Sheri Reynolds, Chair Issues) English

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The Nature of ScienceImpact of Technology ***Human BehaviorEnglishWeb Site: http://odu.edu/englishdept (http://odu.edu/englishdept/)*Sheri Reynolds, Department Chairsreynold@odu.edu**Kristi Costello, Associate Chair of Writing Studies (general education)kcostell@odu.eduDaniel Richards, Associate Chair (assessment & graduate programs)dprichar@odu.edu***CORE COURSES (12 Hours)ENGL 307TDigital WritingThe Bachelor of Arts in English requires a minimum of 39 hours inEnglish, in addition to English courses taken to satisfy General Educationrequirements: ENGL 110C, ENGL 211C or ENGL 221C or ENGL 231C,and ENGL 112L or ENGL 114L.Upon completion of ENGL 110C, intended majors should apply to the chiefdepartmental advisor for English to declare the major. Once admitted tothe program, students take four courses in the core, two literature electives,one open English elective, and six courses in the concentration. Theconcentration is one of six areas of emphasis (applied language studies,creative writing, journalism, literature, technical writing, teaching) withinthe overall Bachelor of Arts program and allows the student to pursue thatarea in depth. The applied language studies concentration is available bothonline and face-to-face. Because requirements sometimes change, studentsshould consult the latest course requirement lists available in the departmentoffice. All majors must take an English writing-intensive (W) course andmaintain a grade point average of 2.0 in the major to graduate (2.75 in theteaching concentration).The department offers graduate degrees in applied linguistics, creativewriting, and English. Please refer to the Graduate Catalog for moreinformation.Bachelor of Arts—English MajorHeather Weddington, Chief Departmental AdvisorFour-Year Plan - English - BA sletters/english/english-bafouryearplan/) The four-year plan is a suggested curriculum to complete this degreeprogram in four years. It is just one of several plans that will work andis presented only as broad guidance to students. Each student is stronglyencouraged to develop a customized plan in consultation with theiracademic advisor. Additional information can also be found in DegreeWorks.Lower-Division General Education1EnglishGrade of C or better required in both courses and inENGL 110C before declaring major.BA students must have competence through the 202 level;competence is not met by completion of the associatedegree.English majors satisfy the requirement with ENGL 307T.English Major RequirementsHeather Weddington, Chief Departmental Advisorhwedding@odu.eduWritten Communication *Oral CommunicationSelect one of the following:COMM 101RPublic SpeakingCOMM 103RVoice and DictionCOMM 112RIntroduction to Interpersonal CommunicationDANC 152RActing Oneor THEA 152R Acting OneMathematicsLanguage and Culture **Information Literacy and ResearchHuman CreativityInterpreting the PastLiteraturePhilosophy and Ethics80-336330-1233333Theory & AnalyticsSelect two:ENGL 325Introduction to Rhetorical StudiesENGL 333Introduction to Critical TheoryENGL 370English LinguisticsWriting*Select one:ENGL 300WENGL 327WENGL 334WENGL 427W363Introduction to Creative WritingAdvanced CompositionTechnical WritingWriting in the DisciplinesRequired Literature and Cultural Studies Electives (6 hours)Select two:ENGL 301Introduction to British Literature IENGL 302Introduction to British Literature IIENGL 303Shakespeare's Histories and ComediesENGL 304Shakespeare's Tragedies and PoetryENGL 336The Short StoryENGL 340American DramaENGL 342Southern LiteratureENGL 345American Literature to 1860ENGL 346American Literature Since 1860ENGL 360World Literature IENGL 363World Literature IIENGL 407Chaucer's Canterbury TalesENGL 416English Renaissance DramaENGL 418WJewish WritersENGL 419The Harlem RenaissanceENGL 421British Literature 1660-1800ENGL 423The Romantic Movement in BritainENGL 432Origins and Early Development of the BritishNovel to 1800ENGL 433Victorian LiteratureENGL 438The Twentieth-Century British NovelENGL 441American Travel LiteratureENGL 447The American Novel to 1920ENGL 448The American Novel 1920 to PresentENGL 459WNew Literatures in EnglishENGL 461Poetry of the Early Twentieth CenturyENGL 463WWomen WritersENGL 464WNative American LiteratureENGL 465WAfrican American LiteratureENGL 466WAsian American LiteratureENGL 492Modern World DramaENGL 493Contemporary World LiteratureOpen English Elective6

