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Course Criteria
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5.00 Credits
Engages students in writing and revising short fiction and poetry. Students may choose to concentrate on stories or poems in individual projects. In class sessions, students critique each other's work and study the published work of other writers. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101, 231, and 232 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
Emphasizes the writing, constructive analysis, and revision of creative nonfiction, focusing on the personal essay and "New Journalism." Briefly examines the history of the forms and studies exemplary published works. Students use journaling and respond to other exercises to develop ideas from personal experience, write and revise essays, and critique one another's work. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
(was titled Technical and Workplace Writing) H Emphasizes written workplace communications, designed especially for the CIS, engineering, and science professions. Topics covered include document format, visual design, multi-tiered audience, formal and informal reports, instructions, letters and memos. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 with a grade of C or better.
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5.00 Credits
Provides guidance in the writing and revising of individual projects in poetry, fiction, or personal nonfiction. Explores connections with the work of published writers in the same form or genre. Students critique each other's work and complement their creative projects with a research paper. This is a Capstone course. See Capstone prerequisites on page 31. Prerequisite: ENGL 231 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
Presents the context for works of American literature and studies major works by authors such as Melville, Dickinson, and Hemingway. Explores the major forms and movements in American literature. This may be offered as a Capstone course. See Capstone prerequisites on page 31. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
Explores contemporary films, drama, poetry, and fiction using analysis, interpretation, and evaluation. Field trips to view a movie or a play, or attendance at a poetry reading may be included. Essays and other written work are required. This may be offered as a Capstone course. See Capstone prerequisites on page 31. Students will participate in seminars building to a researched term paper. Meets the associate's degree cultural diversity requirement. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101.
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5.00 Credits
Surveys major authors from Beowulf, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Donne, Johnson, and Milton through 18th Century authors including Swift, Pope, and Fielding. Seminar-discussion format. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
Surveys major authors from Blake and Wordsworth among other Romantic writers, Tennyson and Browning among other Victorian writers, and poets and prose writers of the 20th century, including Conrad, Yeats, Joyce, Lawrence, Eliot, Becket, and Auden. The course is operated in a seminar-discussion format. This may be offered as a Capstone course. See Capstone prerequisites on page 31. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
Examines traditional and experimental fiction and poetry, presenting the short story and the poem as related literary forms. Students will gain an understanding of the elements of fiction and poetry, as well as the ways in which writers reflect or challenge prevalent societal values through literature. This experience provides an opportunity for students to demonstrate their progress in developing the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values contained in the course plan outcomes. This may be offered as a Capstone course. See Capstone prerequisites on page 31. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 or instructor permission.
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5.00 Credits
Focuses on special topics or genres of literature, identified each quarter. Students learn the literary depth of a specific genre or thematic topic while gaining an understanding of the different forms of literature. This experience provides transfer students an opportunity to demonstrate their progress in developing the knowledge, skills, attitudes and values. This may be offered as a Capstone course. See Capstone prerequisites on page 31. Prerequisite: ENGL& 101 or instructor permission.
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