national borders in a time of historic change. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Equivalents: SJC 3383 Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Honors Course, Upper-Division, Ways of Engaging, Writing "W" Course

ENG 3384: US Imperialism in Asia (& Pacific Islands) (5)

Offerings

This course examines the cultural history of US imperialism in Asia throughout the 20th century including but not limited to the Philippines, Hawai’i and Pacific Islands, Korea, and Viet Nam. In particular, we’ll highlight works by Asian American/Asian diasporic writers and artists as they negotiate these histories of domination and resistance and consider the legacies of empire for today. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Cultural Understand&Engagement, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3386: The Eternal City in Art and Literature (5)

Offerings

Invites students to explore the theme of "Art and Incarnation" through the intensive study of literary works set in Rome and produced by authors from the classic to the contemporary age. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Ways of Engaging, Writing "W" Course

ENG 3710: 19th Century American Literature (5)

Offerings

Examines major American authors, themes, and literary movements of the nineteenth century. Topics may include the American renaissance, transcendentalism, American realism, sentimentalism, regionalism, and the Civil War. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3715: 20th Century American Literature (5)

Offerings

Examines major American authors, themes, and literary movements of the twentieth century. Topics may include modernism, World War I, World War II, the Harlem renaissance, the Beat generation, Southern gothic, and Postmodernism. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 3840: Lewis and Tolkien (5)

Offerings

Studies the major literary works, themes, and ideas of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien in the context of their lives, faith, and friendships. Examines themes such as the use of myth to explore problems of modernity, the relationship between Christian faith and art, as well as the debates over "literary" vs. "popular" fiction. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4152: Modernist Literature (5)

Offerings

Studies the major authors and literary works of the early twentieth century modernist period. Authors may include T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf, or James Joyce. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Honors Course, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: ENG 2252: C- or better OR ENG 2253: C- or better

ENG 4162: Postmodern Literature (5)

Offerings

Studies the emerging authors and literary works of the contemporary postmodern period. Authors and works will vary. (See English department website for a detailed description of this year's course specifics.) Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Honors Course, Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: ENG 2252: C- or better OR ENG 2253: C- or better

ENG 4316: Advanced Poetry Writing (3)

Offerings

A writing workshop for experienced writers of poetry. Also addresses such topics as poetry magazines, small presses, agents and editors, the submission process, and current trends in publishing. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: ENG 3316: C- or better

ENG 4317: Advanced Fiction Writing (3)

Offerings

A writing workshop for experienced writers of fiction. Also addresses such topics as fiction magazines, publishing houses, agents and editors, the submission process, and current trends in publishing. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: ENG 3317: C- or better

ENG 4318: Advanced Creative Nonfiction (3)

Offerings

A writing workshop for experienced writers of creative nonfiction. Also addresses such topics as literary magazines, publishing houses, agents and editors, the submission process, and current trends in publishing. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: ENG 3318: C- or better

ENG 4440: Geoffrey Chaucer (5)

Offerings

An in-depth study of the major works of British writer Geoffrey Chaucer, the author of "Canterbury Tales".

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded. Prerequisites: ENG 2251: D or better

ENG 4442: John Milton (5)

Offerings

An in-depth study of the major works of British writer John Milton, the author of "Paradise Lost".

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded. Prerequisites: ENG 2251: D or better

ENG 4445: Shakespeare (5)

Offerings

Considers Shakespeare's comedies, histories, tragedies, and romances while studying his art and thought in relation to the Elizabethan background.

Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded. Prerequisites: ENG 2251: C- or better

ENG 4449: Jane Austen (5)

Offerings

An in-depth study of the major works of British novelist Jane Austen, the author of "Pride and Prejudice".

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded. Prerequisites: ENG 2252: D or better

ENG 4450: Emily Dickinson (5)

Offerings

An in-depth study of the major works of American poet Emily Dickinson.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded. Prerequisites: ENG 2253: D or better

ENG 4451: Toni Morrison (5)

Offerings

An in-depth study of the major works of African American novelist Toni Morrison, the author of Beloved. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4601: History of English (3)

Offerings

Examines Anglo Saxon, Middle, and Modern forms of English in historical development. Includes phonology, morphology, syntax, and some discussion of the relationship of each language stage to literary expression during its era. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Equivalents: LIN 4601 Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4685: Literary Theory (5)

Offerings

Studies the major issues and schools of literary theory in terms of their historical development. The course is especially appropriate for advanced majors or those who might be considering graduate studies. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: ENG 2225: C- or better

ENG 4701: Teaching Writing:Theory and Practice (5)

Offerings

Interrogates various writing pedagogies for (1) the assumptions each makes about what "good writing" is and (2) how these asumptions play out in the classroom. Recommended for prospective secondary teachers and prospective graduate students in various disciplines. Typically offered: Occasionally.

Attributes: Upper-Division Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4822: The Novel (5)

Offerings

Examines the novel form in its historical varieties and contexts, including a close attention to the relationship between theory, craft, and meaning. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4823: The Poem (5)

Offerings

Examines the poetic form in its historical varieties and contexts, including a close attention to the relationship between theory, craft and meaning. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4824: The Short Story (5)

Offerings

Examines the short story form in all its historical varieties and contexts, including a close attention to the central relationship between theory, craft and meaning. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4825: The Essay (5)

Offerings

Examines the essay form in all its historical varieties and contexts, including a close attention to the central relationship between theory, craft and meaning. Typically offered: Alternate Years.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Prerequisites: WRI 1100: C- or better OR Advanced Writing Eligible: Y or better OR HON 2000: C- or better

ENG 4899: Senior Capstone in English (5)

Offerings

In this required senior capstone course, students will delve into particular literary works, authors, or themes and write a substantial research paper. Faculty and texts will vary from seminar to seminar on a rotating basis. Students will also have an opportunity to reflect upon and evaluate their learning and experience as English majors. May be repeated for credit 1 time.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course Restrictions: English Majors only. Senior students only.

ENG 4900: Independent Study (1-5)

Offerings

Independent Study Typically offered: Occasionally. May be repeated for credit up to 15 credits.

Attributes: Upper-Division

ENG 4930: English Practicum (1-5)

Offerings

For advanced students who wish to assist as tutors, discussion leaders, and readers in lower-division English classes. May be repeated for credit up to 6 credits.

Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded.

ENG 4940: Coop Education: English Internship (1-5)

Offerings

Applies writing skills in varied employment settings; possibilities include public relations offices, newspapers, and other informational services. Students may suggest their own internships in consultation with the faculty supervisor as long as writing skills are used and other internship criteria are met. May be repeated for credit up to 6 credits.

Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded.

ENG 4941: Coop Education: English Internship (1-5)

Offerings

Applies writing skills in varied employment settings; possibilities include public relations offices, newspapers, and other informational services. Students may suggest their own internships in consultation with the faculty supervisor, as long as writing skills are used and other internship criteria are met. May be repeated for credit up to 6 credits.

Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: Freshman, Sophomore students are excluded.

ENG 4950: Special Topics (1-5)

Offerings

Topics will vary. May be repeated for credit up to 5 credits.

Attributes: Upper-Division, Writing "W" Course

ENG 4970: Independent Research in English (5)

Offerings

Under the direction of the English faculty, qualified students bound for postgraduate study will design and complete a senior project: either an article-length scholarly paper or a substantial creative writing project.

Attributes: Upper-Division Restrictions: English Majors only. Post-Baccalaureate, Senior students only.