Select one additional English 300- or 400- level courseTotal Hours*321Grade of C or better requiredENGL 381ENGL 382Concentration Courses (18 hours)Select one of the following options:ENGL 383ENGL 384ENGL 385Applied Language StudiesThis concentration is available both online and face-to-face.ENGL 350Aspects of the English LanguageENGL 371WCommunication Across CulturesSelect three of the following:ENGL 390TESL Methods, Materials, & AssessmentENGL 440General LinguisticsENGL 442English GrammarENGL 443Southern and African American EnglishENGL 444History of the English LanguageENGL 445Forensic LinguisticsENGL 450American EnglishENGL 477Language, Gender and PowerENGL 495Topics in English (linguistics-relatedindependent study)Select one additional course from the list above or selectone approved elective at the 300 or 400 level; for example,Anthropology, World Languages (not World Cultural Studies).Total Hours339Public RelationsReporting News for Television and DigitalMediaDigital JournalismBusiness and Science JournalismThe Press and Making of AmericanDemocracyTV News ProductionCreative NonfictionSports JournalismEditorial and Persuasive Writing18Literature (special requirements for the major)3Note: Applied Language Studies concentration students must takeENGL 370 in the Theory & Analytics portion of the core.Creative WritingTotal HoursENGL 387ENGL 454ENGL 482ENGL 485W6Total Hours18ENGL 300WIntroduction to Creative WritingSelect two of the following:ENGL 449Craft of Literary NonfictionENGL 456The Craft of FictionENGL 457The Craft of PoetrySelect two of the following:ENGL 351Fiction WorkshopENGL 352Poetry WorkshopENGL 451Advanced Fiction WorkshopENGL 452Advanced Poetry WorkshopENGL 454Creative NonfictionSelect one W literature course not taken as literature elective for themajor:ENGL 418WJewish WritersENGL 459WNew Literatures in EnglishENGL 463WWomen WritersENGL 464WNative American LiteratureENGL 465WAfrican American LiteratureENGL 466WAsian American LiteratureSelect two of the following:ENGL 335Editing and Document DesignENGL 368Writing Internship366318Note: If ENGL 300W is taken in the core, an additional creative writing craftor workshop course will be required to meet the concentration requirementof six courses.Select one not taken to fulfill the literature elective for the major:ENGL 301Introduction to British Literature IENGL 302Introduction to British Literature IISelect one not taken to fulfill the literature elective for the major:ENGL 340American DramaENGL 342Southern LiteratureENGL 345American Literature to 1860ENGL 346American Literature Since 1860Select one at the 400 level in British literature from the following, ora class approved by the literature concentration coordinator:ENGL 407Chaucer's Canterbury TalesENGL 416English Renaissance DramaENGL 421British Literature 1660-1800ENGL 423The Romantic Movement in BritainENGL 432Origins and Early Development of the BritishNovel to 1800ENGL 433Victorian LiteratureENGL 438The Twentieth-Century British NovelSelect one at the 400 level in American literature from thefollowing, or a class approved by the literature concentrationcoordinator:ENGL 419The Harlem RenaissanceENGL 441American Travel LiteratureENGL 447The American Novel to 1920ENGL 448The American Novel 1920 to PresentSelect one focus class from the following:ENGL 418WJewish WritersENGL 459WNew Literatures in EnglishENGL 463WWomen WritersENGL 464WNative American LiteratureENGL 465WAfrican American LiteratureENGL 466WAsian American LiteratureSelect one additional 400-level literature elective.Total Hours33333318Notes:1. Literature concentration students must take ENGL 333 in the Theory &Analytics portion of the core.JournalismENGL 380ENGL 483WENGL 484ENGL 486Reporting and News Writing IReporting and News Writing IIFeature Story WritingMedia Law and Ethics33332. Literature concentration students must take one British literature classfrom ENGL 301 or ENGL 302 and one American literature coursefrom ENGL 340, ENGL 342, ENGL 345, or ENGL 346 to fulfill theLiterature and Cultural Studies elective for the major.English2

3. Literature concentration students must take a Shakespeare course,ENGL 303 or ENGL 304, as one of their electives for the major.academic advisor. Additional information can also be found in DegreeWorks.Technical WritingENGL 334WTechnical WritingENGL 435WManagement WritingSelect four of the following not taken in the core:ENGL 327WAdvanced CompositionENGL 354Client-Based Research WritingENGL 368Writing InternshipENGL 381Public RelationsENGL 427WWriting in the DisciplinesENGL 436Writing for the GovernmentENGL 439Writing in Digital SpacesENGL 468Advanced Writing InternshipENGL 495Topics in English *3312Total Hours18*The program combines the usual requirements of a college major andminor. Students take courses in the English department (ENGL) of theCollege of Arts and Letters and the Teaching and Learning department andCommunication Disorders and Special Education department of the DardenCollege of Education and Professional Studies. Students receive a Bachelorof Arts in English.AdmissionWhen the topic is relevant to technical writing andapproved by the chief departmental advisor.Note: Technical Writing concentration students must take ENGL 325 in theTheory & Analytics portion of the core.Elective CreditElective credit will be needed to meet the minimum requirement of 120credit hours.Teaching(See below, Bachelor of Arts—English Major with Teaching Licensure inEnglish)Upper-Division General Education Option A. Approved Minor, 12-24 hours; also second degree or secondmajor Option B. Interdisciplinary Minor, 12 hours specified by the department,3 of which may be in the major area of study Option C. An approved certification program such as teaching licensure Option D. Two Upper-Division Courses from outside the College ofArts and Letters or from the Social Science Component within theCollege of Arts and Letters that are not required by the major (6 hours).Requirements for GraduationRequirements for graduation include a minimum cumulative grade pointaverage of 2.00 overall and in the major, 120 credit hours, which mustinclude both a minimum of 30 credit hours overall and 12 credit hours ofupper-level courses in the major program from Old Dominion University,completion of ENGL 110C, ENGL 211C or ENGL 221C or ENGL 231C,and the writing intensive (W) course in the major with a grade of C or better,and completion of Senior Assessment.Bachelor of Arts—English Major withTeaching Licensure in EnglishFour-Year Plan - English - Teaching Licensure- BA earplan/) The four-year plan is a suggested curriculum to complete this degreeprogram in four years. It is just one of several plans that will work andis presented only as broad guidance to students. Each student is stronglyencouraged to develop a customized plan in consultation with their3EnglishThis program leads to eligibility for teacher licensure in Virginia. Licensurein English prepares students for a full range of secondary school teachingassignments. The program is accredited by the State of Virginia; in addition,Virginia has licensure reciprocity agreements with thirty other states, shouldthe student leave Virginia.All students must apply for and be admitted into the approved Englishteacher preparation program. Students must meet the required criteria foradmission by earning the minimum required grade point averages (GPA).Prescribed Virginia Board of Education Assessment forAdmission to an Approved Teacher Education ProgramFor the most current information on the prescribed Virginia Board ofEducation admission assessment, visit the Office of Clinical Experienceswebsite, http://www.odu.edu/oce (http://www.odu.edu/tes/) and review theProfessional Education Handbook.Required grade point averages (GPA): A cumulative GPA of 2.75 is required. A major/content GPA of 2.75 is required – all upper-division Englishcourses must be passed with a grade of C- or higher. Lower-division andEnglish W courses must be passed with a grade of C or higher. A professional education GPA of 2.75 is required – all professionaleducation courses must be passed with a grade of C- or higher.Although students may enroll in a limited number of education courses,students must be admitted into the approved English teacher preparationprogram prior to enrolling in any instructional strategies practicum educationcourse. Students must also meet with an education advisor in the Careerand Advising Resource Center in the Darden College of Education andProfessional Studies (1107 Education Building).ContinuanceStudents must maintain a cumulative GPA of 2.75, a major/content GPAof 2.75 and a professional education GPA of 2.75. All upper-divisionEnglish courses must be passed with a grade of C- or higher. The remainingcourses required for the major and in the professional education coremust be completed with a grade of C- or higher. A professional educationGPA of 2.75 is required for continuance. Students must take and passthe Virginia Communication and Literacy Assessment (VCLA) and thePraxis Subject Assessment, English Language Arts content knowledge(formerly Praxis II) prior to or while enrolled in the instructional strategiescourse. All assessments must be passed prior to the start of the TeacherCandidate Internship Orientation session. Students are encouraged toobtain information regarding the recommended timeline to complete therequired assessments from the Office of Clinical Experiences website atwww.odu.edu/oce.Background Clearance RequirementOld Dominion University requires a background clearance check ofcandidates interested in many of the professional education programs.Professional education programs have several field experiences that arerequired for continuance and graduation from the program. The backgroundclearance must be successfully completed prior to a field experienceplacement. Candidates will be provided a field experience placementwhen the background check process is completed with resolution of anyissues. The process to complete the ODU clearance background checkis located at: ion/

placement/background-checks tion/placement/background-checks/). The ODU clearanceprocess includes: an FBI fingerprint, a child protective service/social servicereview, and a Virginia State Police sex offender registry review. Candidatesinterested in the professional education programs are advised to completethis clearance process immediately upon entry into the program since theclearance process takes a minimum of eight weeks to complete.Virginia Board of Education Prescribed Assessments forLicensure Virginia Communication and Literacy Assessment (VCLA) – apassing composite score of 470 is required on this reading and writingassessment. Praxis Subject Assessment, English Language Arts content knowledge(test code #5038)--passing score of 167 required.To review more information on the Virginia Board of Education prescribedassessments, visit the Office of Clinical Experiences website, www.odu.edu/oce (http://www.odu.edu/tes/).GraduationRequirements for graduation include completion of ENGL 110C,ENGL 211C or ENGL 221C or ENGL 231C, and the writing intensive (W)course in the major with a grade of C or better; completion of the SeniorAssessment; a minimum cumulative 2.75 GPA in the major area and in theprofessional education core with no grade less than a C- in the major/contentand the professional education core; successful completion of the TeacherCandidate Internship, and between 120-132 credit hours, which must includeboth a minimum of 30 credit hours overall and 12 credit hours of upper-levelcourses in the major program from Old Dominion University.Due to changing University requirements, national accreditation standards,and the Virginia Board of Education licensure regulations, the teachereducation programs in the College of Arts and Letters are under constantrevision. Any changes resulting from these factors supersede the programrequirements described in this Catalog. Students are encouraged to obtaincurrent program information from their advisors and from the Office ofClinical Experiences website at www.odu.edu/oce (http://www.odu.edu/tes/).Teaching Concentration Required Courses (18 hours):ENGL 302Introduction to British Literature IIENGL 345American Literature to 1860ENGL 346American Literature Since 1860ENGL 350Aspects of the English LanguageENGL 406The Teaching of LiteratureENGL 455The Teaching of Composition, Grades 6-12Professional Education Courses (33 hours)TLED 301Foundations and Introduction to Assessmentof EducationTLED 360Classroom Management and DisciplineTLED 408Reading and Writing in Content AreasTLED 430WPK-12 Instructional TechnologyTLED 451Developing Instructional Strategies forTeaching in the Middle/High School: EnglishTLED 483Seminar in Teacher EducationTLED 485Teacher Candidate InternshipSPED 313Fundamentals of Human Growth andDevelopment: Birth through AdolescenceSPED 406Students with Diverse Learning Needs in theGeneral Education ClassroomTotal Hours333333323331123372*Grade of C or better requiredSatisfied through professional education sequence.Bachelor of Science Degree inInterdisciplinary Studies - ProfessionalWriting MajorPlease refer to the Interdisciplinary Studies section of this Catalog forinformation on the IDS professional writing program.Lower-Division General EducationProfessional Writing CertificateSee list under Bachelor of Arts in English above.This certificate requires 12 hours of profesional writing courses from thefollowing courses:Major RequirementsRequired Literature Electives (9 hours)Select one of the following:ENGL 301Introduction to British Literature IENGL 303Shakespeare's Histories and ComediesENGL 304Shakespeare's Tragedies and PoetrySelect one of the following:ENGL 360World Literature IENGL 363World Literature IIENGL 493Contemporary World LiteratureSelect one of the following:ENGL 418WJewish WritersENGL 459WNew Literatures in EnglishENGL 463WWomen WritersNative American LiteratureAfrican American LiteratureAsian American LiteratureUpper-Division General EducationCourse requirements are as follows:CORE COURSES (12 hours)ENGL 307TDigital WritingENGL 327WAdvanced Composition *ENGL 333Introduction to Critical TheorySelect one of the following:ENGL 325Introduction to Rhetorical StudiesENGL 370English LinguisticsENGL 464WENGL 465WENGL 466W3333333Select four of the following:ENGL/IDS 307T Digital WritingENGL 325Introduction to Rhetorical StudiesENGL 327WAdvanced CompositionENGL 334WTechnical WritingENGL 354Client-Based Research WritingENGL 368Writing InternshipENGL 381Public RelationsENGL 427WWriting in the DisciplinesENGL 435WManagement WritingENGL 436Writing for the GovernmentENGL 439Writing in Digital SpacesENGL 468Advanced Writing InternshipENGL 473Writing with Video12Total Hours12For completion of the certificate, students must have a minimum cumulativegrade point average of 2.00 in all courses specified as a requirement forthe certificate and complete a minimum of six hours in upper-level coursesrequired for the certificate through courses offered by Old DominionEnglish4

University. To apply for the certificate, contact the coordinator of technicalwriting.ENGL 380ENGL 381ENGL 382Teaching English as a Second Language(TESL) CertificateENGL 383ENGL 384ENGL 385The Teaching English as a Second Language (TESL) certificateprovides candidates with specialized knowledge of English languagefundamentals and emphasizes the relationship between language andculture, communication across cultures, and how to approach the teachingand assessment of English as a second language (ESL). It is designed forcandidates who are pursuing or who hold a teaching license and wish toprepare for adding an ESL endorsement to it or who wish to teach Englishabroad, work for private businesses and schools, or teach ESL to immigrantpopulations in the USA. In such contexts, candidates will benefit from asolid knowledge of language fundamentals coupled with cross-culturalcommunication and practical pedagogical training.ENGL 454ENGL 482ENGL 483WENGL 484ENGL 485WENGL 486The TESL certificate is available to undergraduate students and non-degreeseeking professionals who meet the requirements. It can be completed in twomodalities: online and face-to-face.This certificate requires 12 credit hours of coursework from the followingcourses:ENGL 350or ENGL 442ENGL 370or ENGL 440ENGL 371WENGL 390Aspects of the English LanguageEnglish GrammarEnglish LinguisticsGeneral LinguisticsCommunication Across CulturesTESL Methods, Materials, & AssessmentTotal Hours333312For completion of the certificate, students must have a minimum cumulativegrade point average of 2.00 in all courses specified as a requirement forthe certificate and complete a minimum of six hours in upper-level coursesrequired for the certificate through courses offered by Old DominionUniversity.Course requirements are as follows.To apply for the certificate, contact the coordinator of Applied LanguageStudies.Minor in EnglishThe English minor consists of 15 hours of 300- and 400-level courses,three hours of which must be at the 400 level. A general minor and fiveminors in concentration areas are offered, with the general minor and someconcentrations also available online. Regardless of emphasis or deliverymethod, the curriculum is still called a minor in English.English: 15 hours selected from 300 and 400-level Englishcourses.Creative Writing: 15 hours selected from the following:ENGL 300WIntroduction to Creative WritingENGL 351Fiction WorkshopENGL 352Poetry WorkshopENGL 449Craft of Literary NonfictionENGL 451Advanced Fiction WorkshopENGL 452Advanced Poetry WorkshopENGL 454Creative NonfictionENGL 456The Craft of FictionENGL 457The Craft of Poetry15Total Hours15Journalism: 15 hours selected from the following:ENGL 335Editing and Document DesignENGL 368Writing Internship155EnglishReporting and News Writing IPublic RelationsReporting News for Television and DigitalMediaDigital JournalismBusiness and Science JournalismThe Press and Making of AmericanDemocracyCreative NonfictionSports JournalismReporting and News Writing IIFeature Story WritingEditorial and Persuasive WritingMedia Law and EthicsTotal Hours15Applied Language Studies: 15 hours selected from the following:ENGL 350Aspects of the English LanguageENGL 370English LinguisticsENGL 371WCommunication Across CulturesENGL 390TESL Methods, Materials, & AssessmentENGL 440General LinguisticsENGL 442English GrammarENGL 443Southern and African American EnglishENGL 444History of the English LanguageENGL 445Forensic LinguisticsENGL 450American EnglishENGL 477Language, Gender and Power15Total Hours15Literature: 15 hours selected from the following:ENGL 301Introduction to British Literature IENGL 302Introduction to British Literature IIENGL 303Shakespeare's Histories and ComediesENGL 304Shakespeare's Tragedies and PoetryENGL 333Introduction to Critical TheoryENGL 336The Short StoryENGL 340American DramaENGL 342Southern LiteratureENGL 345American Literature to 1860ENGL 346American Literature Since 1860ENGL 349The Contemporary American NovelENGL 360World Literature IENGL 363World Literature IIENGL 407Chaucer's Canterbury TalesENGL 416English Renaissance DramaENGL 418WJewish WritersENGL 421British Literature 1660-1800ENGL 423The Romantic Movement in BritainENGL 432Origins and Early Development of the BritishNovel to 1800ENGL 433Victorian LiteratureENGL 438The Twentieth-Century British NovelENGL 447The American Novel to 1920ENGL 448The American Novel 1920 to PresentENGL 459WNew Literatures in EnglishENGL 461Poetry of the Early Twentieth CenturyENGL 463WWomen WritersENGL 465WAfrican American LiteratureENGL 466WAsian American Literature15

ENGL 492ENGL 493Modern World DramaContemporary World LiteratureTotal Hours15Technical Writing: 15 hours selected from the following:ENGL 307TDigital WritingENGL 325Introduction to Rhetorical StudiesENGL 327WAdvanced CompositionENGL 334WTechnical WritingENGL 354Client-Based Research WritingENGL 368Writing InternshipENGL 381Public RelationsENGL 427WWriting in the DisciplinesENGL 435WManagement WritingENGL 436Writing for the GovernmentENGL 439Writing in Digital SpacesENGL 473Writing with VideoENGL 484Feature Story Writing15Total Hours152. Draft a schedule of graduate courses to be taken as an undergraduate,which will be placed in the student's undergraduate and graduateadvising files.3. Apply to the Office of Graduate Admissions for admission to the MA inapplied linguistics program during their senior year.Students will be admitted to the linked program for the semester after theymake their application. Once students have been awarded their B.A. degreesand have fulfilled all regular admission requirements for the MA in appliedlinguistics, they will be officially admitted into the MA program.Program RequirementsStudents in the program will fulfill all normal admission and curricularrequirements for both a BA in English with an applied language studiesconcentration and an MA in applied linguistics, with the followingexceptions:1. Students in the program may count up to 12 hours of graduate coursestaken as an undergraduate for which they have earned a grade of B (3.0)or better toward both the BA in English and MA in applied linguisticsdegrees.For completion of a minor, a student must have a minimum grade pointaverage of 2.00 in all courses specified as a requirement for the minorexclusive of lower-level courses and prerequisite courses and completea minimum of six hours in upper-level courses in the minor requirementthrough courses offered by Old Dominion University.AdvisingTo declare an English major or minor, students must see the Englishdepartmental advisor (CDA). The CDA will assign each major to a facultyadvisor. Students in the Secondary Education Endorsement Program willalso have an advisor in the Darden College of Education and ProfessionalStudies. All English majors are required to have a conference with theiradvisors before each semester (preferably during preregistration). The CDAwill hold periodic group meetings with English majors to keep them fullyinformed.Research PracticumStudents who wish to combine research and real-world experience can takeENGL 369 Research Practicum.Linked Bachelor of Arts in English/Masterof Arts in Applied LinguisticsThe linked BA in English, applied language studies, and MA in appliedlinguistics makes it possible for exceptional students to count up to 12hours of graduate courses toward both an undergraduate and graduatedegree. Students must earn a minimum of 150 credit hours (120 for theundergraduate degree and 30 for the graduate degree).2. Students in the program may substitute English linguistics graduatecourses for undergraduate courses according to the following schema.All students must complete an undergraduate writing intensive course inthe major.a. Any 500-level linguistics course that is cross listed with a 400-levelcourse may be substituted for the 400-level course.b. Students may substitute 600-level courses for undergraduate coursesaccording to the following list:ENGL 672forENGL 350ENGL 677forENGL 371WENGL 695forENGL 495Language Structure Analysis3Aspects of the English LanguageLanguage and Communication AcrossCultures33Communication Across CulturesTopics31-3Topics in English1-3c. Students in the program may make a written petition for othersubstitutions to the graduate program director (GPD) for electivesin fields such as Asian studies, education, or professional writing.The GPD will consider substitutions in consultation with the chiefdepartmental advisor and the instructor(s) of the courses involved.Students should consult the Graduate Catalog for requirements for theMA in Applied Linguistics.Admission RequirementsENGLISH CoursesTo be admitted to the program, students must have completed at least 60undergraduate hours, including at least nine hours in English appliedENGL 101. Composition Studio. 3 Credits.This course is an immersive study of writing, rhetoric, and composingconcepts and strategies designed to extend the ENGL 110C curriculum.The course provides additional instruction, guided practice, and supportas writers learn to successfully compose and revise in multiple genresfor multiple purposes and audiences and navigate university literacyexpectations. Corequisite: ENGL 110C. Prerequisites: A score of 1 on theWSPT or an override from an academic advisor.language studies courses at the 300 level or above. At the time of admission,they must have an overall GPA of 3.00 or better, and a GPA of 3.30 or betterin all English applied language studies courses.Admission ProceduresInterested students who meet the admission requirements should apply to thegraduate program director as soon as possible after completing the required60 undergraduate hours. In consultation with the graduate program director,students will:1. Officially declare themselves an undergraduate English major withan emphasis in applied language studies to the English Department'sundergraduate chief departmental advisor.ENGL 110C. English Composition. 3 Credits.The principal objective of the course is to prepare students to be effectivewriters of the kinds of compositions they will be called on to produceduring their college careers. By the end of the course, students shou

Applied Language Studies This concentration is available both online and face-to-face. ENGL 350 Aspects of the English Language 3 ENGL 371W Communication Across Cultures 3 Select three of the following: 9 ENGL 390 TESL Methods, Materials, & Assessment ENGL 440 Gene

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